Pacific arms race - Naval Technology
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With western military budgets curtailed, Asia's economic growth has  stimulated a major shift away from the Atlantic. Dr Gareth Evans reports  on how, in the aftermath of the global financial crisis, massive  economic growth in Asia has stimulated a major shift in defence spending  away from the Atlantic and towards the Pacific. 
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According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute  (SIPRI), 2010 saw expenditure across the region peak at just less than  $290 billion - 80% up on the start of the decade - and Asian nations now  top the list for global weapons imports.
Securing supply lines  has formed a significant driver, while territorial disputes and the rise  of China have also played their part, leaving many nations - including  Australia, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam -  strengthening their defence positions. In what the Australian Defence  Minister, Stephen Smith, describes as "a region in strategic flux," all  eyes are on the main players.
With  state-of-the-art weaponry being acquired in the Asia-Pacific at a scale  and pace that matches the Cold War arms race, the security landscape is  constantly changing as regional forces gain greater capacity for  power-projection.
Funded by growth, and largely driven by a desire  to protect the resulting prosperity, it is perhaps ironic that the  region's economic inter-dependence may yet form the most potent  safeguard against those capabilities being used in anger.
China
Over  the last two decades, China's defence budget has grown by 13% a year,  though estimates put the real figure considerably higher than the  'official' $78.6bn; SIPRI suggests $114bn, while the Pentagon's  'guesstimate' approaches $150bn. Allowing for lower manufacturing and  manpower costs, its effective worth could be twice that and despite  Beijing's global 'great-power' ambitions, currently at least, it is  almost entirely regionally focussed.
This has added an impressive  collection of conventionally-armed ballistic and cruise missiles to the  inventory and beefed-up surface-to-air defences, while 4th-Generation  warplanes, smart weapon systems and major electronic upgrades have  bolstered air power.
A 5th-Generation stealth fighter, the J-20,  is also being tested. China's navy has expanded its submarine fleet over  recent years and now boasts its first aircraft carrier, with more to  follow.
A number of other surface vessels have also been procured,  including a new stealthy littoral combat class. Conventional assets  aside, the latest Pentagon report states "China is both qualitatively  and quantitatively improving its strategic [nuclear] missile forces."
National  pride, territorial integrity and desire to secure trade routes form  understandable drivers on Chinese military expansion, but inevitably  stoke the fears of regional neighbours. Many observers now openly  question if Beijing's long-held tenet of non-interference can last as  China's global economic presence continues to grow.
India
India's  military budget is $36.03bn - up 11.6% for the financial year 2011/12.  Recently becoming the world's largest arms importer, New Delhi is  looking to acquire still more advanced technology and weapon systems to  further enhance defence capabilities.
The Indian air force is set  to purchase 126 aircraft - either Eurofighter Typhoons or Dassault  Rafales - once the final winner of the Medium Multirole Combat Aircraft  Competition is announced, and other planned 'big ticket' items include  helicopters, ultra-light howitzers and amphibious assault vessels.
The  eastern naval command has been progressively beefed-up over the past  six years and this expansion will continue with the first indigenously  designed nuclear Arihant-class submarines being based at a new facility,  codenamed Varsha. A significant carrier programme is also underway, to  bring both the refurbished INS Vikramaditya and home-grown INS Vikrant  into service by 2014.
Much of India's stance arises from its 'look  East' policy, and while it is too simplistic to suggest this is solely a  response to Chinese ascendancy, it is undeniably a factor.
Although  their respective areas of influence do not immediately overlap, both  countries are aware that India provides the only credible check on  Chinese hegemony in the region, and as each seeks to extend their  international links, that strategic rivalry seems set to grow, despite  the rapprochement of recent decades.
Russia
While not all  of Russia's $52.586bn budget is allocated to the Pacific, over the last  few years, Moscow has become a markedly more visible player in regional  security.
Currently embarked on a major modernisation programme,  with planned purchases in 2010 including two strategic missile  submarines, 36 strategic ballistic missiles and 20 strategic cruise  missiles. A new land-based ICBM system is also under development, due to  be completed by 2013 - the same year that Prime Minister Putin has  called for the production of ballistic missile systems to be doubled.
In  addition, June saw the conclusion of the long-awaited deal with France  to acquire Mistral-class multirole helicopter carriers, some of which  will bolster the Russian Pacific fleet. Russia is also cementing its  role as a key supplier of military hardware to the region, showcasing a  range of combat aircraft, small and medium displacement surface vessels  and compact submarines.
In many respects, Russia is at a  cross-roads, facing uncertainty over its strategic role in the  Asia-Pacific, while seeking to reassert itself on the international  stage, principally by leveraging its energy resources.
The key  question seems to be whether Moscow intends to remain an independent  player, or sees a closer partnership with China as the means to advance  Russian interests within the region. For the moment at least, that issue  appears to be unresolved.
The Korean peninsular
South  Korea is currently the joint second (with China) largest importer of  conventional weapons, accounting for six percent of global sales between  2006 and 2010, with a defence budget of $26.55bn. In general terms,  Seoul continues to cement its advantage over the North in force quality,  developing its missile defence programmes at a cost of $214 million,  enhancing military communications and embarking on a significant round  of ship-building and combat aircraft purchases.
While it is  impossible to obtain details from the secretive and cash-strapped North,  it is clear its appetite for cutting-edge weaponry remains  undiminished. The willingness of potential sources - China and Russia -  to supply them, however, seems limited, despite Kim Jong-Il's overtures  to both during visits this summer.
After  the ROKS Cheonan and Yeonpyeong Island incidents, China is not disposed  to provide the new fighters that Kim seeks to counter Seoul's growing  aerial supremacy - and neither is Russia, given the importance Moscow  places on its energy-politik approaches to the South.
Pyongyang's  inability to replace ageing weapons inventories, coupled with the  country's feeble economy has significantly eroded the North's  conventional military capabilities over the past decade, leaving the  country relying on the deterrent value of its much vaunted nuclear  programme. Inevitably, this leads many to question the sincerity of the  reported readiness to discuss ending tests if the six-party talks on  de-nuclearisation resume - but then mixed messages are nothing new from  this unpredictable regime.
* ARTICLE PUBLICAT PER NAVAL-TECHNOLOGY.COM. Tot i no ser estrictament d'afers marítims el creiem molt adequat per poder tenir una panoràmica de l'escalada d'armaments de diferents potències de l'Àsia.