| REPORTS
The Bush Effect: U.S. Military Involvement in Latin America, a World Policy Institute Fact Sheet, by Frida Berrigan and Jonathan Wingo, November 2005, to view the tables click here, Tables.
U.S. Weapons at War 2005: Promoting Freedom or Fueling Conflict?, a World Policy Institute Special Report, by Frida Berrigan and William D. Hartung, June 2005.
Militarization of U.S. Africa Policy, 2000 to 2005, a World Policy Institute Fact Sheet, by William D. Hartung and Frida Berrigan, March 2005.
Dollar Shift: The Iraq War and the Changing Face of Pentagon Contracting by William D. Hartung and Frida Berrigan, February 2005. Or read the Executive Summary
The Ties that Bind: Arms Industry Influence in the Bush Administration and Beyond, a World Policy Institute Special Report, by William D. Hartung and Michelle Ciarrocca, October 28, 2004.
Missile Defense All Over Again, Foreign Policy In Focus -- Policy Brief, Volume
9, No. 4, by Michelle Ciarrocca, October 2004.
Private Military Contractors in Iraq and Beyond: A Question of Balance Prepared Statement by William D. Hartung, June 22, 2004.
IS WHAT'S GOOD FOR BOEING AND HALLIBURTON GOOD FOR AMERICA? New Data Shows How Contractors Are Cashing In On War On Terror by the Arms Trade Resource Center, February 24, 2004.
HOW MUCH ARE YOU MAKING ON THE WAR, DADDY? -- A Quick and Dirty Guide to War Profiteering in the Bush Administration, by William D. Hartung, January 15, 2004
New Numbers: The Price of Freedom in Iraq and Power in Washington by Ceara Donnelley and William D. Hartung, August 2003.
Missile Defense, Foreign Policy In Focus -- Policy Brief, Volume
8, No. 1, by Michelle Ciarrocca, May 2003.
The Hidden Costs of War, by William Hartung, A report commissioned by Howard S. Brembeck and the Fourth Freedom Forum, February 14, 2003.
Security After 9/11: Strategy Choices and Budget Tradeoffs, A year after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, the White House has issued a National Security Strategy document that identifies foreign policy and national security policy goals - if not how to get there. Are the choices it identifies the right choices, and how best should resources be allocated to reach those or alternative goals? Analysts from a variety of research organizations have put together a briefing book to help expand and deepen a public debate on these issues. . January 2003.
A Safer America?, Experts Respond to Congress and the Bush Administration. In this report, eight military policy experts respond to Congress and the Bush Administration's current military and homeland security policies. It poses the questions: Are Americans safer under the current security strategy? Could our tax dollars be more wisely spent and achieve greater security? This booklet offers some answers. This booklet is part of the Security Policy Working Group project sponsored by the Ford Foundation. January 2003.
Increases in Military Spending and Security Assistance Since 9/11, Arms Trade Resource Center Fact Sheet, by Michelle Ciarrocca and William Hartung, October 2002.
Post-9/11 Economic Windfalls for Arms Manufacturers, Foreign Policy In Focus Issue Brief, Volume
7, No. 10, by Michelle Ciarrocca, September 2002.
Axis of Influence: Behind the Bush Administration's Missile Defense Revival by Michelle Ciarrocca and William D. Hartung, July 2002. Or read the Executive Summary
About Face: The Role of the Arms Lobby In the Bush Administration's Radical Reversal of Two Decades of U.S. Nuclear Policy by William D. Hartung, with Jonathan Reingold, May 2002. Or read the Executive Summary
U.S. Arms Transfers and Security Assistance to Israel, ATRC Fact Sheet
by Frida Berrigan and William Hartung, May 6, 2002.
The Dirty Dozen: Partners in Mass
Destruction, a joint project by WILPF
and ATRC, December 13, 2001.
Indonesia at the Crossroads: U.S.
Weapons Sales and Military Training, by Frida Berrigan, October,
2001
CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE REPORT
FOR CONGRESS: Conventional Arms transfers to Developing Nations,
1993-2000, by Richard F. Grimmett, August 16, 2001
Star
Wars Revisited, Foreign Policy In Focus Issue Brief, Volume
6, No. 25, by Michelle Ciarrocca and William D. Hartung, June 2001.
The New Business
of War: Small Arms and the Proliferation of Conflict, Ethics
and International Affairs, Volume 15, No. 1, published by the Carnegie
Council on Ethics and International Affairs, by William D. Hartung,
2001.
Deadly Legacy Update: U.S. Arms
and Training Programs in Africa, by William D. Hartung and Dena
Montague, March 22, 2001
The Role of U.S. Arms Transfers
in Human Rights Violations: Rhetoric Versus Reality, Testimony
before the Subcommittee on International Operations and Human Rights,
House International Relations Committee by William D. Hartung, March
7, 2001.
PROFILING THE SMALL ARMS INDUSTRY,
by Frida Berrigan and Michelle Ciarrocca, November 2000. This packet
profiles six small arms manfacturers, providing information on what
weapons systems they produce, where and by what countries the weapons
are made, and where they are sold and used. These profiles are part
of our ongoing "Weapons at War" project. Alliant Techsystems, Colt
Manufacturing, Denel South Africa, FN Herstal, Heckler and Koch
and Saco Defense are profiled. Keep an eye out for more.
A Tale of Three Arms Trades: the Changing
Dynamics of Conventional Weapons Proliferation, 1991-2000, by
William D. Hartung, October 2000
Lockheed Martin and the GOP: Profiteering
and Pork Barrel Politics with a Purpose, Issue Brief by William
D. Hartung and Frida Berrigan, July 31, 2000
Nuclear Missile Deception: Corruption
and Conflicts of Interest in the National Missile Defense Test Program,
Special Issue Brief by William D. Hartung and Michelle Ciarrocca,
July 7, 2000
Tangled Web: The Marketing of Missile
Defense 1994-2000, Special Report by William D. Hartung and
Michelle Ciarrocca, May 2000
Beyond the School of America's:
U.S. Military Training Programs Here and Abroad, Issue Brief
by Frida Berrigan, May 2000
Star
Wars Revisited: Still Dangerous, Costly, and Unworkable, Revised
April 2000 Foreign Policy In Focus by William Hartung and Michelle
Ciarrocca
Deadly Legacy: U.S. Arms to Africa and
the Congo War, January 2000, by William Hartung and Bridget
Moix
Arming
Repression: U.S. Arms Sales to Turkey During the Clinton Administration,
October 1999 published by the World Policy Institute and the Federation
of American Scientists
Corporate Welfare
for Weapons Makers: The Hidden Costs of Spending on Defense and
Foreign Aid, August 12, 1999 published by the CATO Institute.
Military-Industrial
Complex Revisited, June 8, 1999 posted at the Interhemispheric
Resource Center.
The Costs of NATO Expansion Revisited:
From the Costs of Modernization to the Costs of War,
April 21, 1999.
Weapons at
War:
U.S. Weapons at War, 1995, by
William D. Hartung. From Richard Nixon to Bill Clinton, it has been
an article of faith for American policy makers that U.S. weapons
exports are only made to responsible allies who use these systems
for legitimate defense purposes. This report puts that thesis to
the test by documenting U.S. weapons deliveries to 50 current ethnic
and territorial conflicts. Contrary to conventional wisdom in Washington,
U.S.- supplied weaponry is at the center of many of today's most
dangerous and intractable conflicts.
U.S.
Arms Transfers to Indonesia 1975-1997: Who's Influencing Whom?,
March 1997, by William D. Hartung and Jennifer Washburn. An examination
of the $1.1 billion dollars in U.S. weapons sales that have been
delivered to Indonesia since the Suharto regime's invasion of East
Timor in 1975. At a time when Indonesian business donations to the
1996 presidential election campaign are being closely scrutinized,
this report provides a detailed look at the extensive role that
the U.S. arms industry has played in influencing U.S. policy toward
the Suharto regime.
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Welfare for
Weapons Dealers:
Welfare for Weapons Dealers 1998:
The Hidden Costs of NATO Expansion, March, 1998, by William
D. Hartung. This new release reveals how NATO expansion will cost
billions more than the Clinton Adminstration admits. It also provides
details on how Boeing and Lockheed Martin have been lobbying for
the widest possible expansion of NATO and increased taxpayer subsidies
to pay for military sales to East and Central Europe. Finally, this
report provides updated figures on the total value of U.S. government
subsidies for arms exports, which were originally detailed in our
1996 Welfare for Weapons Dealers report.
Welfare
for Weapons Dealers: The Hidden Costs of the Arms Trade, 1996,
by William D. Hartung. This report provides the most comprehensive
analysis to date of the billions of dollars in federal subsidies
devoted to helping major defense companies like Lockheed Martin
and McDonnell Douglas to promote and sell weapons abroad. The report
details how an array of government agencies -- including, the Pentagon,
the Department of State, and the Department of Commerce - use taxpayer
dollars to help private U.S. weapons firms promote, market, and
finance foreign arms exports for profit.
Conflicting
Values, Diminishing Returns: The Hidden Costs of the Arms Trade,
1994, by William, D. Hartung.
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Peddling
Arms, Peddling Influence:
Peddling Arms, Peddling Influence:
Exposing the Arms Export Lobby, October. 1996, with a special
April 1997 Press Release Update
including the complete 1995/96 election data by William D. Hartung.
An analysis of political campaign spending by the top 25 U.S. weapons
exporting companies in the 1995/96 election cycle, and how that
money influenced the outcome of a number of important votes related
to U.S. arms sales.
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And Weapons
for All, by William D. Hartung, published by Harper Collins,
1994. This comprehensive book details how America's multibillion
dollar arms trade warps our foreign policy and subverts democracy
at home. "An impressively researched and powerful critique of how
conventional arms exports over the last quarter century have become
an increasingly important tool of U.S. foreign and economic policy,"
writes the Washington Post Book World.
--> PLEASE NOTE
THAT THIS BOOK IS OUT OF PRINT AT THIS TIME.
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