Atrocities fuelled by decades of reckless arms trading
Tuesday 8 December 2015
Iraq: ‘Islamic State’
atrocities fuelled by decades of reckless arms
trading
Decades of poorly regulated arms flows into
Iraq as well lax controls on the ground have provided the
armed group calling itself Islamic State (IS) with a large
and lethal arsenal that is being used to commit war crimes
and crimes against humanity on a massive scale in Iraq and
Syria, Amnesty International said in a new report today.
Drawing on expert analysis of thousands of verified
videos and images, Taking
Stock: The arming of Islamic State catalogues how IS
fighters are using arms, mainly looted from Iraqi military
stocks, which were manufactured and designed in more than
two dozen countries, including Russia, China the USA and EU
states.
“The vast and varied weaponry being used by
the armed group calling itself Islamic State is a textbook
case of how reckless arms trading fuels atrocities on a
massive scale,” said Patrick Wilcken, Researcher on Arms
Control, Security Trade and Human Rights at Amnesty
International.
“Poor regulation and lack of
oversight of the immense arms flows into Iraq going back
decades have given IS and other armed groups a bonanza of
unprecedented access to firepower.”
After taking
control of Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city, in June
2014, IS fighters acquired a windfall of internationally
manufactured arms from Iraqi stockpiles. They included
US-manufactured weapons and military vehicles, which they
used to take control of other parts of the country, with
devastating consequences for the civilian population in
those areas.
The vast array of weapon types captured
and illicitly acquired have enabled IS to carry out a
horrific campaign of abuse. Summary killings, rape, torture,
abduction and hostage-taking – often carried out at
gunpoint – have forced hundreds of thousands to flee and
become internally displaced persons (IDPs) or
refugees.
Dizzying array of arms
The range and
scope of IS’s arsenal reflects decades of irresponsible
arms transfers to Iraq. This has been compounded by multiple
failures to manage arms imports and to put in place
oversight mechanisms to avoid improper end uses during the
US-led occupation after 2003. Likewise, lax controls over
military stockpiles and endemic corruption by successive
Iraqi governments have added to the problem.
The
report documents IS use of arms and ammunition from at least
25 different countries, though a large proportion were
originally sourced by the Iraqi military from the USA,
Russia and former Soviet bloc states. These arms flows were
funded variously by oil barter arrangements, Pentagon
contracts and NATO donations. The bulk have been seized from
or leaked out of Iraqi military stocks.
Among the
advanced weaponry in the IS arsenal are man-portable air
defence systems (MANPADS), guided anti-tank missiles and
armoured fighting vehicles, as well as assault rifles like
the Russian AK series and the US M16 and Bushmaster.
Most of the conventional weapons being used by IS
fighters date from the 1970s to the 1990s, including
pistols, handguns and other small arms, machine guns,
anti-tank weapons, mortars and artillery. Soviet Union-era
Kalashnikov-style rifles are commonplace, mainly from
Russian and Chinese manufacturers.
“This shows again
that arms export risk assessments and mitigation measures to
unstable regions require a long term, root-and-branch
analysis. This must include assessing if military and
security units are capable of effectively controlling
stockpiles and abide by international human rights and
humanitarian standards,” said Patrick Wilcken.
IS
fighters and other armed groups have also resorted to
forging their own improvised weaponry in crude workshops.
Examples include mortars and rockets, improvised hand
grenades, explosive devices (IEDs) including car bombs and
booby-traps, and even repurposed cluster munitions, an
internationally banned weapon. In some instances IEDs
constitute landmines prohibited by the global Mine Ban
Treaty.
Supply chains
Taking Stock covers
Iraq’s lengthy history of arms proliferation and the
complex supply chains that most likely brought some of the
more recent weapons into IS hands.
The Iraqi army’s
stockpile swelled in the late 1970s and early 1980s,
especially around the Iran-Iraq war. This was a seminal
moment in the development of the modern global arms market,
when at least 34 different countries supplied Iraq with
weapons – 28 of those same states were also simultaneously
supplying arms to Iran. Meanwhile Iraq’s then-President
Saddam Hussein oversaw the development of a robust national
arms industry producing small arms, mortar and artillery
shells.
After Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990, a UN arms
embargo decreased imports until 2003, but during and after
the US-led invasion Iraq was again flooded with more weapon
imports. Many of these never adequately secured and audited
by the US-led coalition forces and the reconstituted Iraqi
armed forces. Hundreds of thousands of those weapons went
missing and are still unaccounted for.
More recent
efforts to rebuild and re-equip the Iraqi army and
associated forces have once again resulted in a massive arms
flow into Iraq. Between 2011 and 2013, the USA signed
billions of dollars’ worth of contracts for 140 M1A1
Abrams tanks, F16 fighter aircraft, 681 Stinger shoulder
held units, Hawk anti-aircraft batteries, and other
equipment. By 2014, the USA had delivered more than US$500
million worth of small arms and ammunition to the Iraqi
government.
Endemic corruption in the Iraqi military,
as well as weak controls in place on military stockpiles and
tracking weapons, meant there was an ongoing high risk of
such weapons being diverted to armed groups including IS.
New Zealand's role in preventing arms
proliferation
States can learn from the successive
failures of the past and take urgent steps to curb future
arms proliferation in Iraq, Syria and other unstable
countries and regions. New Zealand, as a leader in
international disarmament efforts, should use its position
in the UN Security Council to confront those responsible for
reckless arms transfers and press for stricter arms control
in Iraq and Syria.
Amnesty International is calling
on the UN Security Council to adopt a complete arms embargo
on Syrian government forces, as well as those armed
opposition groups implicated in committing war crimes,
crimes against humanity and other serious human rights
abuses.
All states must also adopt a “presumption of
denial” rule on arms exports to Iraq, meaning that
transfers could only be carried out after strict risk
assessments. Military or police units in Iraq which are
singled out for exceptions must first demonstrate that they
stringently and consistently respect international human
rights and humanitarian law and that they have the necessary
control mechanisms in place to ensure weapons will not be
diverted to armed groups.
Also, New Zealand should
take concrete steps in the UN Security Council to strengthen
the work of the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq
(UNAMI), particularly in the fields of arms control,
protection of civilians and combating corruption.
All states that have not yet done so should accede to
or ratify the global Arms Trade Treaty immediately. One
of the treaty’s objectives is “to prevent and eradicate
the illicit trade in conventional arms and prevent their
diversion”. The treaty also contains provisions which aim
to stop arms transfers where there is an overriding risk
they could be used for serious international human rights or
humanitarian law violations.
“The legacy of arms
proliferation and abuse in Iraq and the surrounding region
has already destroyed the lives and livelihoods of millions
of people and poses an ongoing threat. The consequences of
reckless arms transfers to Iraq and Syria and their
subsequent capture by IS must be a wake-up call to arms
exporters around the world. New Zealand, as an elected
member of the UN Security Council, can play a constructive
role in tackling the misuse of arms and protecting civilians
from mass violence,” said Carsten Bockemuehl, Advocacy and
Research Coordinator at Amnesty International in New
Zealand.
ENDS/