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Title Sale of US military aircraft to Saudi Arabia. Master`s thesis
Creator/Author Bents, E.R.
Publication Date1995 May 01
OSTI IdentifierOSTI ID: 121841
Report Number(s)AD-A--294714/1/XAB; AFIT/CI/CIA--95-009
Other Number(s)TRN: TRN: 52890563
Resource TypeThesis/Dissertation
Resource RelationOther Information: TH: Master`s thesis; PBD: May 1995
Research OrgAir Force Inst. of Tech., Wright-Patterson AFB, OH (United States)
Subject35 ARMS CONTROL; SAUDI ARABIA; ARMS CONTROL; AIRCRAFT; EXPORTS; USA; POLITICAL ASPECTS
Description/AbstractThe end of the Cold War in the late 1980s resulted in a gigantic downsizing and consolidation of America`s defense industries, as domestic demand plummeted and the volume of international arms trading fell. However, in total world arms exports the United States exports more arms than any other nation. The country of Saudi Arabia has been the destination of a disproportionate amount of these weapons. The following account is an examination of the US military aerospace industry, the world military aerospace market, US government policy concerning arms exports, and the Saudi aerospace market. Each of these entities profoundly impacts US-Saudi military aerospace commerce. By individually analyzing the above factors, it will be demonstrated that the supply relationship between the US and Saudi Arabia is dependent on the convergence of several long standing and deep seated aspirations on the part of the three major players: the US Aerospace Industry, the US Government, and the Saudi Government. The US military aerospace industry`s exports are critical to ensure its independent survival, help fund crucial RD programs, and maintain a viable defense high tech industrial base in the U.S. In addition, it wishes to exert a military presence in the Gulf area and nurture relations with Saudi Arabia in particular, as the world`s leading oil producer. The Saudi government requires a military defense anchored in high tech aerospace systems, as well as a dependable and capable military ally such as the US.
Country of PublicationUnited States
LanguageEnglish
FormatMedium: P; Size: 156 p.
System Entry Date2008 Feb 04

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