The Hindu (Delhi)

Tensions grow in West Asia, a heavily militarise­d region

West Asia accounts for 30% of the global arms imports and spends the most on the military among all other regions

- Sambavi Parthasara­thy

West Asia supplies the most extractive resources for the world’s energy consumptio­n, which makes peace an imperative in the region. Yet tensions are escalating in the region on account of the Israel-Gaza con¬ict, the hostilitie­s between Iran and Israel, and the attacks and counter-attacks between Israel and Iran-backed militias from Lebanon and Yemen.

Apart from this, the region has also become one of the most heavily militarise­d in the world. According to the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute’s ‘Trends in Internatio­nal Arms Transfers 2023’, four of the top 10 largest importers of arms last year were from West Asia, with the U.S. being the main supplier

All this has resulted in West Asia becoming a powder keg.

(Table 1). Crises in the region

Israel’s shadow war with Tehran underwent a dramatic escalation recently. Iran launched its ¥rst-ever full-scale military attack against Israel on April 14 in retaliatio­n to the Benjamin Netanyahu government’s attack on April 1 on an Iranian compound in Syria in which General Mohammed Reza Zehadi, the top commander of the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps, was killed.

Israel has been continuing its attacks on the Gaza Strip in response to the October 7 Hamas attack which led to the death of 1,139 people. Nearly 34,000 Palestinia­ns have been killed so far. The con¬ict persists despite the internatio­nal community urging for an immediate cease¥re. The 10month-long Gaza war and the amping up of Iran-Israel hostilitie­s has caused concern among internatio­nal actors amid existing tensions such as the unresolved Yemeni civil war, the Lebanese political crisis, the 14-year-long Syrian civil war, and the TurkeyCypr­us con¬ict, among others.

Amid these crises, West Asia today accounts for almost 30% of the global arms imports and spends the most on the military among all other regions in the world. Chart

2 shows region-wise military expenditur­e as a share of the GDP. In this measure, West Asia and North Africa have been consistent­ly leading for over three decades now, though the share has come down from the peak of over 10% of GDP, reported in the 1990s. West Asia spent 4.6% of its GDP in 2020 on the military, compared with 3.3% in North America.

Share of GDP

Saudi Arabia and Qatar, the oil and natural gas rich nation-states, have consistent­ly spent over 5% of their GDP on defence in recent years, the highest among countries in this region. Jordan, Oman, Kuwait and Israel have also spent close to 5% of their GDP on their militaries in the last decade. Chart 3 shows the military expenditur­e as a share of GDP for individual countries in the West Asian region. Though Saudi Arabia and Oman’s shares are on a decreasing trend, they continue to lead others in the world in this measure.

This is also the region where the share of the labour force employed in the armed forces is the highest.

Chart 4 shows that 2.5% of the labour force is engaged in the military in the West Asian and North African region, compared with only 1.2% in Europe and Central Asia.

The consistent demand for arms can be attributed to the growing instabilit­y in the region fuelled by domestic insurgenci­es, transnatio­nal terrorist attacks, unstable regional boundaries, and, in some cases, foreign policies and the need to project “hard power”.

The hangover of the ‘Arab Spring’ that led to a lot of churning and resulted in the aforementi­oned issues has also contribute­d to the increased militarisa­tion.

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