China’s combat drones could spark a global arms race

AVIC's Wing Loong II drone.

Photographer: Mikhail Voskresenskiy / AP Images

A dozen years after its fight with the Islamic insurgent group Boko Haram, Nigeria receives some new weapons: a pair of Wing Loong II drones from China. The deal is one of the growing state-owned sales Aviation Industry Corp. of China (AVIC), which has exported several aircraft. The UAE has used AVIC drones in the Libyan civil war, Egypt has attacked rebels in Sinai and Saudi-led troops have deployed them in Yemen. The company’s drones are “now being tested in battle,” says Heather Penney, a fellow at the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies, a think tank in Arlington, Va. “They have been able to feed the lessons learned in their manufacture.”

Nigeria achieves AVIC’s second-generation Wing Loongs – the name means “pterodactyl” – which can fly up to 230 mph and reach 30,000 feet, with a payload of a dozen missiles. Since 2015, when AVIC introduced the new model, there have been 50 for export and an unknown number for China’s People’s Liberation Army. And he’s working on even more advanced aircraft, such as a stealth fighter with a flying wing design similar to the American B-2 bomber. The drone program, combined with deliveries of fighter jets, trainers, carriers and assault helicopters, has propelled AVIC to the top ranks of the global arms trade. In 2019 it sold military equipment valued at $ 22.5 billion, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (Sipri), and placed it sixth in the world, behind five U.S. companies.

AVIC’s drones have two major outlets: they are cheaper than comparable aircraft from US or Israeli producers – the other primary manufacturers – and China doesn’t care much about how they are used, says Ulrike Franke, a member of European Policy Foreign Affairs Council. “China is willing to export armed drones to almost everyone,” he says. AVIC did not respond to requests for comment.

Combat drones delivered

By Chinese and American suppliers, 2010-2020

Excludes orders that have not yet been delivered.


LOWER LINE –
AVIC sold drones and other military equipment valued at $ 22.5 billion in 2019, making it the world’s No. 6 leading arms exporter, behind only U.S. companies.

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