Campaign Against Arms Trade

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Group.png Campaign Against Arms Trade   WebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
CAAT Logo.jpg
Formation1974
HeadquartersLondon, United Kingdom
InterestsArms Trade, BAE Systems
UK-based campaigning organisation working towards the abolition of the international arms trade. Was infiltrated by corporate spies.

The Campaign Against Arms Trade (CAAT) is a UK-based campaigning organisation working towards the abolition of the international arms trade. It was founded in 1974 by a coalition of peace groups. It has been involved in several high-profile campaigns, including a legal challenge against the Serious Fraud Office's decision to suspend a corruption investigation into BAE Systems in 2007.

Research

Campaigns are founded on research into the arms trade and arms companies, and their relationship with the UK government and military, through political, financial and military support. The focus is on arms exports, although they recognise that there is a close relationship with military procurement. The research places particular emphasis on debunking myths and exposing hidden features of the arms trade, and large government subsidies given to the arms industry, largely through government research and development but also through export credits, government promotion and military attaches. The website contains information about the arms trade, arms companies and campaigning material.[1]

According to the campaign, "Governments like to give the impression that it is the illegal trade that is damaging, while the legal trade is tightly controlled and acceptable. In fact, the vast majority of arms sales to human rights-abusing regimes and into conflict areas are not only legal, but actively supported by governments. Many of these 'legal' sales violate the selling countries’ own arms export laws. It is true that there is also a large illegal arms trade, with arms smuggled across borders, stolen, or sold from military or police stocks without government authorisation. While also causing severe harm, it is much smaller than the legal trade."[1]

Infiltrated by spies

Between 1995 and (at least) 1997, the Campaign was infiltrated by Adrian Franks, Martin Hogbin and other agents from Threat Response International or BAE Systems. In September 2003 the Sunday Times published an article BAE had paid a company directed by Evelyn LeChene to infiltrate CAAT and collect information about its workings and activities. The journalists said that LeChene had used at least half a dozen agents posing as campaigners to provide detailed reports of work in the CAAT office, meetings and preparations for protests as well as copies of correspondence and other internal documents.[2]


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