Trends in International Arms Transfers, 2018: SIPRI Fact Sheet
Trends in International Arms Transfers, 2018: SIPRI Fact Sheet
Trends in International Arms Transfers, 2018: SIPRI Fact Sheet
March 2019
40
w The main recipient region in
Volume of arms transfers
Table 1. The 25 largest exporters of major arms and their main clients, 2014–18
Note: Percentages below 10 are rounded to 1 decimal place; percentages over 10 are rounded to whole numbers.
Per cent
Share of change from Main clients (share of exporter’s total exports, %),
arms exports (%) 2009–13 to 2014–18
Exporter 2014–18 a
2014–18 2009–13 1st 2nd 3rd
1 United States 36 30 29 Saudi Arabia (22) Australia (7.7) UAE (6.7)
2 Russia 21 27 -17 India (27) China (14) Algeria (14)
3 France 6.8 5.1 43 Egypt (28) India (9.8) Saudi Arabia (7.4)
4 Germany 6.4 6.1 13 South Korea (19) Greece (10) Israel (8.3)
5 China 5.2 5.5 2.7 Pakistan (37) Bangladesh (16) Algeria (11)
6 United Kingdom 4.2 4.3 5.9 Saudi Arabia (44) Oman (15) Indonesia (11)
7 Spain 3.2 2.9 20 Australia (42) Turkey (13) Saudi Arabia (8.3)
8 Israel 3.1 2.1 60 India (46) Azerbaijan (17) Viet Nam (8.5)
9 Italy 2.3 2.7 -6.7 Turkey (15) Algeria (9.1) Israel (7.6)
10 Netherlands 2.1 1.9 16 Jordan (15) Indonesia (15) USA (11)
11 South Korea 1.8 1.0 94 Indonesia (17) Iraq (17) UK (15)
12 Ukraine 1.3 2.7 -47 China (27) Russia (23) Thailand (14)
13 Switzerland 1.0 0.9 20 Saudi Arabia (19) China (18) Indonesia (9.3)
14 Turkey 1.0 0.4 170 UAE (30) Turkmenistan (23) Saudi Arabia (10)
15 Sweden 0.7 1.9 -62 Saudi Arabia (16) UAE (14) Algeria (10)
16 Canada 0.6 0.9 -33 Saudi Arabia (22) India (13) UAE (7.6)
17 Norway 0.5 0.6 -12 Oman (28) Finland (23) USA (21)
18 UAE 0.3 0.2 103 Egypt (41) Jordan (10) Yemen (7.6)
19 Czechia 0.3 0.1 472 Iraq (40) USA (17) Viet Nam (9.9)
20 Belarus 0.3 0.5 -26 Viet Nam (37) Sudan (18) Myanmar (12)
21 Australia 0.3 0.3 3.9 USA (53) Indonesia (25) Oman (8.8)
22 South Africa 0.3 0.5 -35 USA (21) UAE (21) India (9.8)
23 Brazil 0.2 0.2 21 Afghanistan (32) Indonesia (25) Lebanon (9.1)
24 Finland 0.2 0.2 -9.1 Poland (56) UK (7.1) Sweden (6.7)
25 Portugalb 0.2 0.0 457 Romania (89) Belgium (7.0) Uruguay (2.7)
Guided missiles accounted for 19 per cent of US major arms exports in
2014–18. These exports included the delivery of 400 cruise missiles and
124 ballistic missiles—both types with a range of between 250 and 400 kilo-
metres. The USA also exported around 36 500 anti-tank missiles and
53 500 guided bombs. As in previous years, in 2014–18 the USA remained the
primary exporter of ballistic missile defence systems (see box 1).
Although the USA is the world’s largest arms exporter and has the capabil-
ity to produce all types of arms, in 2014–18 it was still the 16th largest arms
importer globally. However, its arms imports fell by 47 per cent between
2009–13 and 2014–18.
Russia
Russian exports of major arms decreased by 17 per cent between 2009–13 and
2014–18. The fall was partly due to general reductions in Indian and Vene
zuelan arms imports—two countries that have been among the main recipi-
ents of Russian arms exports in previous years. Although India remained the
chief recipient of Russian arms in 2014–18, Russian arms exports to India fell
by 42 per cent between 2014–18 and 2009–13. Arms exports to Venezuela,
which was the fifth largest recipient of Russian arms in 2009–13, decreased
by 96 per cent between the two periods.
In 2014–18 Russia delivered major arms to 48 states. A total of 55 per cent of
its arms exports went to its three main recipients: India, China and Algeria
(see table 1). At the regional level, states in Asia and Oceania accounted for
60 per cent of Russian arms exports in 2014–18, Africa for 17 per cent, the
Middle East for 16 per cent, Europe for 5.8 per cent and the Americas for
1.4 per cent.
Russian exports of major arms to the Middle East increased by 19 per cent
between 2009–13 and 2014–18. In 2014–18 Egypt and Iraq were the main
recipients of Russian arms exports to the Middle East, accounting, respec-
tively, for 46 and 36 per cent of Russian arms exports to the region. Deliveries
to Iraq increased by 780 per cent between 2009–13 and 2014–18, while those
to Egypt rose by 150 per cent.
trends in international arms tr ansfers, 2018 5
China
Whereas Chinese arms exports rose by 195 per cent between 2004–2008 and
2009–13, they increased by only 2.7 per cent between 2009–13 and 2014–18.
In 2014–18 Asia and Oceania accounted for 70 per cent of Chinese arms
exports, Africa for 20 per cent and the Middle East for 6.1 per cent.
The number of countries to which China delivers major arms has grown
significantly over the past few years. In 2014–18 China delivered major arms
to 53 countries, compared with 41 in 2009–13 and 32 in 2004–2008. Pakistan
was the main recipient (37 per cent) in 2014–18, as it has been for all five-year
periods since 1991. China supplied relatively small volumes of major arms to
a wide variety of countries: 39 of the 53 recipients in 2014–18 each accounted
for less than 1 per cent of total Chinese arms exports.
China’s arms exports are limited by the fact that many countries—includ-
ing 4 of the top 10 arms importers in 2014–18 (India, Australia, South
Korea and Viet Nam)—will not procure Chinese arms for political reasons.
Nonetheless, improvements in Chinese military technology have opened up
opportunities for arms export growth, including exports to new custom-
ers. In 2014–18 China became the largest exporter in the niche market of
unmanned combat aerial vehicles (UCAVs), with states in the Middle East
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Table 2. The 40 largest importers of major arms and their main suppliers, 2014–18
Note: Percentages below 10 are rounded to 1 decimal place; percentages over 10 are rounded to whole numbers.
Per cent
Share of change from Main suppliers (share of importer’s total imports, %),
arms imports (%) 2009–13 to 2014–18
Importer 2014–18 a
2014–18 2009–13 1st 2nd 3rd
1 Saudi Arabia 12 4.3 192 USA (68) UK (16) France (4.3)
2 India 9.5 13 -24 Russia (58) Israel (15) USA (12)
3 Egypt 5.1 1.8 206 France (37) Russia (30) USA (19)
4 Australia 4.6 3.6 37 USA (60) Spain (29) France (5.0)
5 Algeria 4.4 3.1 55 Russia (66) China (13) Germany (10)
6 China 4.2 4.8 -7.0 Russia (70) France (10) Ukraine (8.6)
7 UAE 3.7 4.2 -5.8 USA (64) France (10) Turkey (7.8)
8 Iraq 3.7 1.6 139 USA (47) Russia (33) South Korea (8.0)
9 South Korea 3.1 3.6 -8.6 USA (51) Germany (39) UK (3.0)
10 Viet Nam 2.9 1.8 78 Russia (78) Israel (9.1) Belarus (4.1)
11 Pakistan 2.7 4.8 -39 China (70) USA (8.9) Russia (6.0)
12 Indonesia 2.5 1.4 86 UK (19) USA (18) Netherlands (13)
13 Turkey 2.3 3.2 -21 USA (60) Spain (17) Italy (15)
14 Qatar 2.0 0.7 225 USA (65) Germany (15) France (7.4)
15 Israel 2.0 0.5 354 USA (64) Germany (27) Italy (8.9)
16 United States 1.8 3.7 -47 Germany (22) Netherlands (13) France (11)
17 Taiwan 1.7 1.0 83 USA (100) Germany (0.2) Italy (0.1)
18 Oman 1.6 0.6 213 UK (39) USA (30) Norway (8.5)
19 United Kingdom 1.6 1.7 2.3 USA (71) South Korea (17) Germany (4.5)
20 Italy 1.5 0.6 162 USA (59) Germany (26) Israel (7.5)
21 Japan 1.4 1.3 15 USA (95) UK (3.1) Sweden (1.5)
22 Singapore 1.3 3.7 -63 USA (46) France (21) Spain (11)
23 Azerbaijan 1.3 1.2 15 Russia (51) Israel (43) Turkey (2.8)
24 Morocco 1.2 2.0 -35 USA (62) France (36) Italy (0.6)
25 Bangladesh 1.2 0.7 75 China (70) Russia (18) USA (3.2)
26 Canada 1.0 0.8 42 USA (63) Netherlands (16) Germany (6.9)
27 Thailand 1.0 0.7 46 South Korea (20) Ukraine (18) China (18)
28 Greece 1.0 1.5 -30 Germany (67) USA (20) France (8.4)
29 Kuwait 1.0 0.2 348 USA (87) Russia (3.4) Switzerland (2.9)
30 Kazakhstan 0.9 0.3 232 Russia (84) Spain (5.5) France (3.0)
31 Jordan 0.9 0.6 61 Netherlands (37) USA (30) Italy (5.8)
32 Norway 0.8 1.1 -22 USA (76) South Korea (9.3) Italy (6.2)
33 Afghanistan 0.8 1.6 -48 USA (66) Russia (18) Brazil (10)
34 Mexico 0.7 0.5 40 USA (63) France (9.4) Netherlands (8.9)
35 Brazil 0.6 1.0 -28 France (26) USA (17) UK (15)
36 Myanmar 0.6 1.1 -40 China (61) Russia (20) Belarus (6.5)
37 Finland 0.6 0.4 64 USA (37) Netherlands (19) Norway (19)
38 Poland 0.6 0.6 2.5 Germany (28) Finland (20) Italy (16)
39 Turkmenistan 0.5 0.4 59 Turkey (43) China (31) Russia (13)
40 Peru 0.5 0.1 303 South Korea (34) Russia (22) Italy (14)
Africa
Imports of major arms by states in Central America and the Caribbean grew
by 49 per cent between 2009–13 and 2014–18. By contrast, arms imports by
South American states fell by 51 per cent between the two periods. Together,
the two subregions accounted for 3.4 per cent of total global arms imports
in 2014–18. The USA was the main exporter to both subregions: in 2014–18
it accounted for 17 per cent of arms imports by states in South America
and 47 per cent by states in Central America and the Caribbean. France
(13 per cent) and Germany (9.7 per cent) were the other main suppliers to
trends in international arms tr ansfers, 2018 9
South America in the period. The Netherlands (16 per cent) was the second
largest supplier of arms to Central America and the Caribbean in 2014–18.
Mexico accounted for 72 per cent of arms imports to Central America and
the Caribbean in 2014–18. Its arms imports increased by 40 per cent between
2009–13 and 2014–18, mainly due to the Mexican military’s involvement in
internal operations against drug cartels.
Brazil accounted for 27 per cent of South American arms imports in
2014–18. Brazilian arms imports decreased by 28 per cent between 2009–13
and 2014–18. Arms imports by Venezuela, which was the largest arms
importer in South America in 2009–13, fell by 83 per cent between the two
periods. The decrease coincided with a severe economic crisis in the country.
Arms imports by states in Asia and Oceania decreased by 6.7 per cent between
2009–13 and 2014–18. States in the region received 40 per cent of global arms
imports in 2014–18, compared with 47 per cent in 2009–13. Of the 10 largest
importers in 2014–18, half were in Asia and Oceania: India, Australia, China,
South Korea and Viet Nam. Russia accounted for 31 per cent of arms exports
to the region, the USA for 27 per cent and China for 9.0 per cent.
Australia
Due to its heightened perception of threats in the Asia–Pacific region, Aus-
tralia has embarked on major military procurement programmes. As a result,
its arms imports increased by 37 per cent between 2009–13 and 2014–18, to
the highest level since 1950. In 2014–18 Australia was the world’s fourth
largest arms importer and accounted for 4.6 per cent of the global total. All
armed services have received new major arms in 2014–18, but the main focus
has been on aircraft and ships. Deliveries of F-35 combat aircraft and anti-
submarine warfare aircraft from the USA made up 53 per cent of Australian
arms imports in 2014–18, while ships from Spain accounted for 29 per cent.
Large deliveries for additional aircraft and ships are outstanding.
South Asia
Despite the long-standing conflict between India and Pakistan, arms imports
decreased for both countries in 2014–18 compared with 2009–13.
India was the world’s second largest importer of major arms in 2014–18
and accounted for 9.5 per cent of the global total. Its imports decreased by
24 per cent between 2009–13 and 2014–18, partly due to delays in deliveries of
arms produced under licence from foreign suppliers, such as combat aircraft
ordered from Russia in 2001 and submarines ordered from France in 2008.
Russia accounted for 58 per cent of Indian arms imports in 2014–18, com-
pared with 76 per cent in 2009–13. Israel, the USA and France all increased
their arms exports to India in 2014–18.
Pakistan’s arms imports decreased by 39 per cent between 2009–13 and
2014–18. The USA has become increasingly reluctant to provide military
aid or sell arms to Pakistan: US arms exports to Pakistan fell by 81 per cent
between 2009–13 and 2014–18. Pakistan has instead turned to other sup-
pliers. For example, in 2018 it ordered 4 frigates and 30 combat helicopters
from Turkey.
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China
Despite the rapid development of its indigenous arms-producing capabil
ities in recent years, China was the world’s sixth largest arms importer in
2014–18 and accounted for 4.2 per cent of the global total. Its arms imports
decreased by 7.0 per cent between 2009–13 and 2014–18. Russia accounted
for 70 per cent of Chinese arms imports in 2014–18. China remains reliant
on imports for certain arms technologies such as engines for combat aircraft
and large ships as well as long-range air and missile defence systems. Its own
arms industry has yet to develop the technological capability to match Rus-
sian suppliers in these fields.
Europe
Arms imports by states in the Middle East increased by 87 per cent between
2009–13 and 2014–18. Four of the world’s top 10 arms-importing countries in
2014–18 were in the Middle East: Saudi Arabia, which received 33 per cent of
arms transfers to the region, Egypt (15 per cent), the United Arab Emirates
(UAE; 11 per cent) and Iraq (11 per cent). The USA supplied 54 per cent of
total arms transfers to the region, Russia 9.6 per cent and France 8.6 per cent.