Yahoo – AFP,
May 20, 2014
Linkoping (Sweden) (AFP) - Alongside a global reputation for peacemaking and generous foreign aid, Sweden has become a major world supplier of weapons counting a number of regimes criticised for human rights abuses among its customers.
Peace-loving
Sweden 'arms dictators' as defence exports soar (AFP)
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Linkoping (Sweden) (AFP) - Alongside a global reputation for peacemaking and generous foreign aid, Sweden has become a major world supplier of weapons counting a number of regimes criticised for human rights abuses among its customers.
Ranked the
third largest arms exporter per capita after Israel and Russia, Sweden's booming
industry has stirred up ethical concerns among Swedes about some countries it
is doing business with.
In a hangar
in the heart of Sweden's military-industrial complex, Saab technicians are
building an assembly line for the next generation of Gripen fighters -- at
least 60 destined for the Swedish airforce -- equipped with state-of-the-art
warfare systems and larger weapons bays.
The Gripen
E, designed to stand up to Russia's best warplanes, boasts a unique networking
system allowing planes to communicate and divide up tasks such as detecting,
electronic jamming and firing, Saab operations chief Lars Ydreskog told AFP
during a recent visit to the plant in Linkoeping.
"It
was this tactical way of working that was noticed by Brazil and
Switzerland," he said, referring to the recent selection of Saab's fighter
jet over stiff French and US competition -- even though Swiss voters rejected
the deal in last weekend's referendum.
Saab and
other Sweden-based firms including BAE Systems and Bofors have been hugely
successful in the 2000s, last year alone selling weapons and defence material
to 55 countries to the tune of $1.8 billion (1.3 billion euros).
But critics
charge that Sweden has become more inclined to arm regimes accused of human
rights abuses, including Saudi Arabia, UAE and Pakistan, as demand from Western
nations has declined since the Cold War ended.
Arming
dictators
"Swedes
see themselves as very ethical and restrictive when it comes to giving human
rights violators or dictators things that help them stay in power. But the
reality is that has happened," said Siemon Wezeman, an arms expert at the
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).
"In
the last decade or so they've been more open to it, because those are the
markets," he added.
"In
the past they wouldn't have done business with Saudi Arabia due to human rights
concerns -- it's obviously a place that rings all kinds of alarm bells -- but
that has changed... They've sold them Eriye (radar tracking systems) and
anti-tank missiles and marketed other weapons there."
Other sales
have been clandestine.
In 2012,
Swedish public radio revealed that the national defence research agency has
provided Saudi Arabia with covert technical support for a missile factory,
leading to the resignation of a defence minister and the launch of an inquiry
into new ethical criteria for weapons sales.
One of the
most controversial Swedish exports, the Saab-made Carl Gustav rocket launcher
-- used by US armed forces and other armies around the world -- has reportedly
fallen into the hands of groups that Sweden would not normally trade with,
including Myanmar's military and al-Shebab Islamists in Somalia.
Peace
activist Martin Smedjeback said Sweden's original reason for developing a large
weapons industry -- the desire to be self sufficient and independent -- has
vanished, along with the country's policy of neutrality as it develops closer
ties to NATO.
"Politicians
raise the issue of jobs and technology because there are all these other
arguments that they cannot use, like 'it's macho and I like macho
things'," said Martin Smedjeback.
"And
they also can't say that the weapons industry is powerful and they have
influence over the decisions of politicians."
Jobs,
economy
Several
leading defence analysts argue that Sweden could buy fighter jets and other
defence material more cheaply and efficiently abroad but that commercial
interests stand in the way.
"The
Swedish government, like many others, knows that advanced defence industry
technology will spill over to other areas," said Gunnar Hult, deputy head
of military studies at the National Defence College.
"And
the jobs issue is quite big. People care more about local jobs than about what
we do in Saudi," he added.
Some 30,000
people are employed in the Swedish defence industry, many of them in towns
where arms factories are the largest private sector employer.
Hult
believes at times Swedish foreign policy becomes entwined with commercial arms
export interests, citing the example of Sweden's participation in enforcing a
NATO no-fly zone over Libya in 2011.
"Our
participation in the Libya campaign was quite beneficial to the Gripen. This is
something no politician would ever admit, but it's true. People saw it
participating in air campaigns. It's good for business."
Allan
Widman, a prominent member of the governing centre-right coalition, said that
successive governments have had good reason to focus state support on two
particular parts of the industry: jet fighters and submarines.
"I
think we've had this strategic idea in Sweden that these two weapons represent
our national security interests," he told AFP.
"I
think there's a view among politicians in Sweden that defence technology and
industry represents (one)... of the most essential parts of the Swedish
economy."
But many
defence analysts and peace activists reject that view, arguing that weapons
represent just one percent of total Swedish exports and that government support
is more a question of national pride -- particularly when it comes to selling
Saab fighter jets.
"Saab
is seen as one of the crown jewels of Sweden," said Wezeman at SIPRI.
"There
is a strong feeling of pride and nationalism -- that this is a good Swedish
product -- they're proud of it and that plays a major role."
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