
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
The United States sells arms to almost any country willing to pay for them, but many recipients are risky, unstable, undemocratic, and liable to misuse the weapons. Cato defense and foreign policy studies policy analyst Jordan Cohen explains why the U.S. government sells arms to risky countries, why it doesn't give the U.S. strategic leverage, the costs and consequences of U.S. security assistance to Ukraine, the problem of cluster munitions, U.S. support for the Nigerian military (which recently executed a coup d'état), and how to reform U.S. arms sales policies.
Show Notes
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4.4
9090 ratings
The United States sells arms to almost any country willing to pay for them, but many recipients are risky, unstable, undemocratic, and liable to misuse the weapons. Cato defense and foreign policy studies policy analyst Jordan Cohen explains why the U.S. government sells arms to risky countries, why it doesn't give the U.S. strategic leverage, the costs and consequences of U.S. security assistance to Ukraine, the problem of cluster munitions, U.S. support for the Nigerian military (which recently executed a coup d'état), and how to reform U.S. arms sales policies.
Show Notes
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
117 Listeners
967 Listeners
1,085 Listeners
988 Listeners
29 Listeners
605 Listeners
141 Listeners
1,503 Listeners
697 Listeners
415 Listeners
197 Listeners
689 Listeners
127 Listeners
411 Listeners
420 Listeners
257 Listeners
98 Listeners