* Contract portfolio $45 billion end 2010
* India tops list of Russian arms importers
By Thomas Grove
MOSCOW, March 28 (Reuters) - Russian arms exports are
expected to stay at record levels of about $10 billion a year
until at least 2014 as top customer India continues to beef up
its armaments, leading military think tank CAST said on Monday.
Peddling missiles, submarines and fighter planes, Russia is
feeding a hungry market of Asian countries warily eyeing China's
growing military might and African nations preparing for the
worst in potential regional conflicts.
As the world's second top arms exporter, Russia ended last
year with a record $45 billion contract portfolio. Arms
exporters signed $15 billion in contracts during the year, CAST
estimated.
"The existing portfolio of contracts will be enough to keep
Russian arms exports at the current level for another four years
or more," CAST said in the report, obtained by Reuters ahead of
publication.
Rosoboronexport, Russia's weapons export monopoly delivered
$8.6 billion in arms last year. Nearly 20 independent firms make
up the difference with sales of spare parts and upgrades.
Rosoboronexport generally makes up 80 percent of all arms
exports in a given year.
India is carefully watching the growing economic and
military prowess of regional rival China, the world's second
largest defence spender. New Delhi boosted military spending by
more than 10 percent in its 2011-12 budget to more than $36
billion.
By comparison the United States spent $530 billion on core
defence spending, while China set defence spending at $78
billion.
Last year Russia delivered 10 Su-30MKI fighter planes to
India as part of a broader contract worth a total of $1.6
billion as well as a shipment of 20 T-90 tanks in a $1.24
billion contract, CAST said.
India and Russia, whose defence ties date back to Soviet
times, also concluded an agreement last year for the design and
development of an expected 250-300 supersonic fighter aircraft
over 10 years, reported to be worth up to $35 billion.
Orders from China, which has been a big buyer of Russian
arms in the past, is expected to stagnate in part due to the
country's own defence industry, which analysts say has come into
its own in part by copying aspects of Russian technology.
MISSILE DELIVERY TO SYRIA
Uganda became a large importer last year with an order of
eight fighter planes worth $350 million. The African nation is
nervously watching troubled negotiations between north and south
Sudan ahead of the south's formal secession on July 9 as well as
violence which it fears could spill over into the region.
South Sudanese politicians walked out of negotiations with
the north this month, accusing Khartoum of arming militias in
the contested Abyei border region and provoking other fighting.
"Given the growing tensions in southern Sudan, new Ugandan
arms contracts can be expected any time now," the report said.
Moscow also delivered Bastion anti-ship missiles to Syria
despite protests from Israel in 2010, in a deal previously
quoted at $300 million.
Israel fears the sale of the rockets, capable of hitting
ships 300 km (190 miles) off Syria's coast, could end up in the
hands of Lebanese guerrilla group Hezbollah.
While New Delhi accounted for 41 percent of arms deliveries,
Algeria took 12 percent of exports and Syria represented 7
percent of deliveries.
(Editing by Matthew Jones)
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