U.S.
working to keep up with surging weapons demand: Pentagon
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[November 25, 2015]
By Andrea Shalal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. government
is working hard to ensure quicker processing of U.S. foreign arms sales,
which surged 36 percent to $46.6 billion in fiscal 2015 and look set to
remain strong in coming years, a top Pentagon official said.
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"Projections are still strong," Vice Admiral Joe Rixey, who heads
the Pentagon's Defense Security Cooperation Agency (DSCA), told
Reuters in an interview late on Monday.
He said the agency was trying to sort out the impact of a much
stronger-than-expected fourth quarter as it finalized its forecast
for arms sales in fiscal 2016, which began Oct. 1.
The fight against Islamic State militants and other armed conflicts
around the globe were fueling demand for U.S. missile defense
equipment, helicopters and munitions, Rixey said, a shift from 10
years ago when the focus was on fighter jets.
"It's worldwide. The demand signal is coming in Europe, in the
Pacific and in Centcom," he said, referring to the U.S. Central
Command region, which includes the Middle East and Afghanistan.
U.S. companies and some foreign countries have expressed growing
frustration in recent months about delays in arms sales approvals.
They argue that the U.S. government has not expanded its capacity to
process arms deals despite a big spike in such transactions.
Jeff Kohler, Boeing Co's <BA.N> vice president for international
business development, said earlier this month he and his Gulf
customers were "a little frustrated" with delays in getting U.S.
approvals for fighter jet sales.
A $3 billion deal for 28 Boeing F/A-18E/F fighter jets for Kuwait,
and a separate Qatari deal for F-15 fighters, have been delayed for
some time.
Rixey said DSCA was keeping up with surging arms sales requests
largely through process improvements and better training, but he
warned that potential cuts in Pentagon headquarters funding could
pose a problem.
DSCA is handling a total of 13,500 cases with a total value of $461
billion. Last year's total was the biggest yet, outside of a spike
caused by Saudi fighter jet sales in 2012.
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Rixey said his agency was coordinating more closely with the U.S.
State Department, the U.S. Commerce Department and other Pentagon
agencies and leaders to advocate for U.S. arms sales as a key
instrument of U.S. foreign policy.
He said requests from countries that were "well-behaved" and
protected U.S. technology were generally processed quickly, but the
U.S. government would take its time vetting sales to countries with
weaker records on human rights and technology.
DSCA had increased training and was working on a variety of
initiatives, Rixey said, including pre-processing reviews and
stockpiling some munitions and other weapons that were in high
demand by using a special revolving defense acquisition fund.
Congress has authorized the agency to spend up to $400 million from
the account since it was reconstituted in 2011, about $75 million of
which remains available, said Pentagon spokesman Lieutenant Colonel
Joe Sowers.
Rixey said some munitions had also been sold from U.S. military
reserves to ensure that they were available to allies quicker.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Paul Tait)
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