http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/791345cc-2f9c-11df-9153-00144feabdc0.html?nclick_check=1

SE Asia arms purchases fuel fears of clashes
By Kathrin Hille in Beijing and Tim Johnston in Bangkok 

Published: March 14 2010 19:12 | Last updated: March 14 2010 21:58



Military analysts are warning that China's increased regional power has caused 
its south-east Asian neighbours to step up their own defence purchases, raising 
the prospect that territorial disputes in the South China Sea could turn 
violent.

Siemon Wezeman, a senior fellow at the arms transfers programme at the 
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (Sipri), said that several 
south-east Asian countries had "dramatically" stepped up their purchases of 
submarines, fighter aircraft, and long-range missiles in recent years. 

"While south-east Asian governments . . . still don't openly voice concerns 
over China, they think about it, and they are making a statement with what they 
are buying," he said. "Fifteen years ago, there were the same conflicting 
claims in the South China Sea but the countries didn't have the means to 
enforce their claims. Now, the moment somebody hits oil there, things might 
look very dangerous."
Many of south-east Asia's militaries are trying to catch up on purchases they 
deferred several years earlier as their countries were reeling from the Asian 
financial crisis.

They are driven by a mix of domestic, subregional and larger strategic 
considerations, and most governments have yet directly to name China as a 
concern.

However, the Chinese navy has recently built a submarine base on Hainan Island, 
at the top of the disputed waters of the South China Sea, where it has a 
territorial dispute with the surrounding littoral states - Brunei, Malaysia, 
the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam - over the potentially resource-rich 
Spratly and Paracel archipelagos.

According to data to be released by Sipri on Monday, Indonesia's arms imports 
between 2005 and 2009 grew 84 per cent compared with the preceding five years, 
Singapore's increased by 146 per cent, and Malaysia's rocketed by 722 per cent.

Singapore added six frigates and 32 fighter aircraft over the past five years 
and ordered two submarines and 12 more fighters. Malaysia took delivery of two 
submarines, six frigates and 26 fighter aircraft. Indonesia imported four 
frigates and four fighter aircraft and ordered three more.

"Vietnam and Thailand are lagging behind, but both have placed orders recently 
to be delivered in the coming years," Mr Wezeman said. This includes six 
fighter aircraft and one early-warning aircraft for Thailand and six 
submarines, two frigates and eight fighter aircraft for Vietnam.

Singapore's concern is over the impact of the shift in the balance of power in 
the region, said Tim Huxley of the International Institute for Strategic 
Studies in Singapore. "The real problem is the huge discrepancy in power 
between China and the south-east Asian nations."


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