India is the worlds largest arms importer, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) said in a statement upon releasing the report.
India receives nine per cent of the volume of international arms transfers during 2006-10, with Russian deliveries accounting for 82 per cent of Indian arms imports, it said.
Indias arms import delivery volumes jumped 21 per cent from the prior five-year-period, with aircraft accounting for 71 per cent of its imports.
China and South Korea held a joint second place, each accounting for six per cent of global arms imports, followed by Pakistan, which saw the volume of imports soar 128 per cent from the 2001-2005 period to account for five per cent of worldwide arms imports, the institute said.
Siemon Wezeman, of the SIPRI Arms Transfers Programme, explained that Indias imports of conventional weapons were largely driven by rivalries with Pakistan and China, as well as internal security challenges. As an importer, India is demanding offsets and transfers of technology to boost its own arms industry, he said in the statement, adding that competition-pressed suppliers were agreeing to Indias demands.
The United States remained the worlds largest military equipment exporter, accounting for 30 per cent of global arms exports in 2006-10, when 44 per cent of the countrys weapons sales went to Asia and Oceania, SIPRI said.
There was intense competition between the seller companies and countries to land big arms deals around the world, the institute said Monday.
Countries in the Middle East and North Africa, being rocked by popular uprisings, were seen as potentially lucrative markets for weapons exporters, largely due to the tensions across the region, which provide drivers for demand as well as give cause for concern, SIPRI said.
For the five-year period ending in 2010, arms imports were particularly high in the United Arab Emirates, Israel, Egypt and Algeria, while Saudi Arabian and Moroccan arms imports are expected to rise significantly in the coming years, it added.
There had also been a rush to sell arms to Libya, the institute said.
Although Libya placed only limited orders for major conventional weapons following the lifting of the UN arms embargo in 2003, in recent years it has served as an excellent illustration of the competition between major suppliers France, Italy, Russia and Britain for orders, Pieter Wezeman, also of the SIPRI Arms Transfers Programme, said in the statement.
While this development was worrying, SIPRI stressed there are limits to what supplier states are willing to provide, pointing out that the United Nations last month placed a broad embargo on arms sales to Libya.
The think tank, which specialises in research on conflicts, weapons, arms control and disarmament, was created in 1966 and is 50-per cent financed by the Swedish state.