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Wheeled armoured assault vehicles attended China’s giant military parade in Beijing last September to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the end of world war two. Photo: Xinhua

As China and Russia rise, West losing its edge in military tech, says London-based think tank

China’s military spending hit US$145.8 billion last year, second only to the United States’ US$597.5 billion

Science

Western superiority in military technology is “eroding”, notably at the hands of China and Russia, a leading think-tank said this week in its annual report on the state of militaries around the world.

The International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) in London said in its Military Balance report that increasingly easy access to technology by non-state groups means the world faces “an increasingly complex balance of military power”.

READ MORE: Chinese military overhaul to tighten Xi Jinping’s grip on armed forces, say analysts

It also highlighted that Russia and China are pushing to modernise their militaries and are “increasingly active in the development and deployment of advanced military capabilities”.

“We previously felt that Western states were the champions of new technology and had a large technological lead either over their state peer competitors or over non-state actors,” said John Chipman, director-general and chief executive of the IISS.

WATCH: highlights of China V-Day parade in Beijing in 2015

“Now that technological lead is narrowing,” he added.

Chipman stressed that military power in the 21st century was not only about planes, tanks and ships but also about technologies such as cybersecurity, cyber-weapons and drones.

The IISS also said that European defence budgets, which have suffered major cuts since the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, were still too low.

Last year, only four out of 26 European members of Nato met a target that two per cent of gross domestic product should be spent on defence - Britain, Greece, Poland and Estonia.

The top five spenders on defence last year were the United States on US$597.5 billion, China on US$145.8 billion, Saudi Arabia on US$81.9 billion, Russia on US$65.6 billion and Britain on US$56.2 billion.

Russia, which deployed forces to Syria in September, has seen “double-digit” growth in its defence budget, the IISS said.

The United States’ overall defence expenditure as a percentage of GDP has fallen from 4.63 per cent in 2010 to 3.27 per cent in 2015.

But the amount being spent on the US military presence in Europe is being quadrupled to $3.4 billion.

READ MORE: Beijing military parade a ‘bikini show’ of China’s technology but sensitive parts were hidden, expert says

Chipman attributed this to a “perceived growing threat from Russia, especially to the Baltic states and the eastern European states” and their calls “to reassure them and protect them against Russian intimidation”.

In the Middle East, the lifting of sanctions against Iran following a nuclear deal last year raises the possibility of Tehran modernising its military equipment, much of which dates back to the 1970s, according to the IISS.

This could lead to changes in the make-up of countries’ armaments in the region.

“Gulf states - aware that Iran will always have an edge in terms of force size - will likely look to procure yet more advanced weapons, for instance high-speed precision strike or cruise missiles that would allow them still to reliably engage military targets, even with more capable Iranian opposition,” it said.

The nuclear deal struck in Vienna between world powers and Iran has delayed any acquisition by Iran of a nuclear weapon by up to 15 years, Chipman added.

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