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Military stats: Brazil vs United Kingdom

  Brazilian Military stats

  British Military stats

Air force personnel 50,000 52,540
Ranked 11th. Ranked 9th. 5% more than Brazil
Armed forces growth 4 -36
Ranked 65th. Ranked 106th.
Armed forces personnel 288,000 212,000
Ranked 18th. 36% more than United Kingdom Ranked 23rd.
Army personnel 195,000 113,900
Ranked 13th. 71% more than United Kingdom Ranked 21st.
Branches Brazilian Army, Brazilian Navy (Marinha do Brasil (MB), includes Naval Air and Marine Corps (Corpo de Fuzileiros Navais)), Brazilian Air Force (Forca Aerea Brasileira, FAB) Army, Royal Navy (includes Royal Marines), Royal Air Force
Conscription Conscription exists. No conscription (WRI).
Conventional arms exports $100,000,000.00 $985,000,000.00
Ranked 14th. Ranked 4th. 9 times more than Brazil
Conventional arms imports $38,000,000.00 $171,000,000.00
Ranked 49th. Ranked 30th. 4 times more than Brazil
Expenditures > Dollar figure $10,439,400,000.00 $42,836,500,000.00
Ranked 11th in 2003. Ranked 3rd in 2003. 3 times more than Brazil
Expenditures > Dollar figure (per capita) $57.55 per capita $718.95 per capita
Ranked 38th in 2003. Ranked 7th in 2003. 11 times more than Brazil
Expenditures > Dollar figure (per $ GDP) $18.90 per 1,000 $ of GDP $23.72 per 1,000 $ of GDP
Ranked 45th in 2003. Ranked 34th in 2003. 26% more than Brazil
expenditure > % of GDP 1.6 % 2.6 %
Ranked 60th in 2005. Ranked 26th in 2005. 65% more than Brazil
Manpower > Availability > Males age 15-49 51,381,000 14,877,700
Ranked 5th. 2 times more than United Kingdom Ranked 20th.
Navy personnel 68,250 44,500
Ranked 2nd. 53% more than United Kingdom Ranked 10th.
personnel 673,000 217,000
Ranked 9th in 2005. 2 times more than United Kingdom Ranked 28th in 2005.
WMD > Missile Brazil curtailed the military potential of its space launch vehicle (SLV) program in the early 1990s and joined the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR). Previously, however, military control over the SLV program and an ambitious export program of short-range rockets had raised concerns that Brazil might develop ballistic missiles and supply other countries with them. The United Kingdom's sole nuclear deterrent is based on four new Vanguard-class submarines, each outfitted to carry 16 U.S.-supplied Trident II sea-launched ballistic missiles (SLBM) and 48 warheads. Britain shares a pool of missiles with the United States at the Strategic Weapons Facility Atlantic, Kings Bay Submarine Base, Georgia. The Royal Navy retrieves missiles from the U.S. storage area and places warheads on the missiles onboard. Missiles are serviced by the United States. Although Britain has title to 58 SLBMs, it technically does not own them. The nuclear role of Britain's Tornado aircraft was terminated in 1998, bringing to an end a four-decade history of Royal Air Force aircraft carrying nuclear weapons. In 2004, British and U.S. officials conducted negotiations concerning the development of new "mini-nukes" to replace Britain's aging Trident system, a politically sensitive subject in the country.
WMD > Nuclear From the 1960s to the early 1990s, Brazil pursued an ambitious program of nuclear energy and technological development, which included construction of an unsafeguarded uranium enrichment facility under Navy direction. However, Brazil has since disavowed nuclear weapons, become a State Party to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), and, with Argentina, established a bilateral inspection agency to verify both countries' pledges to use atomic energy only for peaceful purposes. Brazil mines uranium, which is shipped to foreign countries for conversion and enrichment, and returned to Brazil, where it is fabricated in Resende into fuel for its two nuclear power reactors. When completed, a uranium enrichment plant under construction at Resende will allow the country to make its own low-enriched uranium fuel for its nuclear power industry. As of mid-2005, the government of Brazil was considering the possibility of signing an Additional Protocol with the IAEA and was planning to release a comprehensive report on the future of the country's nuclear program. The United Kingdom is a nuclear weapon state party to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). The UK's current stockpile is thought to consist of less than 200 strategic and "sub-strategic" warheads on Vanguard-class nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines (SSBN). The Strategic Defense Review of July 1998 called for major changes in the United Kingdom's nuclear weapons program. Air-delivered weapons were removed from service, leaving the SSBNs as the United Kingdom's only nuclear deterrent. The Review mandated that only one submarine be on patrol at a time, with its missiles detargeted and with a reduced number of warheads (maximum of 48). On May 1, 2004, the Nuclear Safeguards Act went into effect in the United Kingdom, providing necessary legislation for the enforcement of the "additional protocol" designed to provide greater protection against nuclear non-proliferation. This protocol built on existing nuclear safeguards agreements with the IAEA. The United Kingdom ratified the NPT in November 1968 and the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty in June 1998.
WMD > Overview Brazil has abjured nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons, and curtailed its ballistic missile program in the early 1990s. From the 1970s to the early 1990s, however, Brazil’s nuclear program aroused concern that the country was seeking to develop nuclear weapons. The international community—and Washington in particular—raised additional concerns that technology from Brazil’s space launch vehicle (SLV) program would be used for production of ballistic missiles. Brasilia is now a member of all key international nonproliferation regimes. The United Kingdom is party to all major nonproliferation treaties and is a member of all major international export control regimes. The British government has made substantial reductions in its nuclear forces, partly due to changes in response to its July 1998 Strategic Defence Review. Though it once possessed biological and chemical warfare programs, London ended both programs in the mid-50s. Its limited missile program is now composed entirely of sea-launched missiles.

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