There was a time when America’s greatest exports were high-quality 
consumer goods, such as automobiles and textiles. Today, most American 
manufacturing has been outsourced to Chinese and Latin American 
sweatshops. However, there’s still one thing that the U.S. does 
extremely well: design, manufacture and export the finest killing 
machines and equipment of any nation on the planet. Furthermore, our 
nation’s defense industry sells more of them than anyone else in the 
world.
This windfall for fine corporations such as Lockheed-Martin, Northrop
 Grumman, Boeing and others is due largely to recent contracts with 
their three biggest customers: South Korea, Qatar and our reliable 
Middle Eastern “ally”, Saudi Arabia. Despite the fact that global 
weapons sales have leveled off and more companies are jumping into the 
industry in order to get their piece of the pie, U.S. weapons sales rose
 from $26.7 billion to $36.2 billion in 2014 – representing an increase 
of 35%.
While the U.S. is leading the parade of death and destruction, it’s 
not marching alone. In second place is Russia, having sold $10.2 billion
 worth of weaponry (a slight drop from the previous year), followed by 
Sweden, France and China.
The Congressional study in which these figures were presented finds 
that a weakened global economy has led to much slower sales. In fact, 
despite a slight increase in global weapons purchases (approximately 
.03%), the study found that “the international arms market is not likely
 growing at all.”
This state of affairs has in turn increased competition among weapons manufacturers.
And the U.S. is coming out on top. While the country is crumbling 
from within, those with connection to the weapons industry are swimming 
in pools of champagne, nibbling on truffles and fine caviar while riding
 aboard their private jets and luxury yachts, financed by blood-soaked 
dollars. It’s not likely to change, either.
Weapons manufacturers are 
offering great deals, such as flexible financing (making certain their 
customers remain debt slaves for decades), co-production agreements, and
 counter-trade agreements (essentially, a form of in-kind payment or 
barter).
Read more: U.S. is the Mecca of Weapons and Killing Machine Exports. Doesn't That Make You So Proud? - The Ring of Fire Network