In a way, my
proposed work picks up on the history-continuum where Kris Lane’s Colour of Paradise: The Emerald in the Age
of Gunpowder Empires leaves off; nestled in alongside and in cahoots with Paul
Gootenberg’s Andean Cocaine: The Making
of A Global Drug. The early period of what we now consider to be known as globalization. If nothing else, it is certainly in the same vein; in the sense that
it deals with elites, exploitation, and to a much greater degree, the tools of war
and death. As our human world grew larger – international trade, early-modern colonialism,
and the constant redrawing national boundaries – so too did the interactions
therein forced. War, war, and more war! The desire for things, emeralds,
tobacco, timber, sugar, etc., etc., and the clashing of cultures and ideologies
built the foundation of our current postmodern status-quo today
(post-post-modern?). The minutia of human life – gaining wealth, conquest,
genocide, war, famine, plague, war, and more war – has remained little changed
over the millennia, but the tools with which we execute these dire human
missions certainly have. My proposed work does not overtly deal with itself as
an invention of commodity history. Whether it be in the vein of Sidney W. Mintz’s
sugar study Sweetness and Power: The
Place of Sugar in Modern History, Paul Gootenberg’ Andean Cocaine: The Making of A Global Drug, or compilation works
like From Silver to Cocaine: Latin
American Commodity Chains and the Building of the World Economy, 1500-2000;
the structured ‘commodity chain’ or ‘web’ or ‘net’ approach we have so deeply investigated
thus far this semester will not be found addressed in the text. Instead, it exists
if analyzed and read between the lines. Part of my pleasure in rereading and selecting
this work has been my reinterpretation of its content through a ‘commodity
historian’s’ lens. Furthermore, shiny rocks and funky people make several
appearances (after all, the author at one point served in the Gauteng, South
African provincial legislature as an advisor to the then provincial premier Tokyo
Sexwale…).
The Shadow World: Inside the Global Arms
Trade explores, well, the global arms trade; or, more accurately, the nefariousness
of the global arms trade. As the dust-cover contends, “The Shadow World is the harrowing behind-the-scenes tale of the
global arms trade, revealing the deadly collusion that all too often exists
among senior politicians, weapons manufacturers, felonious arms dealers, and
the military…”[1]
The work is a product of the author Andrew Feinstein’s time in South African
politics. Feinstein, now an anti-corruption and human rights activist with
Friends of the Treatment Action Campaign (FoTAC) and the United Kingdom based Corruption
Watch, served as a member of South Africa’s national Parliament until his
resignation in 2001 in protest of corrupt dealings within his political party,
the African National Congress (ANC).[2] Feinstein
also writes for numerous media outlets the world over, and is a regular
contributor to the BBC, Al Jazeera, CNN, and Sky News.[3] The Shadow World is very much in line
with the author’s social agenda; by that meaning, Feinstein highlights alleged
corruption and the murky legal reality of today’s arms trade. It does not hide
the fact that it is a call-to-arms against what the author sees is an
out-of-control, dangerous world of death-dealing companies and individuals that
sell the tools of discord with relative impunity; contributing to conflicts
great and small the world over. Well written, narrative in style, The Shadow World blends investigative
journalism, history, and memoir-like story telling into an easily consumed
package. Additionally, Feinstein is the product of educational establishments
including King’s College Cambridge, the University of Cape Town, and the University of California at Berkley.[4]
The Shadow World will bring an
interesting twist to our study of commodities in history. The more recent, continuously
developing subject brings together politics, economy, crime, and a mess of
other themes in our own time. Unlike similar works, however, The Shadow World concerns itself almost exclusively
with conventional arms. That is to say, the dreaded Weapons of Mass Destruction
(WMD) that have grabbed headlines for the past seven decades get little
treatment. This is in no small part due to the fact that conventional arms
(bombs and bullets, the guns that shoot them and the planes that drop them) are
responsible for the most deaths by violent means during this same period. The Shadow World examines a wide range
of topics within the history and continuing endeavors of the global arms trade;
including, “an arms company founded by a group of senior former Nazi officers,”
the explosive wealth and influence of Saudi Arabia, specific case studies on
major arms companies, and, of course, the global arms black market.[5] Moreover,
the author exposes the arms bonanzas that are Iraq and Afghanistan in the wake
of multiple international invasions and years of civil war. Furthermore, this
work provides us, as students and historians in training, the opportunity to
apply our understanding of commodities to an effort that does not explicitly
identify its main subject as a commodity.
A
great example of Feinstein’s work can be found in his treatment of the recent,
and to a degree ongoing, AEY Inc. debacle. “AEY Inc.,” writes Feinstein, “was
run out of a nondescript single room in Miami Beach, Florida, by Efraim
Diveroli, a 21-year-old with a forged driving licence … [and his] sidekick
David Packouz … a drifter who had trained as a masseur.”[6] Despite
being on the US State Department’s Arms Trafficking watch list, “in January
2007, AEY received a $298m contract with the US military as the main supplier
of ammunition to the Afghan security forces.”[7]
Yes, that happened, and what ensued proved far worse… Diveroli’s company bribed
Albanian politicians to facilitate the repackaging of decades old, dangerous
Chinese and Soviet manufactured ammunition in order to maximize profits.[8] The
ammunition proved utterly unusable and more deadly for those handling it than
those it was meant to kill. Furthermore, the Albanian factory built to file
serial numbers and Made-in-China stamps from brass casings and ammo crates eventually
exploded; leveling the town of Gerdec, Albania.[9] Finally,
these horrific events; the combination of untold Afghan and American deaths as
the result of useless, dangerous ammunition, and the leveling of an entire European
town; landed the young company president in federal prison on fraud charges…
for four whole years.[10] This is but one of the many amazing stories found within The Shadow World.
In conclusion, if
the story of a twenty-one year old American arms dealer leveling an Albanian
town at the expense of three-hundred-million US tax dollars doesn’t convince
you that this book isn’t worth the read… I don’t know what will!
Available from Amazon for $12 (the first edition, not the new one!); 531 pages (BUT IT IS DECEPTIVELY LONG! The text is large and it reads absurdly fast.)
[1] Feinstein, Andrew. The Shadow World: Inside the Global Arms
Trade (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2011), dust cover.
[2] Feinstein, Andrew. About the Author. http://www.theshadowworldbook.com/the-author-2/
[3] Ibid.
[4] Ibid.
[5] The Shadow World, xxix-xxx.
[6] Ibid, 343.
[7] Ibid.
[8] Ibid.
[9] Ibid, 343-52.
[10] Lawson, Guy. The Stoner Arms Dealers: How Two American
Kids Became Big-Time Weapons Traders and How the Pentagon Later Turned on Them.
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/the-stoner-arms-dealers-20110316?page=7
Marie, your book is one that I would vote to have in a syllabus. The effect of certain commodities is sometimes not given the full impact in scholarship. I have to say, with this book, there is no room to do anything but squirm.
ReplyDelete- Book Review Response -
ReplyDeleteMcolanto - The monograph you present for nomination as a read for the course is indeed very intriguing and definitely gauges some core ideals or questions this class has debated over the course of the semester. Particularly, your review raises such questions as is the commodity about the physical object or the people that use it? Is this form of commodity history top-down or bottom-up in terms of methodology? Further, you present a question that is indeed unique and different than other previous monographs--does this commodity (ammunition, both brass to crude steal case/core cartridges, conventional firearms, be it small arms, medium and ballistic range firearm) have a direct place of origin? From reading this review, it has no particular direct country/nation of origin, which I agree with being multiple nations hold a multitude of legal as well as illegal firearms manufacturer's. Additionally, it would be interesting to see the response of the more legal firearms companies reactions and responses to find out their products (from Glock, Colt, M&M, H&K, Sig Sauer, Ruger, Kalashinkov, etc.) know the monetary profits they are losing from illegal sales. Moreover, it would be further interesting to know the transportation methods the illegal sales persons, smugglers, cartels, etc. utilize to move their products and even the extent they deploy technology, such as black-market internet sales to further their 'risky' economic endeavors. I would also further like to know both national and international law enforcement agencies (from the ATF, DEA, and Interpol, as well as military law enforcement agencies) responses in resolving these movements of firearms and their accompanying ammunition calibers. Even more so, it also interesting to see how these firearms sales impact counter-insurgency efforts against groups, such as the Taliban, and other groups that promote terrorism and narco-terrorism that heavily deploy firearms as a commodity to both defend their illegal economic enterprises in addition to using a weapon to uphold their ideologies they promote. This is indeed a globalized problem and is one that is well worth considering. This monograph has my support for the book review nomination.