CARTER'S ARMS SALES POLICIES 13
effectively neutralizes the entire set of restrictions Carter supposedly imposed on military sales.
1 Text in The New Tork Times, 24 June 1976.
2 Text in The New Tork Times, 25 January 1977.
3 Text released by US Department of State, 31 January 1977.
US Department of Defense, Foreign Military Sales and Military Assistance Facts, Washington, 1976. (Hereinafter cited as F VIS Facts.) For FY 1977 data, see, US Department of Defense, Security Assistance Program, FY 1978, Washington. ' (Hereinafter cited as Security Assistance FT 1978.)
U S Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, World Military Expenditures and Arms Transfers, Washington, 1977, p 77. 6 FMS Facts, pp 12-13.
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, Arms Trade Registers, Stockholm,
8 For list of co-production projects, see, ^U S Military Co-Production Projects Abroad," NACLA's Latin America Report, January 1977, pp 27-32; for discussion, see, Michael T Klare, "La Multinationalisation des Industries de Guerre," Le Monde Diplomatique, February 1977, pp 4-5.
9 US Senate, Committee on Foreign Relations, U S Military Sales to Iran, Staff Report, 94th Congress, 2nd Session, 1976, p vii.
10 See, Payoffs: the Growing Scandal, Newsweek, 23 February 1976, pp 26.33.
11 See, "Merchants of Repression", NACLA's Latin America Report, July-August 1976, pp31-3
12 Quoted in Aviation Week & Space Technology, 18 April 1977, p 20.
13 For discussion, see. Michael T Klare, "The Political Economy of Arms Sales",
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, November 1976, pp 10-18. u Text released by White House Press Office, 19 May 1977. 15 Security Assistance FT 1918, pp 19-21. 18 Washington Post, 14 July 1977.
17 The New Tork Times. 27 April and 12 July 1977.
18 Los Angeles Times, 19 July 1977.
19 Aviation Week & Space Technology, 21 June 1977, p 22.
20 "U S Military Co-Production Projects Abroad", op cit.
21 The New Tork Times, 27 July 1977.
22 Los Angeles Times, 12 July 1977.