The Phnom Penh Post

Crisis sparks SK arms sales: study

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FACED with constant missile and nuclear threats from its belligeren­t northern neighbour, South Korea is boosting its arms sales and aims to become a major exporter, a study said yesterday.

South Korea’s arms industry accounted for 2.2 percent of global top 100 producers’ sales in 2016, the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute (Sipri) said in a report listing the world’s “top 100” military services.

South Korean arms-producing companies’ combined sales totalled $8.4 billion (€7.1 billion) the same year with a 20.6 percent rise in sales compared to 2015, SIPRI added.

“The increasing nuclear weapons capability in North Korea has led to major investment­s in South Korea,” SIPRI senior researcher Pieter Wezeman said.

In defiance of repeated internatio­nal condemnati­ons and sanctions, Pyongyang fired an interconti­nental ballistic missile (ICBM) last week, which reached an altitude of 4,475 kilometres before splashing into the sea 950 kilometres east of its launch site, North Korean state media said.

The North, which says it needs nuclear weapons to protect itself from “hostile” US forces, has vowed to accelerate its weapons programs in response to “evil” sanctions imposed by the UN Security Council.

Once a mainly agricultur­al backwater devastated by war, South Korea has been one of the world’s largest importers of military equipment and technology for decades – mostly from the US – but in recent years its domestic sector has grown rapidly.

In the face of North Korean threats, the proportion of government spending that Seoul devotes to defence is among the world’s highest outside Middle East and African conflict zones, according to SIPRI’s 2016 figures.

South Korea is turning “to its own arms industry to supply its demand for weapons” and “aiming to realise its goal of becoming a major arms exporter”, SIPRI’s Wezeman said in a statement.

Having gone through a massive industrial developmen­t, South Korea is “increasing­ly using weapons and technology that can compete with what has been supplied by Europe and the US”, according to Wezeman.

The nation is a top arms producer among emerging countries in the sector, including Brazil, India and Turkey.

‘Regional tensions’

South Korean arms exports, which amounted to $253 million in 2006, reached $2.5 bil- lion 10 years later, according to official data.

Its missiles, howitzers, submarines and warplanes are particular­ly popular in Southeast Asia, Eastern Europe and South America.

Seven South Korean arms groups rank among SIPRI’s top 100 global arms producers. The first of these, the conglomera­te Korea Aerospace Industries (KAI), which developed a supersonic training hunter T-50 Golden Eagle with the American Lockheed Martin, is in 48th place.

The top 100 producers’ combined sales totalled $374.8 billion last year, up 1.9 percent from 2015. This is the first annual increase after a five-year consecutiv­e decline.

American producers alone accounted for 57.9 percent of the total sales figure ahead of the British (9.6 percent), the Russians (7.1 percent) and the French (5 percent).

US companies’ arms sales grew by four percent in 2016 at a combined total of $217.2 billion and Germany saw a 6.6 percent rise in arms sales for the same year due to demands in Europe, the Middle East, and South East Asia.

Sipri said growth in arms sales was triggered by “ongoing military operations in several countries and persistent regional tensions that are leading to an increased demand for weapons”.

 ?? KCNA VIA KNS AFP PHOTO/ ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong-un visits a renewal hotel at Samjiyon County in Ryanggang province on Saturday. The leader’s recent ramping up of nuclear threats has led the South to boost its arms industry.
KCNA VIA KNS AFP PHOTO/ North Korean leader Kim Jong-un visits a renewal hotel at Samjiyon County in Ryanggang province on Saturday. The leader’s recent ramping up of nuclear threats has led the South to boost its arms industry.

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