Sivard, R.L.: World Military and Social Expenditures, 1979.
2.
SIPRI Yearbook 1981, page 110. By major weapons, SIPRI means aircraft, missiles, armoured vehicles and warships.
3.
Op. cit., page 12.
4.
Op. cit., page 110et seq.
5.
SIPRI Yearbook 1979, Chapter II.
6.
SIPRI Yearbook 1981, page 78.
7.
Op. cit. , page 188.
8.
See, inter alia, the SIPRI Yearbook 1978, page 238-253, and the study of Ed. Kolodziej and R. Harkavy: 'Developing states and the international security system' , Journal of International Affairs , Vol. 34, No. 1, spring-summer 1980.
9.
Conventional Arms Transfer Policy. Background information, Committee on International Relations, House of Representatives, 1st February 1978, pages 45-49.
10.
World Military Expenditures and Arms Transfers 1969- 1978 , report by the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency (ACDA), Washington, December 1980. Unlike SIPRI, ACDA takes account of all transfers and the cost of technical assistance.
11.
Op. cit., page 11.
12.
See Soviet Policy and United States Response in the Third World, Congressional Research Service, March 1981.
13.
Wireless File, No. 237, 12th December 1980 , United States Embassy Information Service, Paris.
14.
See the report prepared for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee: Prospects for Multilateral Arms Export Restraint, April, 1979.
15.
See the address by Mr. James Buckley to the Aerospace Industries Association on 21st May 1981.
16.
They amounted to almost $10,000 million in 1973 and in 1980 were estimated at $35,000 million.
17.
Le Monde, 23rd October 1981 .
18.
Le Monde, 11th October 1981 .
19.
According to ACDA estimates. See Die Rüstungsexportpolitik der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, Joachim Krause, Europa-Archiv, No. 12, 25th June 1981.
20.
Speech by Mr. Louis de Guiringaud on 25th September 1978. (unofficial translation).