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For

Immediate Release: Tuesday, May 15, 2018



Contacts: John Lindsay-Poland, Global Exchange, 510-282-8983,
johnlindsaypoland@gmail.com; Kristen Rand, Violence Policy Center, (202) 822-8200
x 102, krand@vpc.org


ARMS TRANSFER INITIATIVE WOULD HELP U.S. GUN INDUSTRY
MARKET ITS MILITARIZED FIREARMS GLOBALLY


WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The Trump Administration’s proposal to make it easier to export
military-grade guns to other countries is likely to lead to increased violence and crime,
warn analysts who study gun trafficking.

The proposal would transfer responsibility for reviewing licenses to export firearms—
including assault-style rifles, high-capacity pistols, and armor-piercing sniper rifles—
from the U.S. Department of State to the Department of Commerce. The proposed
changes would also remove Congressional oversight for large gun export deals. The
Trump Administration plans to move ahead with this transfer despite serious concerns
raised by U.S. law enforcement agencies.

As domestic firearms sales decline, the U.S. gun industry is desperate to identify new
markets. The Trump Administration’s proposal will expand the opportunities for
domestic gun manufacturers to market and sell their military-style firearms
internationally.

The proposed transfer of agency responsibility will likely lead to more U.S. guns getting
into the hands of criminal organizations, human rights abusers, terrorist groups, and
others who wreak harm. By one estimate, 1,000 people are killed every day around the
world by terrorists, insurgents, and criminal gangs using such weapons.

“U.S. firearms exported to Mexican police have been used in massacres and forced
disappearances,” said John Lindsay-Poland of Global Exchange’s Project to Stop U.S.
Arms to Mexico. “We need international background checks to prevent gun exports to
military and private groups that use them to commit violence or collude with organized
crime.” Mexico experienced more gun homicides in 2017 than any year on record.
Seventy percent of firearms recovered at crime scenes in Mexico and traced were
purchased in the U.S.

“Sound policy would not make it easier for U.S. gun manufacturers who made the
assault weapons used in the mass shootings at Sandy Hook, Pulse nightclub, Las Vegas,
and Parkland to sell them to international buyers,” said Kristen Rand, legislative director
at the Violence Policy Center.

The proposed transfer will be published in the Federal Register and then open for public
comment for 45 days.

***

Global Exchange is an international human rights organization dedicated to promoting
social, economic and environmental justice around the world. See more on Global
Exchange’s Project to Stop US Arms to Mexico at afsc.org/stoparms.

The Violence Policy Center (www.vpc.org) is a national educational organization working
to stop gun death and injury. Follow the Violence Policy Center on Facebook and follow
@VPCInfo on Twitter.

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