List of defense contractors

Largest Aerospace and Defense Contractors

Company name Sales
(US$ billion)
United States Lockheed Martin 36,270
United States Boeing 31,830
United Kingdom BAE Systems 29,150
United States General Dynamics 23,760
United States Raytheon 22,470
United States Northrop Grumman 21,390
European Union Airbus 16,390
Italy Finmeccanica 14,560
United States L-3 Communications 12,520
United States United Technologies 11,640
France Thales 9,480
United States SAIC 7,940
United States Huntington Ingalls 6,380
United States Honeywell 5,280
France SAFRAN 5,240
United States Computer Sciences 4,860
United Kingdom Rolls-Royce 4,670
Russia United Aircraft 4,440
United States Oshkosh 4,370
United States General Electric 4,100
United States ITT 4,020
Russia Almaz-Antey 3,690

A defense contractor (or security contractor) is a business organization or individual that provides products or services to a military or intelligence department of a government. Products typically include military or civilian aircraft, ships, vehicles, weaponry, and electronic systems. Services can include logistics, technical support and training, communications support, and in some cases team-based engineering in cooperation with the government.

Security contractors do not generally provide direct support of military operations. Under the 1949 Geneva Conventions, military contractors engaged in direct support of military operations may be legitimate targets of military attacks.

Defense contracting has expanded dramatically over the last decade, particularly in the United States, where in the last fiscal year the Department of Defense spent nearly $316 billion on contracts.[1] Contractors have also assumed a much larger on-the-ground presence during recent American conflicts: during the 1991 Gulf War the ratio of uniformed military to contractors was about 50 to 1, while during the first four years of the Iraq War the U.S. hired over 190,000 contractors, surpassing the total American military presence even during the 2007 Iraq surge and 23 times greater than other allied military personnel numbers.[1] In Afghanistan, the presence of almost 100,000 contractors has resulted in a near 1 to 1 ratio with military personnel.[1]

The surge in spending on defense services contractors that began in 2001 came to a halt in 2009 with a new eye on the bottom line, leading to the Better Buying Power initiative of 2010.[2][3]

[nb 1]

  1. N = New to the SIPRI Top 100

Source: http://www.sipri.org/research/armaments/production/Top100 "Arms sales are defined by SIPRI as sales of military goods and services to military customers, including both domestic and export sales. Military goods and services are those [...]designed specifically for military purposes."

See also

References

External links