RT Article T1 Russia and the illicit arms trade JF Crime, law and social change VO 33 IS 1/2 SP 85 OP 104 A1 Berryman, John LA English YR 2000 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1883016851 AB Since the disintegration of the Soviet military industrial complex, the prospect of conventional arms and nuclear, chemical and biological weapons of mass destruction and their ingredients finding their way from Russia into other hands has become a matter of concern for both the Russian Federation and the international community. This article explores the scale, forms and consequences of illicit transfers of conventional arms and weapons of mass destruction and their ingredients from the Russian Federation into the international community. Russian military and security forces seem to have been the main sources of a wide range of illicit conventional arms, whether as a consequence of the participation of Russian armed forces in regional conflicts or as a consequence of the sale of equipment by corrupt officers, the covert commercial export by Russian arms manufacturers being largely confined to small arms and light weapons. The illegal diversion of nuclear, chemical and biological materials from the Russian Federation seems to have been less than was at one time feared but Western cooperation with the Russian Federation to reinforce existing nonproliferation regimes remains a high priority. K1 Biological Weapon K1 Consequence Ofthe K1 International Relation K1 Mass Destruction K1 Russian Federation DO 10.1023/A:1008342202865