Think the U.S. and Europe Have a Lock on the 21st-Century Defense Market?
Think Again
Why nations
like Israel, South Korea, Brazil, Russia and China are catching up—and could
have a chilling effect on American alliances and defense partnerships globally.
There is a
paradigm shift underway in the international defense marketplace, and it’s led
by nations evolving from longtime Western customers and production partners
into worldwide sellers. Nations such as Israel, South Korea, Brazil, as well as
Russia and China, have enormous potential to rewrite the rules of the
twenty-first-century defense business—and America’s military relationships.
It’s true that the biggest defense
exporter remains the United States, accounting for 45 percent of $175.5 billion
in global arms purchases in 2015, according to Avascent Analytics. As well,
Western European firms from allies such as the United Kingdom and France
contributed 14 percent globally, according to Avascent data, giving America and
its closest European partners a majority position at 59 percent of the market.
Yet for how much longer, though, can the United States count on holding sway
over allies—and influence the balance of power in entire regions—through arms
sales as it did during the twentieth century? Signs of a permanent change are
clearer each year. Since 2010, Western defense sales are actually slipping—down
from 62 percent.
This shift is driven by many forces,
including the commitment by Western countries to an abundance of caution
selling certain kinds of technology even at the expense of ceding the
competitive field to new players. Also at work: an awakening in capitals like
Seoul and Beijing that globalization affecting just about every other industry
with worldwide supply chains and customer bases has somehow passed over the
defense market—and that there is real political and economic value in
leveraging those forces for a nation’s own military. Accordingly, non-Western
firms now benefiting from greater domestic investment in defense technology,
higher stakes technology transfer deals and growing internal and export demand
for new sources of equipment and services. Plus, many allies aren’t so sure
that being tied up to the United States or European nations is a prerequisite
to have regional, if not global, influence.
As the data suggests, Western defense
suppliers are in a strategic bind: budget pressure and red tape at home and new
competitors abroad. With the steady march of technology for unmanned aircraft,
submarines and airborne radars and sensors, the stakes get higher year by year
for American and European firms.
Leading the Change: The Country-by-Country View
The list of nations on the cutting edge of
this shift should be familiar to longtime defense officials as countries
serious about their military development. Yet in the past many would have been
viewed simply as importers of Western equipment to achieve that edge. Now they
are exporters capable of driving wedges into strategic relationships that for
decades were underpinned by trade with American and European firms. While many
of these systems are smaller than big-ticket fighters or warships, the advanced
technologies involved often can have an outsized impact on defense plans and
future procurement.
Israel:
Strategic self-sufficiency
is a powerful motivation for Israel’s government and defense industry due to
existential threats and lingering uncertainty about access to the global
defense supply chain during a crisis. Years of Israel’s industrial policymakers
channeling support to developing niche markets tied to improving and modifying
imported (particularly American) defense platforms has given the country an
edge. This is none more true at a time when many other nations also will look
at a variety of sources to obtain the most effective combinations of equipment
and technology for their militaries.
Israel’s areas of expertise
include electronics systems, radar, precision munitions, and unmanned aerial
systems. The popularity of such systems is clear: During the past five years,
Israel exported at least a third and as much as half of all defense industrial
production, including to India which is its largest current export market.
Other deals include European, South American, and Southeast Asian governments.
Unmanned systems such as the
Heron and Hermes UAVs have been sold on at least four continents, including
buyers in South Korea, Germany, Canada and Australia.
South Korea:
South Korea boasts a
juggernaut shipbuilding industry and recent success in the
trainer/light attack aircraft market. It also faces lower obstacles
to exports than other Asian competitors, such as China or Japan. Meanwhile
demand for domestic systems is growing: locally sourced acquisitions rose from
under 40 percent in 2010 to more than 50 percent in 2015.
Emerging from a legacy of
selling mostly at home, South Korea’s defense firms and the nation’s political
leaders have clear export ambitions. Korea Aerospace International (KAI) has
sold its T-50 trainer aircraft and F/A-50 light attack variant to Indonesia,
Iraq, Peru, and the Philippines. The Korean Fighter Experimental, or KF-X,
program, a joint effort with Indonesia, has the potential to launch the
country’s aerospace industry into the advanced multi-role fighter aircraft
market. South Korea’s shipyards can produce advanced destroyers, frigates,
amphibious assault vessels, and attack submarines with the same alacrity
they’ve approached commercial vessels. Of note, South Korea exported its first
submarine in March 2016 to Indonesia and two more are on order.
Brazil:
Aircraft maker Embraer is
now well established in the commercial aviation market and is making inroads
into niche regional and lower-tier markets with light attack aircraft, light
transport aircraft, and low-end ISR and maritime patrol aircraft. This modest
debut over the next 10 years has the potential to allow for a significant
impact, nonetheless, as a regional source in South America for highly capable
yet affordable systems.
Moreover, its partnership with Saab in the
co-production of the Gripen fighter ensures an industrial connection to Western
markets into the future that once established may prove to be highly valuable.
This industrial alliance will work both ways, as the know-how the Swedish contractor
brings for design and industrial processes has the potential to pay dividends
in the coming years when it comes to competing economically in
highly-competitive markets such as tactical aircraft.
Russia and China:
Russian and Chinese defense deals may not
offer up one-for-one replacements for European or US systems—yet—but what they
can do is present buyers with cheaper solutions like the Su-30, and often
with far fewer strings attached. Economic forces are also an influence. Russia
needs hard currency to compensate for falling oil revenue, and arms fill that
gap. Meanwhile, China’s GDP rise has led to more defense spending, including
crucially on R&D. This addresses a key factor: the United States and
European governments do not sell military hardware to China. Nonetheless, the
payoff for this investment is clear: nascent programs in hypersonics,
viable fifth-generation fighters
like the J-20 and technologically advanced naval vessels such as the
Type-55 destroyer.
A high profile example is the fast-growing
remotely piloted aircraft market. Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iraq, and Egypt reportedly
have acquired the Caihong family of medium-altitude/long-endurance UAS from
China’s Chengdu Aircraft Design and Research Institute—including armed
versions.
For Russia’s part, its employment of cruise
missiles in Syria and advanced equipment in asymmetric operations in
Crimea and Ukraine effectively advertise unmanned ISR and electronic attack
systems, long-range land-attack capabilities and precision-guided ground-attack
munitions. among other systems. Notably, Russia last month deployed its
advanced S-400 “Triumf” surface-to-air missile system to the Crimea,
a system it has sold to China and is working to export to India as part of a
reported $6 billion deal.
What Western Governments and A&D Companies Can Do:
This is just the beginning
of a paradigm shift in the global defense marketplace.
For Western governments and
their defense firms, this increasing “diffusion” of the global defense
marketplace poses profound commercial and policy questions to resolve if they
are to have any chance of enhancing or even simply preserving their global
position.
For American and European
defense firms, new commercial tactics are in order, as well as greater
diversity at the supply chain level. One of the biggest changes: “simple
exports” are a thing of the past. Meaningful technology transfer is the norm
today, and the degree of technology sharing and industrial partnerships will
only increase with a bias toward the customer nation’s domestic industry.
Structuring bids and proposed transactions will require greater creativity and
a deeper understanding of the local industrial context as part of broader
regional and global market considerations.
The status quo is in flux,
and this state of uncertainty may be the new normal as the percentage of U.S.
and European defense sales slips year by year. While it is unlikely that any
one nation will immediately challenge the United States directly with its
export leadership, the effect of many countries crowding into once prized
markets could still have a chilling effect on American alliances and defense
partnerships globally.
August Cole is the
writer-in-residence at Avascent.
He is also an Atlantic Council nonresident senior fellow, focusing on using
fiction to explore the future of war; and a member of the International
Institute for Strategic Studies. He is the co-author of Ghost Fleet: A Novel of the Next
World War and the editor of the Atlantic Council’s War Stories
from the Future anthology.
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