"According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), in the 2000-2015 stint France and Germany sold defense items to Asian-Pacific nations worth $9,681 billion and $7,166 billion respectively," author Emanuele Scimia wrote in Asia Times on Friday.
"The list continues with Britain ($4,736 billion), Sweden ($2,485 billion), Spain ($2,135 billion), Italy ($1,924 billion) and the Netherlands ($1,197 billion), only citing the most prominent European arm suppliers."
Scimia contrasts the surge in sales with the rhetoric from Brussels, where the European Parliament has called for sanctions on arms sales to countries like China and Saudi Arabia. Nevertheless, the sales still go ahead.
While the EU and the US have long banned the sale of arms to China, EU member states have continued to sell weapons there.
"European countries systematically skirt the EU arms embargo on China, which Brussels imposed on Beijing in the wake of the crackdown on Tiananmen Square protests in 1989. China buys up components, dual-use goods and sub-systems designed and manufactured in Europe, seizing the relative technology."
The EU may choose to pursue a similar tactic regarding Saudi Arabia, after the European Parliament voted in February for a Europe-wide arms embargo against the kingdom in response to its bombing campaign in Yemen.
Immediately after the non-binding resolution was adopted, then-UK Prime Minister David Cameron announced the expansion of arms exports to Saudi Arabia.
On Monday, Laetitia Sedou of the European Network Against Arms Trade sought to persuade the EU leaders that cutting support for the European arms industry might be a good way to foster more public support for the faltering EU project.
"Subsidizing the arms industry is not the way the once-peaceful EU project will improve its popularity with Eurosceptic citizens. Instead, the EU should invest in jobs and research projects which contribute to the prevention of conflicts," the campaigner wrote on EurActiv, an EU-centered media platform.
Last month the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network (BIRN) and the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) reported that Central and Eastern European countries have delivered $1.3 million in weapons to Middle Eastern countries, which were later diverted to Syrian and other armed groups accused of widespread human rights abuses and atrocities.
"Countries selling arms to Saudi Arabia or the Middle East-North Africa region are not carrying out good risk assessments and, as a result, are in breach of EU and national law," EU parliament member Bodil Valero commented on the report.
The report found that some of Europe's biggest arms sellers are also the beneficiaries of border control contracts, having lobbied the EU to increase security in order to control illegal migration.