Abstract
Despite the end of the Cold War?perhaps because of it?the nations of East and Southeast Asia are engaged in accelerating arms races with significant implications for regional and international security. The recent sale of American F-16 fighter jets to Taiwan and Russian Su-27 fighter jets to China are part of a larger arms acquisi tion effort as both countries also upgrade their own military produc tion capabilities. Other countries in the region?Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and the two Koreas?are also involved in major arms acquisition programs and the development of high-tech military industries. Although these nations have generally managed to avoid direct combat with one another since the Vietnam War (the short border conflict between China and Vietnam in 1979 being the sole exception), continuing tension in Korea and a number of territorial disputes in the South China Sea area could provide the sparks to ignite a regional conflagration. The acceleration of regional arms races is made more worrisome by the absence of any regional arms control talks, such as those now under way in the Middle East, and by the growing technological prowess of the leading Asian powers. While most of the nato and former Warsaw Pact countries are reducing their military expendi tures and slowing the development of new weapons, many East Asian countries are raising their military outlays?in some cases by a
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