US military spending up for first time in 7 years: Sipri

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STOCKHOLM, April 29, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – US military spending has risen for
the first time in seven years, reflecting Trump administration policy,
according to a new report released Monday by the Stockholm International
Peace Research Institute.

Worldwide military spending also rose by 2.6 percent to $1.8 trillion
overall last year, SIPRI calculated.

It was the second year running the global figure has risen, bringing
military spending to its highest level since 1988.

“The increase in US spending was driven by the implementation from 2017 of
new arms procurement programmes under the Trump administration,” said Aude
Fleurant, director of SIPRI’s Arms and Military Expenditure (AMEX) programme.

The US figure alone of $649 billion was as much as the next eight highest
military budgets.

But Chinese as well as US spending helped push the overall spending
figures for the year higher, said the report.

China’s spending has risen 83 percent since 2009, bringing it up to second
place, ahead of Saudi Arabia, India — which is modernising its armed forces
— and France.

China has spent 1.9 percent of its gross domestic output (GDP) on military
spending since 2013.

Russia meanwhile dropped out of the top five spenders, with its military
budget declining since 2016, said the report.

Western countries’ economic sanctions against Russia, in place since 2014
because of its conflict with Ukraine, have hit the country’s military budget.

In Ukraine itself meanwhile, military spending rose 21 percent on the
previous year to $4.8 billion, SIPRI calculated.