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China now world’s third-biggest arms exporter

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Institute: China now world’s third-biggest arms exporter

Global share:

USA: 31%
Russia: 27%
China: 5%
Germany: 5%
France: 5%

BEIJING — China has overtaken Germany to become the world’s third-biggest arms exporter, although its 5 percent of the market remains small compared to the combined 58 percent of exports from the U.S. and Russia, a new study says.

China’s share of the global arms market rose 143 percent during the years from 2010-2014, a period during which the total volume of global arms transfers rose by 16 percent over the previous five years, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute said in a report released Monday.

Its share of the world market was up from 3 percent in the 2009-2014 period, when China was ranked ninth among exporters of warplanes, ships, side arms and other weaponry, said the institute, known as SIPRI.

The data show the growing strength of China’s domestic arms industry, now producing fourth-generation fighter jets, navy frigates and a wide-range of relatively cheap, simple and reliable smaller weapons used in conflicts around the globe.

China had long been a major importer of weapons, mainly from Russia and Ukraine, but its soaring economy and the copying of foreign technology has largely reversed the trend, except for the most cutting-edge designs and sophisticated parts such as aircraft engines.

China supplies weapons to 35 countries, led by Pakistan, Bangladesh and Myanmar, SIPRI said.

Chinese sales included those of armored vehicles and transport and trainer aircraft to Venezuela, three frigates to Algeria, anti-ship missiles to Indonesia and unmanned combat aerial vehicles, or drones, to Nigeria, which is battling the Boko Haram insurgency in its north.

China’s comparative advantages include its low prices, easy financing and friendliness toward authoritarian governments, said Philip Saunders, director of the Center for the Study of Chinese Military Affairs at the U.S. National Defense University.

“Generally speaking, China offers medium quality weapons systems at affordable prices, a combination attractive to cash-strapped militaries in South Asia, Africa and Latin America,” Saunders said.

Notable successes include a co-production deal with Pakistan to produce the JF-17 fighter, widespread sales of the basic but effective C-802 anti-ship cruise missile, and an agreement to sell the HQ-9 air defense missile system to Turkey that has run into controversy over its incompatibility with NATO weapons systems.

China also has exploited niche markets such as North Korea and Iran that the West won’t sell to, emphasizing its attractiveness to impoverished countries and pariah states, said Ian Easton, research fellow at The Project 2049 Institute, an Arlington, Virginia-based Asian security think tank.

Both those U.S. foes appear to have received satellite jamming and cyber warfare capabilities from China, along with technologies to break into private communications and spy on government opponents, Easton said.

“All of these sales should be very disconcerting to American policymakers and military leaders,” he said, calling China’s rise to the third-place spot among exporters a “disturbing development” that could threaten the security of the U.S. and its allies.

China also offers leading-edge drone technology at competitive prices. One model, known variously as the Yilong, Wing Loong or Pterodactyl, has become especially popular with foreign buyers, although Chinese secrecy surrounding such sales makes it difficult to know how many are in service and where.

Chinese state broadcaster CCTV quoted retired People’s Liberation Army Gen. Xu Guangyu saying at an air show two years ago that the unmanned aircraft, which can be armed with two guided missiles, would cost only about $1 million each. That is about 10 to 20 percent of the price of a comparable U.S. model such as the MQ-1 Predator. Rumored buyers include the United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan and Saudi Arabia.

However, China’s incremental growth and the yawning gap with industry leaders America and Russia show the limitations of its aspirations.

The U.S. retained a 31 percent share of the global arms market, exporting to at least 94 recipients, SIPRI said. Countries in Asia and Oceania took 48 percent of U.S. exports, followed by the Middle East with 32 percent and Europe at 11 percent, it said.
 
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I'm surprised Canada hasn't taken a step into the military aviation industry, especially with the aerospace behemoth Bombardier leading our civilian aerospace industry.
 
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USA and Russia have almost 60% market share that's impressive.
Most of the buyers are Gulf nations who would buy whatever crap the US offers them. Others are NATO members who will have to buy US weapons because it's "NATO compatible".
 
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China Overtakes Germany as World’s Third-Largest Arms Exporter

China has overtaken Germany as the world’s third-largest arms exporter and cut its dependence on imports by producing more-sophisticated weapons, according to a new report.

State-owned defense suppliers, such as Norinco Group, have become prominent at arms fairs, opening new markets beyond established customers in South Asia by, for example, selling armed drones to Nigeria in its battle against Boko Haram rebels.

U.S. and allied military chiefs and lawmakers have expressed concern about China’s fast-growing military capabilities and territorial claims in the Pacific, but its role as an exporter has garnered less attention.

China’s arms exports rose 143% between the five-year period ended in 2009 and the five-year period ended in 2014, according to the annual report on weapons transfers from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, which is closely watched by policy makers and defense contractors.

China represents just 5% of a global export market valued at more than $300 billion a year. That’s far behind the 31% secured by the U.S. and 27% by Russia in the 2010-2014 period. Still, China’s share has more than doubled over the past decade.

“The equipment you get nowadays from China is much better than 10-15 years ago,” said Siemon Wezeman, a senior researcher at the institute. Customers who used to buy Western or Russian equipment can now turn to China and often secure weapons of similar quality at far lower costs, he said.

A proposed $3.4 billion deal to sell a missile-defense system to Turkey, while not finalized, shows how Chinese arms makers are winning business outside their traditional markets, as well as from countries shunned by Western rivals.

Pakistan, Bangladesh and Myanmar accounted for two-thirds of China’s exports. Africa has become a key market, with the institute identifying sales by China to 18 countries on the continent.

Chinese arms makers are increasingly attending global arms fairs to showcase their weapons, including participating last month at the Idex exhibition in Abu Dhabi. State-owned Chinese firms marketed a range of weapons including the advanced FD-2000 air and missile defense system, designed to shoot down aircraft at a range of up to 125 kilometers, or about 80 miles, and the Wing Loong armed drone that closely resembles the General Atomics Reaper unmanned aircraft used by U.S. forces in Afghanistan and Iraq.

While Pentagon leaders fret about the more advanced long-range missiles and other weapons being fielded by China in the Pacific, their potential proliferation is also becoming an issue.

“One of the concerns about China is not just that they are modernizing—we don’t anticipate a conflict with China, certainly—but [that] they export,” Frank Kendall, the Pentagon’s chief weapons’ buyer, told Congress last year.

The Chinese Foreign Ministry has said that Beijing is “prudent and responsible” when it comes to exports and abides by its international obligations.

The rise in its domestic arms industry also is leading China to slip in the ranking of weapons importers. The country was the top arms importer in the 2005 to 2009 period, and now has fallen to third, according to the Stockholm Institute’s study. The level of imports fell 42% during the period.

Germany continued to slip in the global ranking of exporters. Economics Minister Sigmar Gabriel, of the center-left Social Democrats, has become reluctant to approve some deals.

The country’s arms exports have slipped 43% in the five years ended 2014 compared with the 2005 to 2009 period, the institute said. Arms makers such as Rheinmetall AG have struggled amid more restrictive export policies.

Saudi Arabia is among the markets where Germany is reluctant to sell weapons, and Sweden last week ended a military cooperation deal with the Mideast kingdom. Still, Saudi Arabia has risen to be the second biggest importer of arms, trailing only India, and is likely to remain at that high level for some time, Mr. Wezeman said. The U.K. and U.S. are the largest provider of arms to Saudi Arabia, including such systems as the European Typhoon combat jet and the Boeing Co. F-15 fighter plane.

China Overtakes Germany as World’s Third-Largest Arms Exporter - WSJ
 
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Most of the buyers are Gulf nations who would buy whatever crap the US offers them. Others are NATO members who will have to buy US weapons because it's "NATO compatible".

those stuff you called craps is out of your country reach
 
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23:39 16.03.2015(updated 08:19 17.03.2015)
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Experts say that China should only be placed 10th in the global arms exports rating in spite of the increasing weapons exports.

MOSCOW (Sputnik) — There is definitely some evidence that China is increasing its weapons exports, but the pace should not be exaggerated, experts told Sputnik on Monday.

“China is increasing its resources, but they should not be exaggerated,” Russian Defense Ministry public council member Igor Korotchenko said.

On March 16, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) published a report, saying that between 2005–2009 and 2010–2014 Chinese exports of major arms increased by 143 per cent, making it the third largest supplier in 2010–14, however still significantly behind the United States and Russia.

Meanwhile, former deputy secretary of the Arms control and reduction Commission Zhai Dequan said that it is too early to say if China has become the third leading arms exporter in the world.

"There is as yet not enough evidence to say that China has become the third largest arms exporter, but given the economic growth and technological progress military exports may increase," Zhai Dequan told Sputnik.

According to Korotchenko, China should only be placed 10th in the global arms exports rating, accounting for 2.4 percent of the total volume of arms exports worldwide.

Korotchenko explained that SIPRI’s methodology is based on the so-called “trend indicator,” exaggerating the data for countries, who supply cheaper arms, and lowering the data for countries exporting expensive arms, such as the United States.

SIPRI’s data reflects the volume of deliveries of arms, not the financial value of the deals. Its database on arms transfer contains information on all international transfers of major conventional weapons, including sales, gifts and production licenses, to states, international organizations and armed non-state groups.

Read more: Too Early to Place China Among World’s Leading Arms Exporters - Experts / Sputnik International
 
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23:39 16.03.2015(updated 08:19 17.03.2015)
72321
Experts say that China should only be placed 10th in the global arms exports rating in spite of the increasing weapons exports.

Read more: Too Early to Place China Among World’s Leading Arms Exporters - Experts / Sputnik International
Actually,most Chinese don't care the ranking is third,forth or tenth.From our education,the number one is good,the else are the same.So,you can see some Chinese athletes feel sad or even cry bitterly when they only get a silver medal in Olympics.

In my eyes,China is still behind the starting line.It's only the first two step that we introduce foreign technologies and produce some "improved" kinds of local military products.There is a long run for Chinese innovation.
 
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Actually,most Chinese don't care the ranking is third,forth or tenth.From our education,the number one is good,the else is same.So,you can see some Chinese athletes feel sad or even cry bitterly when they only get a silver medal in Olympics.

In my eyes,China is still behind the starting line.It's only the first two step that we introduce foreign technologies and produce some "improved" kinds of local military products.There is a long run for Chinese innovation.

really? I think it's not too bad for a bronze medal for the first time.
 
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Pakistan along with other Muslim countries should be doing JV and R&D together so that they can produce their products and export it as well.
 
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really? I think it's not too bad for a silver medal for the first time.
Yeah,not bad means just so-so in our language.
This news broadcast and disappear soon in Chinese medias.Few people care about that.(595 comments)
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What Chinese public opinion care most these time is that Burma fighters killed four Chinese people living on the frontiers.(only one little title,4538 comments)
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