ADVERTISEMENT

U.S. Weapons Sales to Thailand Have a New Competitor: China

U.S. Weapons Sales to Thailand Have a New Competitor: China

(Bloomberg) -- When signing a vision statement with the U.S. last month, Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-Ocha quietly sat as Pentagon chief Mark Esper touted the commitment of an old ally at a time of “external coercion and intimidation” in Asia -- a clear reference to China.

Less than an hour later, Prayuth -- a former army chief -- signed a similarly vague defense cooperation agreement with Chinese Defense Minister Wei Fenghe while also pledging to support key Beijing policies like the Belt and Road Initiative to finance infrastructure investment around the globe.

U.S. Weapons Sales to Thailand Have a New Competitor: China

While neither statement committed Thailand to anything concrete, Prayuth’s balancing act showed the extent to which China has made inroads in a nation with deep U.S. military connections going back decades. Designated by former U.S. President George W. Bush as a “major non-NATO ally” in 2003, Thailand served as a key staging ground during the Vietnam War when both countries teamed up to stop the spread of communism.

U.S.-Thai relations soured after Prayuth led a military coup in 2014, triggering American laws that restrict defense ties until democracy is restored. China quickly filled the void, stepping up military exercises and signing 10 major arms deals including Thailand’s largest defense purchase ever: $1.03 billion for three diesel-electric submarines and 48 battle tanks, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.

“Ultimately the reset in Thai-U.S. relations means that Thailand finds itself at the center of a geo-strategic tug-of-war between the U.S. and China in Southeast Asia,” said Paul Chambers, director of research at the Institute of South East Asian Affairs in Chiang Mai, who has written extensively on security sector reform and democracy.

After Thai elections in March that rights groups said were neither free nor fair, U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration has moved quickly to make up lost ground. U.S. Secretary of State Michael Pompeo hailed Thailand for “returning to the democratic fold” during a visit to Bangkok in August, as his department pushes its “Buy American” weapons export strategy.

“Unlike the determination made in Beijing or Moscow, our major defense sales are managed by a process of policies that are clear and transparent and with approvals that are public,” said Jillian Bonnardeaux, spokeswoman for the U.S. Embassy in Bangkok. She added that weapons and assistance programs from competitors “rarely deliver at advertised capability and instead leave the buyer in debt with systems that are not operational.”

U.S. Weapons Sales to Thailand Have a New Competitor: China

Thailand said in August it will receive 70 Stryker armored vehicles by year-end under the U.S. Foreign Military Sales program, and that it plans to purchase 50 more. The following month, the Thai army said it’s buying eight AH-6i light attack reconnaissance helicopters in a $138 million deal.

Competition between the U.S. and China also has extended to military exercises in recent years. Thailand continues to host the U.S.-backed “Cobra Gold” exercise, the largest military drill in Asia, which this year featured 29 participating countries including 4,500 U.S. personnel and several dozen from China.

At the same time, Thailand has participated in more combined military exercises with China than any other Southeast Asian country, according to Ian Storey, a senior fellow at the ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute. What began as landmine clearance and humanitarian assistance drills back in 2005 have more recently expanded to air and maritime exercises, he wrote in May.

Buying Spree

“It’s about creating balance -- we can’t choose sides, we have to be friendly to everyone,” Raksak Rojphimphun, the director general of policy and planning at the Thai Defense Ministry, said on the sidelines of a regional gathering of defense ministers in Bangkok last month. “We’re a small country. We can’t choose our friends.”

According to SIPRI data, China’s conventional arms sales surged from $644 million in 2008 to $1.04 billion in 2018. Still, the overall value of its trade pales in comparison to the U.S., whose exports averaged over $9 billion annually during the last ten years. In 2018 alone, the U.S. exported $10.5 billion worth of weapons to foreign militaries.

U.S. Weapons Sales to Thailand Have a New Competitor: China

For Thailand, where annual defense spending is budgeted at about $7.7 billion, China may provide a cheaper alternative than the U.S. for certain weapons. Now the world’s fifth largest arms supplier, China has largely sold to its neighbors, with Asia accounting for 75% of all sales, with Pakistan, Bangladesh and Myanmar among their biggest customers.

Southeast Asia is a growing market for defense where countries have more money to spend and feel a need to react to their neighbors, said Siemon Wezeman, a senior researcher in SIPRI’s arms and military expenditure program.

Reduced U.S. engagement in Asia “helped push other players more toward China,” Wezeman said. “The U.S. just became a visibly less and less reliable partner.”

--With assistance from Siraphob Thanthong-Knight.

To contact the reporter on this story: Philip J. Heijmans in Singapore at pheijmans1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Ruth Pollard at rpollard2@bloomberg.net, Daniel Ten Kate

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.