Economy The merchants of death: a brief look on the weapon trading business

wars the biggest racket there is.

Was wondering if this would go into the black market trade, how they are getting military weapons on black market etc

- Countries that are already persona non grata, in the world trading business sell to the highest bid, or anyone that is willing to buy. Army personal does smugle guns also, legal ownersre-sell them also.
For cartels or other criminal orgs, isnt hard to get them. I bet terrorists orgs have more hard time getting guns, than dru trafickers for example.



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US Weapons Main Source of Illegal Arms Trade on the Dark Web




    • New report based on first ever study looking at the size and scope of the illegal arms trade on the dark web.
    • European purchases of weapons on the dark web generate estimated revenues five times higher than the US.
    • The dark web's potential to anonymously arm criminals and terrorists, as well as vulnerable and fixated individuals, is “the most dangerous aspect”.
Sixty per cent of weapons on sale on the ‘dark web’ are from the US, according to a new study – Behind the Curtain: the illicit trade of firearms, explosives and ammunition on the dark web.

The report states that Europe is the source of around 25 per cent of weapons on sale on the dark web. However, transactions of weapons sold to European customers on the dark web generate estimated revenues that are around five times higher than those sold to US customers.

The study from the not-for-profit research organisation RAND Europe and Judith Aldridge, Professor of Criminology at the University of Manchester, is the first piece of research exploring the size and scope of the illicit trade of firearms, explosives and ammunition on the dark web.

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The study involved data collection on the dark web between 19–25 September 2016, which covered 12 cryptomarkets, a type of dark web marketplace that brings together multiple sellers managed by marketplace administrators, and 167,693 listings. From these listings, 811 were identified as relevant for the purpose of the study.

The dark web was found to facilitate the illegal sales of firearms, weapons, explosives and banned digital products that provide guides on “home-made” explosives and weapons. Findings from the study suggest that the dark web is increasing the availability of better performing, more recent firearms for the same, or lower, price, than what would be available on the street or the black market.

Despite being unlikely to fuel large-scale terrorist operations and armed conflicts, the study illustrates how the dark web has the potential to become the platform of choice for individuals (e.g. “lone-wolf” terrorists) or small groups (e.g. gangs) to obtain weapons and ammunition. The lone-wolf terrorist attacker in the 2016 Munich shooting used weapons purchased on the dark web.

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Giacomo Persi Paoli, the report's lead author and a research leader at RAND Europe, says, “The dark web is both an enabler for the trade of illegal weapons already on the black market and a potential source of diversion for weapons legally owned. Recent high-profile cases have shown that the threat posed by individuals or small groups obtaining weapons illegally from the dark web is real. The ability to not only arm criminals and terrorists, who can make virtually anonymous purchases, but also vulnerable and fixated individuals is perhaps the most dangerous aspect.”

Judith Aldridge, Professor of Criminology at the University of Manchester and a co-investigator on the research, says, “In very simple terms, anyone can connect to the dark web and within minutes have access to a variety of vendors offering their products, which are most often illegal. The dark web enables illegal trade at a global level, removing some of the geographical barriers between vendors and buyers, while increasing the personal safety of both buyers and sellers through a series of anonymising features that obscure their identities. This veil of anonymity, combined with the relative ease of access, makes the dark web an attractive option for a wide range of sellers.”

Forty-two per cent of the 811 arms-related listings on cryptomarkets were for firearms, followed by arms-related digital products (27 per cent) and others, including ammunition (22 per cent). Pistols were the most commonly listed firearm (84 per cent), followed by rifles (10 per cent) and sub-machine guns (6 per cent).
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@fingercuffs holding a firearm

The trade in arms-related digital products poses complex challenges. These products are often guides that provide tutorials for a wide range of illegal actions, ranging from the conversion of replica/alarm guns into live weapons, to the full manufacture of home-made guns and explosives, and also include models that can be turned into fully-working firearms through 3D printing.

The overall value of the arms trade based on the 12 cryptomarkets analysed in the study is estimated to be in the region of $80,000 USD per month, with firearms generating nearly 90 per cent of all these estimated revenues. Every month there could be up to 136 untraced firearms or associated products in the offline world that have been traded on the dark web. However, estimates of the arms trade on cryptomarkets, in terms of both value and volume, will include a certain percentage of fake listings or transactions.

Persi Paoli says, “The arms trade on the dark web is a drop in the ocean compared to the legal trade of arms worldwide. However, compared to other products traded on the dark web, the numbers are not necessarily the most appropriate indicator of how serious the issue is. A few people using illegally purchased weapons from the dark web can have severe consequences.”

He continues, “We're unable to ascertain the extent of scamming, but know this occurs across all product categories on dark web markets, and perhaps more frequently for vendors of firearms. Despite the uncertainty, we should not dismiss or play down the threat posed by the arms trafficking phenomenon on the dark web.”

The illegal sales of weapons on the dark web present challenges for law enforcement agencies and national governments. These challenges largely derive from the anonymity enabled by the dark web, which makes identifying individuals and linking them to specific activities challenging.

However, Persi Paoli believes that governments and law enforcement agencies can use existing measures to tackle illegal arms trafficking to limit the dark web trade. He says, “The dark web offers a platform to trade firearms, but does not create completely new firearms. If properly implemented, all measures designed to tackle illegal arms trafficking ‘in the real world’ may reduce the availability of illegal weapons to be traded. The only exception is the availability of 3D models for home-made 3D-printed firearms on the dark web. This new element will require further investigation as 3D printing continues to develop and grow.”
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Persi Paoli concludes, “The emergence of the dark web as an enabler for arms trafficking certainly requires appropriate responses at all levels. However, this does not mean that existing measures should be considered obsolete.”

https://www.rand.org/news/press/2017/07/19.html
 
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I just don't understand how military weapons can end up on the dark Web etc with no accountability.

Like I can track a usb stick I send across Australia but the military or lockhead or who ever don't have records of who last had custody of some shipment of weapons?
 
I just don't understand how military weapons can end up on the dark Web etc with no accountability.

Like I can track a usb stick I send across Australia but the military or lockhead or who ever don't have records of who last had custody of some shipment of weapons?

- I posted on the f35 thread, guys that "lost" a tank. The tank was found in someone backyard.
 
his LEGO game is of the charts..
I only come for the LEGO
and now he updated to LEGOS and Boobies.
Its almost too much, almost.

- Guys are prentending they didn't reconize Lisa Boyle on those pics.
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Did a research now. Human traficking moves almost as much money as drug trafficking! Always thought guns was the second one.

Theres more slaves and trafficing now than any other point in history. Its quiet nuts.
 
I think that's incorrect.

Drugs aren't even the most profitable crime.

- He is right.And as i posted before, human trafficking is becoming the close second.

Illegal lucrative business ventures

Organized crime has been there in the world for decades and its effects are deeply acclimatized into the social, political and cultural fabric of various nations. There are a plethora of illicit activities performed systematically by criminal enterprises like drug trafficking, illegal logging, illegal crude oil trade, human trafficking, illegal wildlife trade, illegal arms trafficking, illicit fishing, illegal art trade and counterfeiting. These are the sectors where organized crime is most active in. Some are focused on a single activity, while others perform multiple crimes at once due to their organisational complexities. So without further ado, lets take a look at each of them one by one:

Drug Trafficking – Drug trafficking is the most profitable and remarkable illicit activity in the crime world. The reason being the substance it deals with (cocaine, heroin, cannabis etc) are considered as one of most valuable commodities in the world. The operation includes right from cultivation, processing and manufacturing to distribution and sale of substances overseas. The task is not completed here. The daily cash proceeds are also brought back by cartels either physically or converting cash into legitimate assets. The cartel also invest heavily into legitimate economies like real estate, crooked banks, car dealerships etc.

The total value of drug trafficking worldwide is estimated to $426 billion to $652 billion annually constituting for almost 1% of the World GDP – $142 trillion. Almost every organized crime group is involved in drug smuggling either directly or indirectly. The reason is the insatiable demand of drugs worldwide. The United States is the world’s largest consumer of illegal narcotics. The majority of the drugs smuggled include cocaine, heroin, marijuana, methamphetamine, fentanyl, etc.

The drug cartels have set up dedicated narco routes across the world through which they daily smuggle tons of drugs which include cocaine, heroin, cannabis, LSD, ecstasy, methamphetamine. Some of these narcotics have their own GI like cocaine is found in latin america, mostly in Colombia, Peru, Bolivia and Chile. Mexico is one of the biggest cannabis producing countries, hence the name ‘marijuana’. Afghanistan[4] is the largets producer of opium in the world with more than 90% share in illicit opium growth. One of the worst affected countries are the United States, Mexico, Brazil and Colombia. In 2006, the then Mexican President Felipe Calderon declared an all out war on drugs. In any country, drug trafficking attracts one of the most stringent punishments. The reason behind this is of all the organised crime activities, drug trafficking has caused greater harm than any other illicit business. Not only it kills people from its drugs but also various innocent people become victims of violence and bloodshed caused by drug cartels. We can surely estimate the level of violence from the fact that the above mentioned countries are one of the most dangerous countries in the world.

https://blog.ipleaders.in/top-profitable-lucrative-business-world/
 
Theres more slaves and trafficing now than any other point in history. Its quiet nuts.

- I got surprised. I thought since a tank or a fighter jet are more than 10 mi, that weapons trade would be the more profitable.
 
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- He is right.And as i posted before, human trafficking is becoming the close second.

Illegal lucrative business ventures

Organized crime has been there in the world for decades and its effects are deeply acclimatized into the social, political and cultural fabric of various nations. There are a plethora of illicit activities performed systematically by criminal enterprises like drug trafficking, illegal logging, illegal crude oil trade, human trafficking, illegal wildlife trade, illegal arms trafficking, illicit fishing, illegal art trade and counterfeiting. These are the sectors where organized crime is most active in. Some are focused on a single activity, while others perform multiple crimes at once due to their organisational complexities. So without further ado, lets take a look at each of them one by one:

Drug Trafficking – Drug trafficking is the most profitable and remarkable illicit activity in the crime world. The reason being the substance it deals with (cocaine, heroin, cannabis etc) are considered as one of most valuable commodities in the world. The operation includes right from cultivation, processing and manufacturing to distribution and sale of substances overseas. The task is not completed here. The daily cash proceeds are also brought back by cartels either physically or converting cash into legitimate assets. The cartel also invest heavily into legitimate economies like real estate, crooked banks, car dealerships etc.

The total value of drug trafficking worldwide is estimated to $426 billion to $652 billion annually constituting for almost 1% of the World GDP – $142 trillion. Almost every organized crime group is involved in drug smuggling either directly or indirectly. The reason is the insatiable demand of drugs worldwide. The United States is the world’s largest consumer of illegal narcotics. The majority of the drugs smuggled include cocaine, heroin, marijuana, methamphetamine, fentanyl, etc.

The drug cartels have set up dedicated narco routes across the world through which they daily smuggle tons of drugs which include cocaine, heroin, cannabis, LSD, ecstasy, methamphetamine. Some of these narcotics have their own GI like cocaine is found in latin america, mostly in Colombia, Peru, Bolivia and Chile. Mexico is one of the biggest cannabis producing countries, hence the name ‘marijuana’. Afghanistan[4] is the largets producer of opium in the world with more than 90% share in illicit opium growth. One of the worst affected countries are the United States, Mexico, Brazil and Colombia. In 2006, the then Mexican President Felipe Calderon declared an all out war on drugs. In any country, drug trafficking attracts one of the most stringent punishments. The reason behind this is of all the organised crime activities, drug trafficking has caused greater harm than any other illicit business. Not only it kills people from its drugs but also various innocent people become victims of violence and bloodshed caused by drug cartels. We can surely estimate the level of violence from the fact that the above mentioned countries are one of the most dangerous countries in the world.

https://blog.ipleaders.in/top-profitable-lucrative-business-world/

I thought the most profitable crime was counterfeiting, it used to be.

Keep in mind the comparison wasn't illegal weapons, it was weapons period.
 
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