Until five years ago, the USA and China shared an almost equal proportion of Pakistan’s arms imports: 39 percent and 38 percent respectively.
Today, China supplies 63 percent of Pakistan’s armaments, with the USA dropping to 19 percent and second place, an IndiaSpend analysis reveals, as Pakistan mulls a response to India’s strike on terror camps across the border.
China’s rise to becoming the world’s third-largest arms exporter was to a large degree helped by heightened demand from Pakistan, which now buys 35 percent of these exports and is Beijing’s biggest buyer (Bangladesh follows at 20 percent), according to this February 2016 report from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).
The military supplies are bolstered by unwavering support at a time of heightened tension with India and faltering ties with the US (there was a 73 percent drop in US security aid over four years to 2015, The Wire reported in August 2016; the US also cancelled the subsidised sale of eight F-16 fighter jets).
Last month, Pakistan’s ministry of defence production confirmed a contract with China for the purchase of eight conventional diesel-electric submarines, which will cost between $4 billion to $5 billion (Rs 25,600 crore to Rs 33,200 crore), China’s biggest defence export deal.
The submarines could have a nuclear strategic capability – they could be used to launch nuclear-tipped land attack cruise missiles, providing Pakistan with a partial second-strike capability to rival India’s nuclear-submarine ballistic missiles.
The submarines are the latest of several big ticket arms purchases by Pakistan. Others:
China’s share in the international arms exports market has risen from 3.6 percent in 2006-10 to 5.9 percent in 2011-15. France’s market share has declined from 7.1 percent to 5.6 percent, and Germany’s, from 11 percent to 4.7 percent, during this period.
The period coincides with China’s emergence as a major global power, seeking to challenge US hegemony across various areas and with enough heft to keep India unbalanced, either directly or through Pakistan.
(Sethi is a Mumbai-based freelance writer and defence analyst. This article has been published in an arrangement with IndiaSpend.)
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