by the numbers

Weapons of mass reduction

The dynamics of the 'peace index' are changing.

The world is still awash in weapons, yet fewer changed hands last year. The Russia-China love-in is over. And a classic arms race is heating up in Latin America.

Arms trade graph

After six consecutive years of increases, there has been an 8% drop in international transfers of major conventional weapons -- battle tanks, armoured combat vehicles, large-calibre artillery systems, combat aircraft, attack helicopters, warships and missiles -- between 2006 and 2007, according to new data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).

With significant new orders for weapon systems inked in the Middle East, South Asia and South East Asia during 2007, it is too early to say the data suggest a new declining trend in arms transfers or just a blip.

TIV of arms exports from the top 5 largest exporters, 2000-2007
#
Supplier
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
Source: SIPRI
TIVs are expressed in US$ m. at constant (1990) prices.
1
USA
7505
5801
4984
5581
6616
7026
7821
7454
2
Russia
4190
5631
5458
5355
6400
5576
6463
4588
3
Germany (FRG)
1622
825
910
1707
1017
1879
2891
3395
4
France
1033
1235
1342
1313
2267
1688
1586
2690
5
UK
1356
1116
772
624
1143
871
978
1151

 

TIV of arms imports from the top 5 largest importers, 2000-2007
#
Receiver
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
Source: SIPRI
1
China
1874
3234
2636
2068
2906
3346
3719
1424
2
India
826
924
1613
2870
2331
1182
1404
1318
3
Greece
651
700
480
2226
1498
540
817
2089
4
UAE
309
182
208
700
1436
2224
2067
1040
5
South Korea
1266
583
336
575
967
661
1527
1807
20
Chile
177
43
63
175
57
403
1034
615
25
Vene-zuela
89
89
47
13
13
27
477
887

Russia and China

A 62% fall in arms imports by China clobbered Russia.  After orders peaked at more than $2 billion a year early in this decade, China's arms deals with Russia shrank to almost nothing in 2006, and no major new contracts are in the pipeline. The table shows that Moscow's arms exports shrank almost the same amount as Beijing's imports.

There are political and technological reasons for the discontinuance of the relationship. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, both countries desperately needed one another. Denied weapons from the West, China became almost totally reliant on Russia to swell its arsenal and was Moscow's main client. Yet Russia's fear of a large neighbour armed to the teeth and China's desire to become more self-reliant, led both sides to re-evaluate this trade. There was also a surge of purchases at the turn of the century, meaning Beijing has less need for replacement weapons now.

Despite the winding down of business with China, Russia retains its position as the world's second-largest arms supplier, behind the United States. The top five suppliers -- the United States, Russia, Germany, France and the UK -- together account for 80% of international arms exports.

Latin America: ravenous?

The importers table shows two Latin American countries that have become ravenous for arms. The argument is usually made that these countries are simply replacing aging materiel, yet Chile and Venezuela's purchases could reflect growing rivalries with neighbours. Chile has a long-standing dispute over Bolivia's access to the Pacific and has clashed with Peru over maritime sovereignty. Venezuela has clashed with Colombia over Caracas's relations with the FARC and is becoming increasingly confrontational over the US role in the region.

The sudden increase in the firepower of these two countries is far beyond that of its neighbours. Venezuela has gone from the 56th biggest importer in the world in 1998-2002 to the 24th. This triggers neighbours' concerns and a classic arms race is heating up.

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