Jul 18, 2017
If someone's house was on fire would you pour gasoline on it? Well the answer is obvious: Of course you wouldn't. Yet that is very similar to what the United States and many other more economically developed nations are doing.
Despite the tragic fact that approximately 40 current armed conflicts worldwide are causing over 150,000 deaths annually, countless serious injuries, untold destruction and 28,300 people per day fleeing from their homes, many of the wealthiest countries continue to pour flammable weapons into these volatile conflicts. And the U.S. is leading the pack.
Accounting for 33 percent of arms exports to over 55 nations, the U.S. is by far the world's leading arms merchant, followed by Russia, China, France, Germany, United Kingdom, Spain and Italy.
And worse yet, according to the Congressional Research Service, poorer nations continue to be the primary focus for weapons suppliers. The value of all arms agreements in 2014 with economically developing nations was over $61 billion. And as always, the poor suffer.