Despite its
efforts, the European Union (EU) has never been an influential actor in the
geopolitical space ranging from the Eastern Arabian Sea to the Western Pacific.
Though
irrelevant as a diplomatic broker and a fighting force, the European bloc (in
reality, its single member states) has still found its pragmatic and lucrative
way to impact on Indo-Pacific affairs.
The recent leak by the Australian media of secrets about the combat
capacities of French Scorpene-class vessels has indeed shed light on the
growing amount of Europe’s arm sales in Asia-Pacific.
In 2005, India signed a $3.5 billion deal with France’s state-owned
shipbuilder DCNS to buy six Scorpene submarines; the France-made
small-to-intermediate size underwater vessels, which are already used by the
Malaysian navy, are being constructed by DCNS in cooperation with an Indian
government-controlled defense company in Maharashtra.
France and
Germany at the Forefront:
France’s arms selling-spree in India is not limited to the Scorpene
submarines. Paris is also trying to complete an $8.9 billion deal with
Delhi for the acquisition of 36 Dassault Rafale fighter jets by the Indian
Air Force. India is also interested in purchasing French missiles and munitions
at a cost of $1 billion.
In another development, in April, DCNS obtained a multi-billion contract
to provide Australia with 12 Shortfin Barracuda submarines over a period of 50
years. The new underwater vessels will be part of Canberra’s next generation
fleet.
DCNS secured the submarine deal, one of the most profitable in history,
in a competition with Germany’s ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems (TKMS)
and Japan’s joint venture between Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and Kawasaki
Heavy Industries.
If France is dominating – among European countries – weapon sales in
Asia-Pacific, Germany is hardly standing there looking. In early August, the
German industry manufacturer Rheinmetall AG launched a joint cooperation with
Malaysia’s Etika Strategi and Turkey’s BMC to produce armored vehicles.
The initiative is aimed at expanding the three defense industry manufacturers’
activities in Asia. In addition, TKMS has to deliver to the Singaporean
navy two Type 218SG submarines by 2020, a purchase that will cost the
Southeast Asian city-state $2.2 billion.
According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute
(SIPRI), in the 2000-2015 stint France and Germany sold to Asian-Pacific
nations defense items worth $9,681 billion and $7,166 billion respectively. The
list continues with Britain ($4,736 billion), Sweden ($2,485 billion), Spain
($2,135 billion), Italy ($1,924 billion) and the Netherlands ($1,197 billion),
only citing the most prominent European arm suppliers.
European countries systematically skirt the EU arms embargo on China,
which Brussels imposed on Beijing in the wake of the crackdown of Tiananmen
Square protests in 1989. China buys up components, dual-use goods and
sub-systems designed and manufactured in Europe, seizing the relative
technology.
In fact, if European countries cannot sell to China complete weapon
systems, they can transfer part of them, in particular engines and electronic
apparatuses for helicopters and naval propulsion, SIPRI reports.
American defense companies too manage to transfer indigenous components,
spare parts and weapon systems to China although the U.S. arms embargo on
Beijing is far more binding than EU’s.
Business as
Usual:
France and Germany, the most powerful EU member states, have the lion’s
share in the European arms sales to Asian-Pacific countries.
France is the one EU nation with a credible Asian-Pacific military
presence and the remnants of a colonial empire to defend; faced with a decade
of stagnant economy, Paris has deliberately chosen to prop up its defense
industry and is expected to become the world’s second-largest arms supplier –
behind the U.S. and ahead of Russia – in a couple of years.
Berlin usually tries to shy away from military conflicts, even when
these rage in Europe’s neighborhood. However, it seems that German leaders lose
their diplomacy-focused approach to international crises when it comes to
profit from the Indo-Pacific geopolitical instability.
European arms export to Asian nations remains in large part “neutral”,
as EU countries quietly place orders with both sides of a particular conflict.
EU states in fact make no distinction between belligerent India and Pakistan,
as well as between China and the nations that dispute Chinese claims over vast
segments of the East China and South China seas.
Thus for the EU, it is (arms) business as usual in Asia, like for the US
and Russia, even though the European integration has been built and developed
on a “pacifist” platform after the Second World War’s tragedies. But this is
yet another cruel irony of history.
Emanuele Scimia is a journalist and foreign policy analyst.
This first appeared in AsiaTimes
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