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Military stats: South Africa vs United Kingdom

  South African Military stats

  British Military stats

Air force personnel 11,140 52,540
Ranked 30th. Ranked 9th. 4 times more than South Africa
Armed forces growth -40 -36
Ranked 112nd. Ranked 106th.
Armed forces personnel 63,000 212,000
Ranked 55th. Ranked 23rd. 2 times more than South Africa
Army personnel 54,300 113,900
Ranked 31st. Ranked 21st. 110% more than South Africa
Branches South African National Defense Force (SANDF): South African Army, South African Navy (SAN), South African Air Force (SAAF), Joint Operations Command, Military Intelligence, Military Health Services Army, Royal Navy (includes Royal Marines), Royal Air Force
Conscription No conscription. No conscription (WRI).
Conventional arms exports $35,000,000.00 $985,000,000.00
Ranked 24th. Ranked 4th. 27 times more than South Africa
Conventional arms imports $8,000,000.00 $171,000,000.00
Ranked 75th. Ranked 30th. 20 times more than South Africa
Expenditures > Dollar figure $2,653,400,000.00 $42,836,500,000.00
Ranked 25th in 2003. Ranked 3rd in 2003. 15 times more than South Africa
Expenditures > Dollar figure (per capita) $57.89 per capita $718.95 per capita
Ranked 37th in 2003. Ranked 7th in 2003. 11 times more than South Africa
Expenditures > Dollar figure (per $ GDP) $15.92 per 1,000 $ of GDP $23.72 per 1,000 $ of GDP
Ranked 55th in 2003. Ranked 34th in 2003. 49% more than South Africa
expenditure > % of GDP 1.4 % 2.6 %
Ranked 69th in 2005. Ranked 26th in 2005. 82% more than South Africa
Manpower > Availability > Males age 15-49 11,865,300 14,877,700
Ranked 27th. Ranked 20th. 25% more than South Africa
Navy personnel 8,000 44,500
Ranked 31st. Ranked 10th. 5 times more than South Africa
personnel 56,000 217,000
Ranked 68th in 2005. Ranked 28th in 2005. 3 times more than South Africa
Service age and obligation 18 years of age for voluntary military service 16 years of age for voluntary military service
WMD > Nuclear In the 1960s, South Africa began to explore the technical utility of "peaceful nuclear explosions" for mining and engineering purposes. In 1973, then Prime Minister Johannes Vorster approved a program to develop a limited nuclear deterrent capability. Ultimately, South Africa manufactured six air-deliverable nuclear weapons of the "gun-type" design. In parallel with decisions to end apartheid, the government halted the bomb program in 1989 and dismantled existing weapons and associated production equipment. South Africa acceded to the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) as a non-nuclear weapon state in 1991, and International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors subsequently verified the completeness of its nuclear dismantlement. South Africa joined the Zangger Committee in 1994 and the Nuclear Suppliers Group in 1995. South Africa was instrumental in winning indefinite extension of the NPT in 1995, and played a leading role in successful conclusion of the 2000 NPT Review Conference as a member of the "New Agenda Coalition" that also included Brazil, Egypt, Ireland, Mexico, New Zealand, and Sweden. More recently, South Africa began working more closely with the IAEA in 2004, in order to monitor international smuggling of nuclear weapons materials, after investigations of a South African businessman exposed connections to the A.Q. Khan network. In 2004, there was also ample discussion concerning South Africa’s dwindling coal reserves and its need for additional nuclear power generation. 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.
World War II Fatalities 9,000 388,000
Ranked 24th. Ranked 13th. 42 times more than South Africa

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