ID | 129105 |
Title Proper | Promoting restraint |
Other Title Information | updated rules for U.S. arms transfer policy |
Language | ENG |
Author | Stohl, Rachel |
Publication | 2014. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | On January 15, 2014, the United States released a document describing its new policy governing transfers of conventional weapons. The policy revision was long overdue, as the new publicly released document, Presidential Policy Directive 27 (PPD-27),[1] replaced a classified directive that came out in 1995.[2] The world has changed dramatically since the end of the Cold War. Until the release of the new policy document, however, the United States had been using policy guidance rooted in the geopolitical challenges created by the fall of the Soviet Union in making its arms transfer decisions and in outlining policy priorities and approaches to the global arms trade. According to a White House summary, a multi-year interval review of U.S. arms export policy "concluded that the 1995 conventional arms transfer policy was effective but needed to be updated to address 21st century national security and foreign policy objectives."[3] Thus, the new U.S. policy more accurately reflects the reality of U.S. arms transfers today. The Obama administration began its review when it came into office, but U.S. officials have said the impetus to finish the review came from events during the Arab Spring, when canisters of tear gas emblazoned with "Made in the USA" dominated pictures of the uprisings in Cairo's Tahrir Square. Questions surrounding U.S. arms sales to Egypt and other Arab countries led to increased scrutiny over the process of determining whether to transfer conventional arms and whether arms sales in fact led to U.S. influence over the recipient. |
`In' analytical Note | Arms Control Today Vol.44, No.2; March 2014: p.15-19 |
Journal Source | Arms Control Today Vol.44, No.2; March 2014: p.15-19 |
Key Words | Cold War ; United States - US ; Presidential Policy ; Arms Transfer Policy ; Us Arms Policy ; Soviet Union - Russia ; Conventional Arms Transfer Policy -1995 ; Middle East Policy - US ; Looking East Policy - US ; Western Power ; European Union - EU ; United Kingdom - UK ; Global Arms Trade ; Arms Control ; Foreign Policy - US ; Arms Accord ; Nuclear Security ; Nuclear Weapons ; International Treaty |