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Embargo Disimplemented: South Africa's Military Industry

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Publisher: Oxford University Press
ISBN 0-19-829127-2
276 pp.
1989

This study of South African weapon programmes and imports of arms, components, and technology describes how a desperate buyer and eager suppliers have bent or pre-empted embargo rules. Signe Landgren explains the role of multinational corporations and South African investments abroad in the process of 'disimplementation' and reveals the parts played by France, the Federal Republic of Germany, Israel, Italy, the UK, and the USA as sources of military technology. She provides useful reference material for those studying the effect of arms embargoes or with a special interest in the buildup of the South African military industry. South Africa has now acquired sufficient technical expertise to allow it a degree of self-sufficiency, but this book highlights areas of its military industry which remain vulnerable.

Contents

Part I. Introduction

1. South Africa as a case study

2. Historical impediments to embargo implementation

 

Part II. The development of South Africa's military industry

3. The historical background

4. The organization and structure of the modern arms industry

 

Part III. The sectors of the military industry

5. The aircraft industry

6. The armoured vehicle industry

7. The missile industry

8. The warship industry

9. Infantry weapons and small arms

10. Military electronics and communications equipment

11. The CBW industry

12. Nuclear technology

13. South Africa's arms exports

 

Part IV. Implementation and disimplementation

14. Embargo implementation

15. Summary and conclusion

 

Appendices

Appendix 1. Sources and methods

Appendix 2. UN Security Council resolutions on the arms embargo against South Africa

Appendix 3. Selected bibliography

Appendix 4. South Africa's major weapons industry: The dependence on foreign military technology

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