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Bahrains våbenhandel
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våbenfabrikker,
våbenhandel og
våbentransporter: / Weapon Factories, arms trade and
-transport / Les fabriques d'armes, le commerce des armes et de
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- Militærudgifter
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Lande med en militær byrde på mere end 4 procent af
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tilgængelige data.
/ Countries with a military burden over 4 per cent of gross
domestic product (GDP) in 2014 or in year of most recent available
data
Trends in World Military Expenditure, 2014. / : Sam Perlo-Freeman,
et al. SIPRI Fact Sheet, 2015
- Arms Transfers
to the Middle East. / : Sam Perlo-Freeman. SIPRI Background
Paper, 2009.

- Bahrain har været i krig siden 2015.
- Fabrikker:
- Handel:
- Eksport af våben til ...
- Import af store våben, ifølge SIPRIs Arms Transfers Database,
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-
- Dutch arms trade with
coalition forces in the Yemen war.
Stop Wapenhandel, 2015.
- U.S. Arms Exports and Military Assistance in the
“Global War on Terror” : 25 Country Profiles. /
Project Director: Rachel Stohl, Senior Analyst Contributing
Authors: Sarah Chankin-Gould et al. Center for Defense Information
at the World Security Institute, 2007. - 149 s. Online.
- U.S. Resuming Arms Sales to Bahrain’s Military
Ban had been in place since Bahrain cracked down on protesters in
2011 during Arab Spring uprisings. / : FELICIA SCHWARTZ
-
http://www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-resuming-arms-sales-to-bahrains-military-1435618872
June 29, 2015
WASHINGTON—The U.S. is lifting restrictions on military aid
to Bahrain despite ongoing human rights concerns, the State
Department said Monday.
The U.S. continues to fault Bahrain for human rights violations,
officials said, but the decision to lift holds on arms sales
recognizes steps Bahrain’s government has taken to improve
its rights record and acknowledge its importance as an ally in the
fight against Islamic State extremists.
“Bahrain is an important and long-standing ally on regional
security issues, working closely with us on the counter-ISIL
campaign and providing logistical and operational support for
countering terrorism and maintaining freedom of navigation,”
State Department spokesman John Kirby said, using an acronym for
the militant group, also known as ISIL or ISIS. “We will
continue to press Bahrain on our human rights concerns.”
The Obama administration put a hold on arms sales to
Bahrain’s military after the government cracked down on
protesters in 2011 during the Arab Spring uprisings. A State
Department official said the restoration of military assistance on
Monday applies to Bahrain’s Ministry of Defense but
doesn’t include its Ministry of Interior, “except for
items that meet a clear counterterrorism need.”
The official said the Ministry of Interior “bore the
preponderance of responsibility for government abuses in
2011” and will therefore not have access to U.S.-manufactured
small arms or other lethal equipment.
In May 2012, the U.S. lifted the hold on sales of some items,
including those required to protect U.S. facilities, allowing
Bahrain’s defense force, coast Guard and national guard to
receive them. The items released on Monday included antitank
missiles and Humvees.
Bahrain also will be able to request additional arms from the U.S.
as part of the move to normalize security cooperation between the
two countries, the official said.
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