Military build-up in Southeast Asia

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Military build-up in Southeast Asia has been a noticeable trend, as shown by force modernization, although there is not necessarily political will to improve military effectiveness. The phenomenon has been attributed to various factors, including protecting economic interest, self-reliance in the reduction of US commitment in the region, domestic and foreign tensions, and the need to replace colonial era material, but also some non-military related factors such as national prestige, political corruption, etc.

Almost all Southeast Asian nations modernized their militaries since 1975, the ending year of the Vietnam War, and continued since then, even though the process was slowed after the 1997 Asian financial crisis. During this period, military personnel, tanks, armored personnel carriers (APCs), medium-range howitzers, missile-armed naval vessels, combat helicopters and combat aircraft increased and modernized. However, experts pointed out that this still did not fit the definition of an arms race.

Southeast Asia had seen an increase in absolute defense spending, the biggest increase compared to other regions of the world, even though they are relatively unchanged in proportion to the country's GDP. The South China Sea dispute was cited by some analysts as the motive, but others pointed to steady military expenditure per capita and relatively small in change of military inventory compared to old equipment replaced.

Flag Active military Reserve military Paramilitary Total Per 1,000 capita
(total)
Per 1,000 capita
(active)
Brunei Brunei 7,200 700 500 8,400 18.6 16 [1]
Cambodia Cambodia 124,300 0 67,000 191,300 11.6 7.6 [2]
Indonesia Indonesia 405,000 400,000 280,000 1,085,000 3.8 1.4 [3]
Laos Laos 29,100 0 100,000 129,100 17.8 4 [4]
Malaysia Malaysia 113,000 51,600 267,200 431,800 13.6 3.6 [5][a]
Myanmar Myanmar 406,000 0 107,000 513,000 9.2 7.3 [6]
Philippines Philippines 180,000 1,800,000 61,100 2,041,100 19.3 1.7 [7]
Singapore Singapore 72,500 312,500 8,400 393,400 65.6 12.1 [8]
Thailand Thailand 360,850 200,000 138,700 699,550 10.2 5.3 [9]
Vietnam Vietnam 600,000 5,000,000 250,000 5,850,000 60.3 6.2 [10]
Countries[b]
Military budget
(US$ bn)[c]
Sources
 Brunei0
.5730000004000000[13]
 Cambodia0
.4462000000000051400[14]
 Indonesia7
.093780500111805974500[15]
 Laos0
.024250000000001200[16]
 Malaysia5
.034800002402673200[17]
 Myanmar2
.431850000420215527TC0[18]
 Philippines2
.09002004100222700[19]
 Singapore10
.0163040066061262509[20]
 Thailand5
.692881500107001434700[21]
 Timor-Leste0
.0720000000000000[22]
 Vietnam6
.2180000004606974700[23]

Regional overview

Noticeable modernization trends in Southeast Asia are acquiring of technological sophistication, such as guided munitions, and investment in command, control, communications and computer processing, as well as intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance systems (C4ISR). Multi-role fighter aircraft, maritime reconnaissance aircraft, modern missiles (including anti-ship missiles, beyond visual range air-to-air missiles, air-to-ground missiles, tactical ground-to-ground missiles), modern artillery systems, submarines and warships equipped with the new electronics and anti-ship missiles, including Scud missiles, late-model MiG 29, F16, F18 and Su-27 jet fighters, MRLS systems, and modern frigates armed with Harpoon and Exocet missiles became more widespread. However, any regional nation seem not to be able to adopt Revolution in military affairs (RMA) due to lack of military resource, technology and armed force specialist. Almost every military increased its conventional capabilities, while archipelago nations adopted rapid deployment. Navies tend to cover its lack of mine counter-measures, maritime surveillance, offshore patrol and anti-submarine capabilities. Another notable trend is to acquire advanced fighters, with Singapore being the first to introduce fourth-generation jet fighters.[24]:24–8

Southeast Asia was the fastest-growing military spending region in the world between 2009 and 2018.[25]:ix Between 2009 and 2018, total regional spending was increased by 33 percent from $30.8 billion to $41.0 billion (constant 2017 US dollars). The region's share of global arms import increased from 5.8 percent in 1999–2007 to 8.1 percent in the period 1999–2018.[25]:10 China's rising to a regional military power and aggression in the South China Sea was cited as the motive for this period, and countries that are parties to the conflict saw the largest increase. Even though the proportion of military spending to each country's GDP remained constant and still did not fit the definition of arms race, the action-reaction pattern and low trust among the nations with lack of regional dispute resolution mechanisms meaning that there could be a risk of misunderstanding in the future.[25]:ix–x

In official defense policy documents often cited terrorist, armed rebels, pirates, smugglers and organized crime, including humanitarian assistance and disaster relief as the reasons of arms acquisition. However, the acquisition of tanker aircraft, combat aircraft, anti-submarine warfare aircraft, air-to-ground missiles, air defense systems, coastal defense systems, submarines, and surface combat ships, as well as amphibious assault landing ships, were the evidence that the nations perceived foreign threats. The equipment can engage with foreign threat far from home country, and could be seen by neighbors as "aggressive".[25]:7–8

There is also a number of factors, even unreasonable, to arms acquisition, as in the countries with strong military influence in politics. Myanmar's military spending has been decreased after 2015 political reform, but the opposite is true for Thailand after the 2014 coup.[25]:8–9

Military spending of Southeast Asian nations, 2009–18[25]:11
Country%ChangeNumbers of years increased vs. decreased
SEA33.1
 
Increase 7, Decrease 3
 Brunei-7.9
 
Increase 2, Decrease 8
 Cambodia190.6
 
Increase 10, Decrease 0
 Indonesia99.5
 
Increase 7, Decrease 3
 LaosN/AIncrease 4, Decrease 1 (incomplete data)
 Malaysia-18.5
 
Increase 4, Decrease 6
 MyanmarN/AIncrease 3, Decrease 3 (incomplete data)
 Philippines50.3
 
Increase 6, Decrease 4
 Singapore14.3
 
Increase 6, Decrease 4
 Thailand15.6
 
Increase 8, Decrease 2
 Timor-Leste-63.4
 
Increase 3, Decrease 7
 Vietnam75.5
 
Increase 8, Decrease 2

By country

Notes

References

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