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Australia Unveils Plans to Boost Int'l Arms Sales

by Phil Mercer

   SYDNEY --

   Australia has set out an ambitious strategy to become one of the
   world's top 10 weapons exporters within 10 years. Ministers say the
   plan will boost global peacekeeping efforts, as well as create
   thousands of jobs in Australia.

   As part of its plan, Canberra wants to sell more of its military
   technology and hardware, including armored vehicles and surveillance
   systems. It currently sells about $1.6 billion worth of weapons each
   year and is ranked 20th in a global list of arms exporters, but it has
   ambitions to break into the top 10. There will be government grants to
   help companies boost sales.

   Australian Minister for Defense Industry Christopher Pyne says the plan
   could create tens of thousands of jobs. He says it will also boost
   international peacekeeping efforts.

   "Our primary market is New Zealand, Canada, the U.K. and the United
   States. That is where the vast majority of our effort will be placed
   and has been placed. We need a strong alliance with those kinds of
   countries with the capabilities that we need militarily to ensure that
   we maintain peace in the world. I do not think anybody would question
   our role in places like Iraq and Syria most recently," Pyne said.

   The plan has been anticipated since mid-2017 when Pyne said he wanted
   to sell more Australian-made weapons overseas.

   At the time the charity World Vision said the policy was "exporting
   death and profiting from bloodshed."

   Aid organizations said the move would not boost global peace efforts, a
   claim rejected by the Australian government.

   Officials have asserted that the "price of liberty is eternal
   vigilance."

   The United States is the world's largest arms exporter, followed by
   Russia, China, France, Germany and the U.K., according to the Stockholm
   International Peace Research Institute.