U.S. overseas defense sales reached the second-highest end-of-year figure in Pentagon history after $46.6 billion worth of hardware was sold in fiscal year 2015, with military officials citing the wars against the Islamic State militant group as the driving force behind the significant increase. Despite the good news for the country’s aerospace and defense sector, which had seen a dip in U.S. arms acquisition at home since the end of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars in late 2011 and 2014, respectively, overseas sales were expected to drop in 2016 due to the general correlation between OPEC oil prices and military spending abroad, according to a Defense News report Sunday.

While this year’s figure is nowhere near the 2012 total of $65 billion, military officials see 2015 as a more honest representation of the state of the defense industry. In 2012, defense sales were on track to come in at a low $25 billion until Saudi Arabia spent nearly $30 billion on Boeing F-15s and Japan spent $10 billion on Lockheed Martin’s F-35 Joint Strike Fighters.

Vice Adm. Joseph Rixey, head of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency, a government department that brokers U.S. defense deals overseas, said sales for this year were unexpectedly above the $34.2 billion in sales in 2014 and $27.8 billion in 2013.

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