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Mar 10, 2025

Arms: Ukraine tops in importer, United States biggest exporter

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FA News Desk
SIPRI

Ukraine became the world’s largest importer of major arms in the period 2020-24, with its imports increasing nearly 100 times over compared with 2015-19.

Ukraine was the only European state among the top 10 importers in 2020-24, although many other European states significantly increased their arms imports in the period, according to new data on international arms transfers published today by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).

Established in 1966, Stockholm based SIPRI is an independent international institute dedicated to research into conflict, armaments, arms control, and disarmament.

The United States was by far the largest exporter of major arms in 2020-24 with a share of 43 per cent of global arms exports while Russia’s exports fell by 64 per cent making it the world’s third largest arms exporter behind the USA and France as stated in a SIPRI press release .

European arms import overall grew by 155 per cent between the same periods, as states responded to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and uncertainty over the future of US foreign policy.

The overall volume of arms transfers globally remained at roughly the same level as in 2015-19 and 2010-14 (but was 18 per cent higher than in 2005-2009), as increasing imports in Europe and the Americas were offset by decreases in other regions.

The top 10 arms exporters in 2020-24 were the same as those in 2015-19 but Russia (accounting for 7.8 per cent of global arms exports) fell to third place behind France (9.6 per cent), while Italy (4.8 per cent) jumped from 10th to sixth place, added the release.

 At least 35 states sent weapons to Ukraine after Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, and substantial further deliveries are in the pipeline. Ukraine received 8.8 per cent of global arms imports in 2020-24. Most of the major arms supplied to Ukraine came from the USA (45 per cent), followed by Germany (12 per cent) and Poland (11 per cent).

‘The new arms transfers figures clearly reflect the rearmament taking place among states in Europe in response to the threat from Russia,’ said Mathew George, Programme Director with the SIPRI Arms Transfers Programme.

‘However, some major arms importers, including Saudi Arabia, India and China, saw large declines in import volumes for a variety of reasons, despite high threat perceptions in their regions,’ he said.

Europe-NATO

Arms imports by the European NATO members more than doubled between 2015-19 and 2020-24 (+105 per cent). The USA supplied 64 per cent of these arms, a substantially larger share than in 2015-19 (52 per cent).

The other main suppliers were France and South Korea (accounting for 6.5 per cent each), Germany (4.7 per cent) and Israel (3.9 per cent), it reads.

Export: USA up Russia slide

Arms exports by the USA increased by 21 per cent between 2015-19 and 2020-24, and its share of global arms exports grew from 35 per cent to 43 per cent. The USA supplied major arms to 107 states in 2020-24.

For the first time in two decades, the largest share of US arms exports in 2020-24 went to Europe (35 per cent) rather than the Middle East (33 percent). Nevertheless, the top single recipient of US arms was Saudi Arabia (12 per cent of US arms exports).

In contrast to the USA, arms exports by Russia fell sharply (-64 per cent) between 2015-19 and 2020-24. The decline started before Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

In 2020 and 2021 export volumes were much smaller than in any year in the previous two decades.

Russia delivered major arms to 33 states in 2020-24. Two thirds of Russian arms exports went to three states: India (38 per cent), China (17 per cent) and Kazakhstan (11 per cent).

France became the world’s second largest arms supplier in 2020-24, delivering arms to 65 states. France’s exports of major arms to other European states almost tripled between 2015-19 and 2020-24 (+187 per cent), release said.

This was mainly due to deliveries of combat aircraft to Greece and Croatia, and arms supplies to Ukraine after Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022.

Nevertheless, India received by far the largest share of French arms exports (28 per cent)—almost twice the share that went to all European recipients combined (15 per cent). The second largest recipient of major arms from France was Qatar (9.7 per cent of French arms exports).

China was the fourth largest exporter of arms in 2020-24, with 5.9 percent of global arms exports. Despite China’s efforts to increase its arms exports, many large importers do not buy Chinese arms for political reasons.

Likewise, the share of global arms transfers going to states in Asia and Oceania fell from 41 per cent to 33 per cent between 2015-19 and 2020-24.

Asia-Oceania

Four states in Asia and Oceania–India, Pakistan, Japan and Australia ranked among the 10 largest arms importers globally in 2020-24.

China dropped out of the top 10 arms importers for the first time since 1990-94.

The main suppliers to the region in 2020-24 were the USA, which accounted for 37 per cent of regional arms imports, Russia (17 per cent) and China (14per cent). India was the world’s second largest arms importer, with its imports reflecting perceived threats from both China and Pakistan.

However, its imports decreased by 9.3 per cent between 2015-19 and 2020-24. The largest share of Indian arms imports (36 per cent) came from Russia, a significantly smaller share than in 2015-19 (55 per cent) and 2010-14 (72 per cent).

Arms imports by Pakistan grew by 61 per cent between 2015-19 and 2020-24. China became even more dominant as its supplier, accounting for 81 per cent of Pakistan’s arms imports in 2020-24, compared with 74 percent in 2015-19.

With the sharp drop in China’s arms imports, and marked decreases in imports by Taiwan (-27 per cent) and South Korea (-24 per cent), arms imports by East Asian states shrank by 22 per cent between 2015-19 and 2020-24.

Japan (+93 per cent) was the only East Asian state that saw an increase in its arms imports.

Middle East

Arms imports by states in the Middle East fell by 20 per cent between 2015-19 and 2020-24.

Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Kuwait were the top 10 global importers in 2020-24. Qatar was the world’s third largest arms importer in 2020-24 (up from 10th largest in 2015-19) while Saudi Arabia’s arms imports decreased by 41 per cent.

More than half of arms imports to the Middle East came from the USA (52 per cent), while 13 per cent came from Italy, 9.8 per cent from France and 7.6 per cent from Germany.

Despite the ongoing war in Gaza, arms imports by Israel remained largely stable between 2015-19 and 2020-24. In 2020-24 the USA supplied the biggest share of Israel’s arms imports (66 per cent), followed by Germany (33 percent) and Italy (1.0 per cent). Israel was the 15th largest arms importer globally in 2020-24, down from 14th in 2015-19.

Insecurity and conflict drive a large increase in arms imports to West Africa. The combined arms imports of West African states almost doubled (+82 per cent) between 2010-14 and 2020-24. Nigeria accounted for by far the biggest share (34 per cent) of arms imports to West Africa in 2020-24.

‘States like Burkina Faso, Mali and Senegal seem to be rapidly increasing their imports. African arms imports fell by 44 per cent between 2015-19 and 2020-24. This was mainly due to large decreases in imports by Algeria (-73 per cent and Morocco (-26 per cent). Arms imports by states in sub-Saharan Africa increased by 4.2 per cent.

Brazil’s arms imports increased by 77 per cent between 2015-19 and 2020-24, and accounted for 49 per cent of all arms imports to South America in 2020-24.

The main suppliers to South America in 2020-24 were France (accounting for 30 per cent of South American arms imports), the USA (12 per cent) and the UK (11 per cent), it said.

North Korea exported artillery and missiles to Russia for use in Ukraine. With this, both states violated the United Nations sanctions on North Korea.

SIPRI’s data reflects the volume of deliveries of arms, not their financial value. As the volume of deliveries can fluctuate their financial-on-year, SIPRI presents data for five-year periods, giving a more stable measure of trends.

This is the second of three major data launches in the lead-up to the release of SIPRI’s flagship publication in mid-2025, the annual SIPRI book.

The third data launch will provide comprehensive information on global, regional and national trends in military spending, reads the release.