FACTOID # 182: China loses 2 million people per year.
 
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Military stats: Cuba vs United States

  Cuban Military stats

  American Military stats

Armed forces growth -64 -37
Ranked 125th. Ranked 108th.
Armed forces personnel 58,000 1,366,000
Ranked 60th. Ranked 3rd. 23 times more than Cuba
Arms imports > constant 1990 US$ 96,000,000 constant 1990 US$ 246,000,000 constant 1990 US$
Ranked 41st in 1991. Ranked 25th in 1991. 156% more than Cuba
Branches Revolutionary Armed Forces (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias, FAR): Revolutionary Army (ER; includes Territorial Militia Troops, MTT), Revolutionary Navy (Marina de Guerra Revolucionaria, MGR; includes Marine Corps), Revolutionary Air and Air Defense Force (DAAFAR), Youth Labor Army (EJT) US Army, US Navy (includes Marine Corps), US Air Force, US Coast Guard; note - Coast Guard administered in peacetime by the Department of Homeland Security, but in wartime reports to the Department of the Navy
Conscription Conscription exists (AI and NISBCO). No conscription.
Manpower > Availability > Females 3,024,876 71,638,785
Ranked 62nd in 2008. Ranked 3rd in 2008. 23 times more than Cuba
Manpower > Availability > Males 3,094,388 72,715,332
Ranked 66th in 2008. Ranked 3rd in 2008. 23 times more than Cuba
Manpower > Availability > Males age 15-49 3,134,622 73,597,731
Ranked 66th in 2004. Ranked 3rd in 2004. 22 times more than Cuba
Manpower > Availability > Males age 15-49 3,120,700 73,597,700
Ranked 66th. Ranked 3rd. 23 times more than Cuba
Manpower > Military age 17 years of age 18 years of age
Manpower > Reaching military age annually > Males 79,945 2,186,440
Ranked 86th in 2008. Ranked 3rd in 2008. 26 times more than Cuba
personnel 76,000 1,546,000
Ranked 62nd in 2005. Ranked 3rd in 2005. 19 times more than Cuba
personnel > % of total labor force 1.41 % 0.99 %
Ranked 56th in 2005. 42% more than United States Ranked 84th in 2005.
Service age and obligation 17-28 years of age for compulsory military service; 2-year service obligation; both sexes subject to military service 18 years of age; 17 years of age with written parental consent
Tanks 420 tanks 16,000 tanks
Ranked 21st. Ranked 2nd. 37 times more than Cuba
Weapon holdings 2,490,000 38,538,000
Ranked 33rd. Ranked 1st. 14 times more than Cuba
WMD > Overview Fidel Castro spearheaded Cuba's communist revolution by leading a rebel army to victory in 1959. Relations between Washington and Havana deteriorated rapidly; the United States imposed an embargo on Cuba in October 1960 (which is still in effect today) and broke diplomatic relations in January 1961. Taking advantage of Cuba's fear of U.S. armed aggression against the island, the Soviets persuaded Cuba into adopting closer economic and political ties, including military and defense arrangements; later that year, Castro formally embraced Marxism. Tensions between the United States and Cuba peaked during the October 1962 missile crisis. Under Castro, Cuba became a highly militarized society. Massive Soviet military assistance enabled Cuba to upgrade its military capabilities and expand its military presence abroad, spending millions of dollars in exporting revolutions, most visibly in Angola, Ethiopia, and Nicaragua. Cuba's support for these guerrilla movements, its Marxist-Leninist government, and its alignment with the USSR led to its isolation in the hemisphere. Cuba does not possess nuclear weapons, and there are no credible reports of Cuban efforts to acquire nuclear weapons. In 2002, Cuba acceded to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), ratified the Treaty for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean (Treaty of Tlatelolco), and has an Additional Protocol with the IAEA. Cuba is not reported to possess chemical weapons (it acceded to the Chemical Weapons Convention [CWC] in 1993), nor are there credible reports of Cuban possession of long-range ballistic missiles. Cuba is generally regarded as having a program of research on biological warfare (BW) agents, though the scope and focus of this effort remains obscure and controversial. Numerous US administrations have claimed that Cuba possesses a limited offensive biological weapons program and has provided dual-use biotechnology to other nations—suspicions that stem from Cuba's possession of one of the most advanced biomedical industries in Latin America and its large-scale production of pharmaceuticals and vaccines. Cuba has been a member of the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention (BTWC) since 1976. In 1990, Cuba's Air Force, with about 150 Soviet-supplied fighters, including advanced MiG-23 Floggers and MiG-29 Fulcrums, was probably the best equipped in Latin America. In 1994, Cuba's armed forces were estimated to have 235,000 active duty personnel. Cuban military power has been sharply reduced by the loss of Soviet subsidies. By 1999, the Revolutionary Armed Forces numbered about 60,000 regular troops. The United States possesses a substantial nuclear weapons arsenal and associated delivery systems. The 2001 Nuclear Posture Review suggests that the United States may seek to develop, and possibly test, new types of nuclear weapons in the future. The United States destroyed its biological weapons by 1970 and is in the process of destroying its stockpile of chemical weapons. Some critics allege that elements of U.S. government biodefense research are in violation of the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention (BWC).

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