Perun delivers a masterclass in cutting through the noise of defense spending headlines. Forget the 2.5% global increase touted as "subdued"—this piece reveals how that number masks a tectonic shift: Europe’s defense budget now rivals Russia’s entire military expenditure, while China silently overtakes its former arms master. For anyone who thinks rearmament is just about writing checks, this is the wake-up call you need.
The Mirage of Modest Growth
Perun immediately dismantles the illusion of calm. "In some cases, responding to conflicts are already happening, and in other cases, apprehended ones," he writes, highlighting how 2025’s spending surge wasn’t reactive but anticipatory—a prescient move given early 2026’s chaos. The core insight? Defense budgets are lagging indicators. While MENA spending grew 4.5%, 70% came from just two nations: one actively at war and Algeria, which spends like it is. This unevenness exposes a critical truth—geopolitical anxiety, not GDP, drives the rearmament race. Perun’s framing lands because it forces us to see budgets as psychological barometers, not just fiscal line items. Critics might note he underplays inflation’s distortion of "real terms" growth, but his pivot to regional breakdowns makes the point undeniable.
Beijing once one of the largest importers of Soviet and later Russian arms is now in a position of the apprentice having overtaken the master in most respects.
That single line reframes Asia’s entire arms landscape. Perun shows how China’s spending surge barely registered in import data because it’s now exporting advanced systems that surpass Russia’s—proof that industrial self-sufficiency trumps mere budget size. Meanwhile, Korea’s transformation from importer to top exporter gets sharp treatment: "as we’ll see, it’s also corresponded with the country shifting from primarily an arms importer to being one of the most successful and fastest growing exporters." This isn’t just trend-spotting; it’s documenting the collapse of Cold War-era supply hierarchies. The omission of how missile tech controls (like the 1987 Missile Technology Control Regime) are straining under this shift feels like a missed opportunity—those rules were designed for a bipolar world, not today’s multipolar arms bazaar.
Europe’s Phantom Muscle
Here’s where Perun’s analysis shines brightest. He dissects Europe’s record $563 billion spend with surgical precision: Germany doubling its budget since 2020, Nordics doing the same, and Poland making equipment procurement larger than its entire non-equipment budget. But his killer insight? "The second thing to note is not a huge amount of that spending has actually converted into new capability yet. A lot of it is for procurements and investments that are going to take a long time to pay off." This exposes the dangerous gap between political promises and battlefield readiness—a gap that would terrify any strategist watching Russia’s next move. The historical irony of Germany’s rearmament being welcomed by neighbors ("Congratulations Moscow. You managed to get Warsaw and Paris cheering for German rearmament") lands perfectly, especially when tied to the European Intervention Initiative’s quiet 2018 launch as a framework for such cooperation.
Perun then delivers the knockout punch on procurement math: "If, for example, you’re Poland and you quadruple defense spending over the course of less than a decade while also more than doubling the percentage of that spending that goes towards new equipment, the impact on your new stuff budget is the product of those two increases." This isn’t just arithmetic—it’s a warning that Europe’s industrial base may buckle under the weight of these compounded demands. A counterargument worth considering: Can NATO’s supply chains handle this surge without replicating Ukraine’s ammunition shortages? Perun hints at the risk but doesn’t confront the industrial bottlenecks head-on.
The Time Lag Trap
The article’s most vital contribution is exposing the arms trade’s hidden clock. Perun writes, "But in the context of an episode focusing on arms transfers, it’s important to highlight a very important disconnect between defense spending and arms transfers. Emergencies and exceptions aside, there’s usually a massive time delay." His evidence is irrefutable: Poland’s 2025 arms haul mostly reflected orders placed during Ukraine’s invasion, while Saudi Arabia’s THAAD deliveries arrived years after the 2018 contract. This reframing turns conventional wisdom on its head—2025 wasn’t about that year’s threats but 2022’s panic. The analysis holds up because Perun uses concrete examples (like Saudi Arabia’s "1,400 TIV worth of THAAD") to prove that today’s shipments are yesterday’s fears. Still, the reliance on TIV (Trend Indicator Value) metrics—flawed for opaque markets like North Korea—leaves dollar-value impacts fuzzy for business readers.
Bottom Line
Perun’s greatest strength is exposing the dangerous illusion that defense spending equals immediate deterrence—a vulnerability that could haunt Europe within months. His biggest blind spot? Underestimating how supply chain fragility might turn today’s orders into tomorrow’s empty promises. Watch whether Korea’s export surge or China’s tech leap triggers the next major arms control crisis.