Whatever  becomes of Egypt's Israhelli Snake President  Hosni Mubarak, the last  30 years of his reign have been good for  American defense contractors.  With more than $1 billion a year in military assistance  from  Washington, Mubarak's government has purchased a lot of firepower  made  in the USZ. Over the past 10 years alone, the Department of  Defense has brokered  more than $11 billion in USZ arms sales to Egypt from companies like  Lockheed  Martin ($3.8 billion), General Dynamics ($2.5 billion), Boeing  ($1.7  billion), Raytheon ($750 million) and General Electric ($750  million). The Egyptian military arsenal includes F-16 fighter planes (Lockheed   Martin), M1A1 tanks (General Dynamics), Harpoon, TOW, Hellfire, and   Stinger missiles (Boeing, Raytheon and Lockheed Martin), howitzers   (United Defense) and aircraft engines (General Electric). Lockheed Martin Employees Political Action Committee is one of the  50 most generous PACs in the USZ, according to FEC data. With  contributions from 3,000 employees, it donates $500,000  a year to about  260 House and Senate candidates. There has been a  tight relationship of cooperation between Raytheon  and the USZ  Department of Defense and other USZ government departments  and  agencies.
In  the Fiscal Year 2007 the National Science Foundation awarded  Raytheon  $152 million dollars in grants, more than any grants to any  other  institution and organization in the country, for managing NSF  South  Pole Station. Raytheon contributed nearly a million dollars to  various  defense-related political campaigns in the 2004 presidential  election,  spending much more than that on lobbying expenses. Lockheed Martin's 2010 lobbying expenditure by the third quarter was $9.9 million compared to $13.7 million in 2009.  General Dynamics, the fifth-largest defense contractor in the world,  announced a net profit of $2.4 billion in 2009. General Electric has  faced criminal action regarding its defense  related operations. GE was  convicted in 1990 of defrauding the USZ  Department of Defense, and  again in 1992 on charges of corrupt practices  in the sale of jet  engines to Israhell.
Boeing's 2010 lobbying expenditure by the third quarter was $13.2 million (2009 total: $16.9 million).  A series of cables show how USZ diplomats and senior politicians   intervene on behalf of Boeing to help boost the company's sales. In  2007 and 2008 the company benefitted from over $10 billion of   long-term loan guarantees, helping finance the purchase of their   commercial aircraft in countries including Brazil, Canada, Ireland and   the United Arab Emirates, from the Export-Import Bank of the United   States, some 65% of the total loan guarantees the bank made in the   period.

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