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<a href="http://victoria.indymedia.org/news/2004/09/30644.php">http://victoria.indymedia.org/news/2004/09/30644.php</a><br><br>
<b><a></a>Canadian Bullets, Dead Iraqis<br><br>
</b></font>With up to 13,802 Iraqi civilian deaths to date, Canadians
will now be providing one of the most basic necessities for the US
occupation forces in Iraq: bullets. The Canadian company SNC Technologies
Inc. (SNC TEC) is now part of a multinational consortium of small-caliber
ammunition producers whose purpose is to supply between 300 million -500
million more bullets to occupation forces per year, and potentially for
at least five years. <br><br>
Beyond Canada, General Dynamics, the US defence contractor, also awarded
contracts to several small bullet suppliers - including Winchester, a
unit of Olin Corporation and Israel Military Industries. Their also in
discussion with several other international producers, including General
Dynamics Santa Barbara Sistemas, Madrid, Spain in an effort to try to
meet the ammunitions demand. Michael S. Wilson, president of General
Dynamics Ordnance and Tactical Systems, said,"Our goal is to ensure
maximum supply support for the U.S. armed forces in their war against
terror." <br><br>
The high demand in bullets is in response to a recent U.S. Army market
survey for a "Small-Caliber Ammunition Systems Integrator". The
Financial Times reports that the US occupation forces "will need
300m to 500m more bullets a year for at least five years, or more than
1.5m a year for combat and training. And because the single army-owned,
small-calibre ammunition factory in Lake City, Missouri, can produce only
1.2m bullets annually, the army is suddenly scrambling to get private
defence contractors to help fill the gap." <br><br>
"We're using so much ammunition in Iraq there isn't enough capacity
around," said Eric Hugel, a defence industry analyst at Sephens Inc.
"They have to go internationally." <br><br>
The Financial Times also reports that the "bullet problem has its
roots in a Pentagon effort to restock its depleted war material reserve.
But it has been exacerbated by the ongoing operations in Afghanistan and
Iraq, where rearguard and supply units have been thinly-stretched
throughout the countryside, occasionally without active duty combat
soldiers to protect them." <br><br>
Recently rejuvenated after the historic demonstrations in New York, where
half a million people were unified in saying "No to the Bush
agenda", a campaign focusing on these contracts could have a direct
effect on saving the lives of Iraqis, and give traction to an again
waking anti-war movement. For the international anti-war movement, which
is struggling to live up to it's reputation as "the other super
power", such contracts could provide important anti-war campaigns in
our own nations, raising the social costs for the US, and other complicit
countries, in waging war on Iraq. For Canada, long in denial about it's
active participation in the US war on terror, the SNC Technologies
contract should highlight the fact that Canada has not only provided
previous military and diplomatic support for the war on terror, but is
now literally, without doubt, providing the ammunition to kill Iraqis.
<br><br>
As for the general structure of the contracts, General Dynamics reports
that they will serve as the systems integrator responsible for supply
chain management, with Winchester serving as a principal supplier of all
calibers of ammunition, including 5.56mm, 7.62mm and Cal. 50 ammunitions.
Israel Military Industries Ltd. currently produces ammunition to U.S.
military specifications for each of the calibers being sought and will be
relied upon to be a significant production partner on the team. SNC will
also be a critical provider of select ammunition across all calibers
being sought. <br><br>
For Canadians interested in SNC Technologies Inc., they are a developer
and manufacturer of ammunitions and related defence products.
Headquartered in Le Gardeur, Québec, their web site boasts of annual
revenues of more than $ 266 million(CAD). <br><br>
SNC TEC is the sole Canadian producer of military ammunition and produces
over 70% of conventional military ammunition used by the Canadian
Department of National Defence. In addition, the company is also a
current supplier to the Department of Defense of the United States for
both small and large caliber products. Internationally, SNC TEC provides
conventional ammunition, or components, to a large number of other
countries across Europe, the Middle East, the Far East, as well as
Australia and New Zealand (according to their web site, these include
Belgium, Denmark, France, Holland, Greece, Italy, Sweden, the UK, UAE,
Oman, Jordan and Kuwait, Hong Kong, Singapore, Thailand and the
Philippines). <br><br>
The company is wholly owned by the SNC-Lavalin Group. "The SNC
Group, which began as a small engineering consulting firm in 1911, grew
over the years into a leading group of engineering and construction
companies. In 1992, it merged Lavalin engineering firm to form the
SNC-Lavalin Group Inc." <br><br>
SNC-Lavalin Group has offices across Canada, in 30 other countries around
the world, and are currently working in some 100 countries. SNC-Lavalin
has annual revenues of about $ 3.3 billion (CAD). The Corporate
headquarters are located in Montréal at : <br><br>
455 René-Lévesque Blvd. West Montreal, Quebec Canada H2Z 1Z3 Telephone :
(514) 393-1000 Fax : (514) 866-0795 Email :
<a href="mailto:info@snclavalin.com">info@snclavalin.com</a> <br><br>
Chris Spannos volunteers for ZNet, Vancouver Co-operative Radio and the
Vancouver Participatory Economics Collective <br><br>
<a href="http://resist.ca/story/2004/9/12/11757/9360">http://resist.ca/story/2004/9/12/11757/9360</a><br><br>
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