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Politics

How European gunmakers swamp the US firearms market

Michael Knigge Washington
March 14, 2018

While Europeans decry America's gun obsession, European gunmakers have no qualms about selling firearms that are tightly regulated at home to the US. It comes as no surprise to discover where those guns pop up.

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A man showing a woman how to use a gun in a store in Florida
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo/L. Sladky

What links some of the deadliest massacres in US history?

That they were carried out with guns imported from Europe or produced by European-owned companies in the US.        

The gun used in the June 2016 mass shooting in a gay nightclub in Orlando that left 49 people dead — at the time the worst massacre in US history — was a Sig Sauer MCX rifle. SigSauer is owned by Germany's Lüke and Ortmeier Holding Gruppe.

Assault-type weapons like these are either banned or heavily regulated in Germany where they can only be purchased with a special license.

Guns by Austrian arms maker Glock and Germany's Sig Sauer were used in the December 2012 massacre in a Newtown, Connecticut elementary school that left 28 people dead — until the recent shooting in Parkland, Florida, the worst high school shooting in US history.

The US gun problem

A Glock gun was also used in the shooting spree inside a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado in July 2012 in which 11 people were killed.

A semiautomatic weapon by the Austrian gun producer again featured in the January 2011 massacre in Tucson, Arizona, in which six people were killed and Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords was seriously injured.

Guns by Italian manufacturer Beretta were used in the April 2009 shooting in an immigration services center that left 14 people dead in Binghamton, New York.

A German Walther and an Austrian Glock gun were used in the June 2007 rampage at Virginia Tech University that left 33 people dead — also at the time the worst mass shooting in US history.

Read more8 facts about gun control in the US

A Sig Sauer high-powered rifle
A Sig Sauer rifle on display at a US gun showImage: imago/UPI Photo

European guns swamp US market

All guns used in these mass shootings were bought legally in the US.

This list of European guns featuring in US massacres is not exhaustive, just exemplary.

European gun-makers have doubled their exports into the US civilian market between 2010 and 2016, according to US government data compiled for DW by small arms trade expert Nicholas Marsh of the Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO).

In 2010, European-origin guns accounted for two million of the estimated eight million US civilian gun market.

In 2016, European-origin guns accounted for four million of an estimated 16 million US civilian gun market.

It shows that European gun-makers have kept pace with the market and ratcheted up their sales to Americans accordingly.

While European gun-makers have doubled their exports into the US firearms market in less than a decade in part by marketing guns that are banned or regulated in their home countries to Americans, there has been little public knowledge or discussion about the role of European firearms in America's gun violence epidemic. "There is no debate about this in Europe really," said Marsh. Similarly, the significant role of European guns has also not featured in the US debate about gun violence.     

How Germany handles guns

One in every four guns of European origin

As a consequence, European gun-makers defended their share of the US gun market between 2010 and 2016, according to PRIO researcher Marsh's analysis of data from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF).

"It was 25.7 percent then and it is 25.7 percent now," he said, which means that then as now one out of every four guns in the US is of European-origin — with the key difference that the sheer number of European guns has doubled from two to four million.

The largest European player in the US market is Austria with more than 1.3 million guns exported in 2016 compared to 434,374 in 2010. Austria's gun share stems almost entirely from Glock handguns, which are some of the best-selling firearms in the US.

Croatia comes in second, shipping 574,486 handguns to the US in 2016 compared to 239,021 in 2010, all from one company called HS Produkt.

What is interesting about HS Produkt, said Marsh, is that the firm's entire business strategy revolves around marketing guns to Americans. "The US market is basically what this company is selling into," he said. "So you have a company in Croatia which basically spends its time supplying the US market."

Germany, which exported 473,278 guns to the US in 2016 compared with 266,688 in 2010, ranks third among European countries selling into the US civilian market, ahead of Italy and the Czech Republic, with sales of more than 300,000 and 100,000 guns, respectively. 

Read moreGerman weapons firms find lucrative market in United States

But it isn't just Austria, Croatia, Germany or the Czech Republic that flood the US with weapons. More than a dozen other European countries also shipped tens of thousands of guns into the US, among them Belgium (85,039), Finland (56,619), Spain (30,524) and the UK (10,061).

Infographic showing European-made firearms exports to the US

Read moreEuropean arms, money fuel US gun addiction

Lobbying the NRA

European gun-manufacturers are not just swamping the US market with guns. Just like their US counterparts, they are also major donors to the National Rifle Association (NRA), the powerful US gun lobby.

A study by the Violence Policy Center (VPC), a Washington-based gun control group, found that European gun makers gave the NRA at least $2.175 million (€1.764 million) in 2012.

More current data on donations from firearms companies is "very hard to come by," said VPC Executive Director Josh Sugarmann, as the organization is not publishing this information.

Sugarmann said its reluctance to disclose corporate donors is not surprising since this would show that the NRA has evolved from a gun owner's organization into a lobby for the gun industry.

"So when the NRA opposes a specific piece of legislation it is not just about stopping gun control, the real issue is how does it affect the industry and gun sales," he said. "If you add three more years to where a potential customer can't buy that assault rifle, as is currently being discussed, that's very very significant to the industry."

The NRA headquarters in Fairfax
European gun makers are staunch supporters of the NRAImage: picture alliance/dpa/J. Schmitt-Tegge

While complete current figures of European gun-makers' financial support for the NRA are not available, some notable efforts to support the NRA are.

To celebrate Austrian gun maker Glock's 30th anniversary in the US in 2016, its US subsidiary donated $115,000 and 30 pistols to the NRA.

German-owned Sig Sauer currently sponsors a format called "Empower the People," a series on the NRA's TV branch, NRA-TV, designed to show "just how relevant and effective advanced training can be for normal gun owners." Appropriately, the series is set at Sig Sauer Academy in New Hampshire.

Sugarmann says it's little wonder that European gun-makers are flooding the US market. "For the world, we are the last great legal gun market.  That's where companies can dump their guns."

European hypocrisy

But what Sugarmann takes issue with is the stance of European governments.  

"I think it is hypocritical for foreign governments that have moved to pass restrictive gun laws to protect their citizens to allow the export of these weapons to the US," he said.

Sugarmann believes that Europeans would put pressure on their governments and European gun-makers if Europe's role in gun violence in the US was more widely known.           

"I do think if there was more focus on the role these companies play, the fact that they can ship guns to the US that are banned in their own country, that are then used in massacres, I think people would be outraged," he said. "And I think, to be honest, they would also have some feeling of moral responsibility."

Austria's Glock, Germany's Sig Sauer and Italy's Beretta did not respond to DW's requests for comment.