The battle for the Middle Eastern arms market is heating up
Chinese, Russian and local companies want to conquer market share from Western defence giants

THE FLOW of foreign arms to the Arabian peninsula began in earnest 150 years ago. As European armies adopted modern breech-loading rifles, a stock of old-fashioned weapons was left surplus to requirements. Rivalries among Arab tribes created a ready-made market for ageing arms. A combination of the region’s chronic instability and oil riches has since continued to fuel weapons sales. Most of them still come from the West. Now the shifting sands of geopolitics have left an opening for others.
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “From muskets to missiles”
Business
February 15th 2020- The battle for the Middle Eastern arms market is heating up
- Burger King’s owner tries to regain its sizzle
- Admen have a clever new way to trick sports fans
- Elliott Management guns for SoftBank
- Youngsters’ job preferences and prospects are mismatched
- Chinese management schools are thriving
- American state capitalism will not beat China at 5G

From the February 15th 2020 edition
Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents
Explore the edition
Linda Yaccarino goes from X CEO to ex-CEO
The top position at Elon Musk’s social-media platform is open once again

Does working from home kill company culture?
Our analysis suggests it depends on what sort of culture bosses want

On Lego, love and friendship
Human relations are a useful way to think about brands
Jeff Bezos 2.0: new wife, newish job, old vision
The Amazon founder’s semi-retirement plan
Would you pay $19 for a strawberry?
The rise of luxury fruit
Kim Kardashian, Ryan Reynolds and the age of the celebrity brand
Stars are using their fame to build thriving businesses