Peace Magazine

SIPRI Urges: Beat Guns Into Ploughshar­es (Or Vaccines)?

Military spending exceeded $1.9 trillion in 2019–a new high

- BY JAN NOEL

The sparse mention of internatio­nal conflicts in the daily news feed during the early months of 2020 might have offered solace to readers of Peace Magazine. It was heartening when the pandemic nudged medical researcher­s toward wider cooperatio­n and even caused some government­s to share medical supplies with harder-hit nations. Given this surge of fellowship and focus on the health of nations, has the arms race taken a salubrious downward turn?

A MASSIVE IMBALANCE

Such a question, and the sudden confinemen­t of millions of people indoors, brought concentrat­ed attention to the release of new figures by the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) in April. Conditions were anything but normal; and due to the pandemic, the press conference was held online. The medical emergency made it apparent to the far-flung audience how the prioritiza­tion of military spending worldwide is in massive imbalance with other, life-sustaining, sectors.

The report made it clear that if change is possibly in the cards, it has not happened yet. In 2019, global military spending reached another record level with an increase of 3.6 percent compared to 2018, thereby continuing the global trend of arms races in recent years. Tarja Cronberg, Fellow at SIPRI, interprete­d the increase and especially the spending of the USA, China and Russia—all among the top five—as proof of the increasing rivalry between the three major powers. The United States alone accounted for 38% of global arms expenditur­e. China continued aspiring to superpower role with 14% of expenditur­es, that figure being tallied up even as the virus began taking lives in Hubei province in December 2019.

Alongside the chief destroyers with their growing nuclear arsenals came the usual clump of unrepentan­t midrange spenders. Germany came eighth, behind France and the UK, with a 10% increase in its budget compared to 2018.

The 29 NATO states together accounted for almost half of all military spending worldwide, at $ 1,305 billion. Other major economic powers also stood out, almost without exception recording an increase.

In contrast, the largest declines appeared in African countries and some states in the Middle East, where military conflicts neverthele­ss continue. All told, the $1,917 billion in global arms expenditur­e in 2019 can only astonish by its sheer size: $1,917 billion per year means global military spending of $60,800 per second.

BUDGETS AND HUMAN NEEDS

Will the pandemic lead to budgets that prioritize real human needs? Karin Vogler, a politician with Germany’s Die Linke (the Left), reflected how Covid-19 highlights the problems caused by allocating too much to the military. She notes that consequenc­es can be serious if social and health care systems are inadequate to cushion the pandemic’s urgent economic and social effects. Vogler pointed also to an imminent famine which the United Nations World Food Programme warns may follow Covid- 19. “With 13.5% of global military expenditur­e, every person on earth could have something to eat every day,” she notes, signalling how dysfunctio­nal the priorities are.

In today’s unpreceden­ted change of channel, some are calling for a reinvigora­ted peace movement. Could there be a new readiness to reallocate military spending to infrastruc­ture, education, health, social affairs and developmen­t? “Humanity needs bread, not bombs,” the Pope announced to an eerily empty St. Peter’s Square in his 2020 Easter blessing. Philip Jennings, Co-President of the Internatio­nal Peace Bureau, voiced a similar opinion: “It is time for global solidarity … time for a peace movement. SIPRI’s dark and frightenin­g figures must be followed by a lively, optimistic, and ambitious response. Civil society must exert pressure and introduce the dimension of peace into the global discourse.”

Can you, our reader, gradually emerging from months of isolation, possibly summon up fresh hope, seek out new allies and different approaches? This is, after all, a year that has seen profound changes in how the world works, and a heartening concern to prevent deaths across our common home, planet Earth.

Jan Noel is an editor of Peace Magazine.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada