SIPRI Yearbook 2005

Stockholm International Peace Research Institute
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SIPRI Yearbook 2005

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Armaments, Disarmament and International Security

"Today's world cannot be secure without security for all, yet the events of the past few years have done little to bring global solutions closer. The UN Secretary-General was right to seek suggestions for new approaches from the High-level Panel that reported in December 2004, and right to endorse their major proposals for consideration at the 2005 UN General Assembly."

Alyson J. K. Bailes

The Yearbook is SIPRI's annual compendium of data and analysis of developments in security and conflicts, military spending and armaments and non-proliferation, arms control and disarmament.

The 36th edition of the SIPRI Yearbook analyses developments in 2004 in

  • Security and conflicts
  • Military spending and armaments
  • Non-proliferation, arms control and disarmament
with extensive annexes on arms control and disarmament agreements and a chronology of security- and arms control-related events. Highlights of this edition are given below.

This site contains summaries and the full text of the Yearbook's chapters, appendices and annexes, video presentations, ordering information, details of translations into Arabic, Chinese, Russian and Ukrainian, and summaries in a number of other languages.


How to order

SIPRI Yearbook 2005: Armaments, Disarmament and International Security

Published in June 2005 by Oxford University Press on behalf of Stockholm International Peace Research Institute

ISBN 0-19-928401-6 978-0-19-928401-6 hardback 853 pp. £97/$175

SIPRI Yearbook 2005 can be bought from most booksellers and online bookstores, or directly from OUP:


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Translations

Translations of SIPRI Yearbook 2005 are published

Contact these organizations for more information.

Summaries, produced by SIPRI and in partnership with institutions worldwide, are available in Dutch, English, Farsi, French, German, Spanish and Swedish.

Highlights

Security and conflicts

  • In 2004 it became obvious that maintaining control over Iraqi territory would require capabilities other than high-intensity warfare and more manpower than in the technology-intensive phase of the war. See chapter 1.
  • Many of the conflicts that continue to produce the greatest number of deaths, casualties and suffering are wars of long duration. Far from soliciting more attention, their long-standing and recurrent nature tend to make them less visible internationally. Although the current international emphasis on the prevention of violent conflict is a positive development, it is worth considering whether the emphasis of policy and research should be directed at addressing the resolution of the world’s longest-standing major armed conflicts. See chapter 2.
  • Much of the current discussion of peace-building is focused on the macro level. What current operational experiences appear to illustrate, however, is that peace-building fails most often at the micro level, in the content and delivery of specific security, rule-of-law, economic, social and political reforms. See chapter 3.
  • Nationally led ‘coalitions of the willing’ of the kind that undertook the military actions in Afghanistan (2002) and Iraq (2003) pose special challenges for parliamentary oversight, since the interstate component of decision making is not carried out through an established, transparent multilateral institutional process. See chapter 4.
  • Military expenditure by states in the Middle East is high and shows a rising trend since 1996. Conventional arms races are unconstrained, but developments related to weapons of mass destruction are the ones that receive international attention. See chapter 5.
  • Since the 1980s, the introduction of a more open economic model in most states of the Latin American and Caribbean region has been accompanied by the growth of new regional structures, the dying out of interstate conflicts and a reduction in intra-state conflicts. See chapter 6.

Military spending and armaments

  • In the new security environment, which focuses on insecurity in the South and greater global security interdependence, there is an increasing awareness of the ineffectiveness of military means for addressing threats and challenges to security and a growing recognition of the need for global action. See chapter 7.
  • World military expenditure exceeded $1 trillion in 2004. The USA accounted for 47 per cent of this spending. See chapter 8.
  • The combined arms sales of the top 100 arms-producing companies in 2003 were 25 per cent (in current dollars) higher than in 2002. See chapter 9.
  • China is almost completely dependent on Russia for its arms imports, but its relationship is changing from a recipient of complete weapons to a recipient of components and technology to be used in Chinese weapon platforms. There are indications that China is anxious to gain access to other than Russian technology, partly because that technology is becoming outdated. See chapter 10.

Non-proliferation, arms control and disarmament

  • In April 2004 the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 1540, an instruction to UN member states that they must legislate nationally to introduce effective controls on nuclear, biological and chemical weapon proliferation-sensitive items. The resolution was adopted under Chapter VII of the UN Charter, leaving open the potential use of enforcement measures by the Security Council against states failing to comply with this instruction. See chapter 11.
  • The controversies over the North Korean and Iranian nuclear programmes led to renewed interest in proposals for limiting civil uranium-enrichment and plutonium-reprocessing capabilities on a worldwide basis. See chapter 1.
  • A number of official inquiries into the handling of intelligence concerning Iraq’s weapon programmes, including how it had been interpreted or presented, published reports in 2004. The inquiries found a common theme that pre-war assessments were inaccurate and unsupported by the available evidence. See chapter 13.
  • Since Libya’s policy change it has become clear that it received considerable foreign assistance to procure sensitive nuclear materials, technologies and components as well as documentation related to nuclear weapon design. However, the relatively low technical absorption capacity of its scientific–industrial base meant that these ‘short cuts’ did not bring Libya appreciably closer to achieving a nuclear weapon capability. See chapter 14.
  • The NATO–Russia stalemate over the adapted CFE Treaty has lasted for over five years, but the second wave of NATO enlargement was accomplished despite Russia’s concerns. In Europe, the focus has shifted towards ‘soft’ measures and arrangements, such as confidence- and security-building measures for stricter control of small arms, surplus ammunition and landmines. See chapter 15.
  • International non-proliferation and disarmament assistance (INDA) is becoming a significant element of the wider anti-proliferation effort. To increase the effectiveness of this assistance, the efforts made by the G8 group of industrialized states were redesigned in 2004. Traditionally undertaken as a bilateral effort between the USA and Russia, the functional and geographic scope of INDA programmes is expected to expand in future to include projects in a wider range of countries, cover new types of sensitive material and undertake projects in new countries. See chapter 16.
  • In 2004 the EU reviewed the instruments that have been used to create an effective and modern system for controlling transfers of both conventional weapons and dual-use items. As a result of these reviews, revisions will be made to both the arms and dual-use export control systems of the EU. See chapter 17.
  • Over the years, the law of the sea has been adapted to changed priorities. Today, the general rule of flag-state jurisdiction has yielded to the universal interest of combating the slave trade, piracy and drug trafficking. In future, the non-proliferation of weapons of mass destruction may also be added to this list. See chapter 18.

Press launch

The press release and a video stream from the Press Conference, 7 June 2005, are available. Quicktime player and broadband are required to view this video.


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