Anti War: Thread

grarpamp grarpamp at gmail.com
Sat Aug 20 18:15:29 PDT 2022


> Declarations of Independence historically risk death

Clearly none of these want you to be Free Independent Human Beings,
so stop paying them to enslave you...

https://www.visualcapitalist.com/ranked-top-10-countries-by-military-spending
https://www.sipri.org/databases/milex

As Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has continued, military spending and
technology has come under the spotlight as the world tracked Western
arms shipments and watched how HIMAR rocket launchers and other
weaponry affected the conflict.

But, as Visual Capitalist's Niccolo Conte details below, developing,
exporting, and deploying military personnel and weaponry costs nations
hundreds of billions every year. In 2021, global military spending
reached $2.1 trillion, rising for its seventh year in a row.

Using data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute
(SIPRI), this visualization shows which countries spent the most on
their military in 2021, along with their overall share of global
military spending.

Which Countries Spend the Most on Military?

The United States was the top nation in terms of military expenditure,
spending $801 billion to make up almost 38% of global military
spending in 2021. America has been the top military spending nation
since SIPRI began tracking in 1949, making up more than 30% of the
world’s military spending for the last two decades.

U.S. military spending increased year-over-year by $22.3 billion, and
the country’s total for 2021 was more than every other country in the
top 10 combined.



The next top military spender in 2021 was China, which spent $293.4
billion and made up nearly 14% of global military spend. While China’s
expenditure is still less than half of America’s, the country has
increased its military spending for 27 years in a row.



In fact, China has the largest total of active military personnel, and
the country’s military spending has more than doubled over the last
decade.

While Russia was only the fifth top nation by military spending at
$65.9 billion in 2021, it was among the higher ranking nations in
terms of military spending as a share of GDP. Russia military
expenditures amounted to 4.1% of its GDP, and among the top 10
spending nations, was only beaten by Saudi Arabia whose spending was
6.6% of its GDP.
Military Collaboration Since the Russia-Ukraine Conflict

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February has resulted in seismic
geopolitical shifts, kicking off a cascade of international military
shipments and collaboration between nations. The security assistance
just sent by the U.S. to Ukraine has totaled $8.2 billion since the
start of the war, and has shown how alliances can help make up for
some domestic military spending in times of conflict.

Similarly, Russia and China have deepened their relationship, sharing
military intelligence and technology along with beginning joint
military exercises at the end of August, alongside other nations like
India, Belarus, Mongolia, and Tajikistan.

Since China’s breakthrough in hypersonic missile flight a year ago,
Russia has now been testing its own versions of the technology, with
Putin mentioning Russia’s readiness to export weaponry he described
as, “years, or maybe even decades ahead of their foreign
counterparts”.
Sanctions and Energy Exports: New Weapons in Modern Warfare

Along with advanced weaponry, sanctions and energy commodities have
become new tools of modern cold warfare. As Western economic sanctions
attempted to cripple Russia’s economy following its invasion, Russian
gas and oil supplies have been limited and forced to be paid in rubles
in retaliation.

Global trade has been turned into a new battlefield with offshore
assets and import dependencies as the attack vectors. Along with
these, cyberattacks and cybersecurity are an increasingly complex,
obscure, and important part of national military and security.

Whether or not Russia’s invasion of Ukraine ends in 2022, the rise in
geopolitical tensions and conflict this year will almost certainly
result in a global increase in military spending.


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