-
Advertisement
US-China relations
Asia

Asia sees more military drills, but China lags US in scale and complexity: study

  • The International Institute of Strategic Studies said between 2003 and 2022, the US held 1,113 exercises with its allies, compared to China’s 130
  • Beijing has also stepped up focus on the Indian Ocean, where analysts warned it would struggle to defend its vital energy supplies in an East Asian conflict

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
1
Chinese and Cambodian troops take part in a military exercise in Kampong Chhnang province, Cambodia, on May 30. Photo: AP
Reuters

The United States and China have significantly increased the volume of military exercises across Asia amid roiling regional tensions in recent years, though Beijing’s drills still lag in scale and complexity, a new study has found.

In a survey of military exercises in Asia between 2003 and 2022, the London-based International Institute of Strategic Studies said drills are expanding at an increasing rate, driven in part by US and Chinese efforts to test capabilities and boost strategic diplomacy.

The IISS study “Scripted Order”, released on Friday, charted some 1,113 US exercises involving Asian countries, compared with 130 run by China.

Advertisement

Noting that the US military may eventually lose its edge over China in the region, the study says China is challenged by a lack of combat experience and that its exercises “remain underdeveloped and over scripted for a regional contingency”.

“The US will seek to maintain its lead via plethora of military exercises with almost all regional countries,” the study notes. “China will try to narrow the gap by deepening its exercise ties with a small number of regional partners.”

Advertisement

More broadly, military deployments across the region have been rising for several years amid tensions over Taiwan and territorial disputes in the vital trade waterways of the East and South China Seas.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x