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FEATURES: Resurgent Russia? A Still-Faltering Military
By Zoltan Barany
Reports of its return have been greatly exaggerated
In the past few years Moscow’s increasingly assertive foreign policy posture has been underscored by signs of
improvement in the military realm. Several pundits have argued that the Russian
army is
“back,” that it is once again an effective force, having endured humiliating conditions
through much of the post-Soviet period. Some recent developments have
undoubtedly supported this contention. After all, in
2007 alone Russia resumed regular long-range bomber missions after a 16-year hiatus, conducted a military exercise with the People’s Republic of China and other members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization
(a.k.a.
“The Dictators’ Club”) that included 6,500 troops and over 100 aircraft, increased defense spending by more than 30 percent, announced a new rearmament program, and began planning the reclamation
of the old Soviet naval base at Tartus, Syria in order to reestablish a
Mediterranean naval presence.
These events are in concert with the longstanding Soviet-Russian tradition of
emphasizing the armed forces as the state
’s most important foreign policy instrument while designating lesser roles to
diplomatic, economic, and other means. Still, those familiar with the magnitude
of the Russian defense establishment
’s post-Cold War privations cannot but wonder whether it could have recovered
quite so quickly. To be sure, the military
’s situation has improved in some respects in the past several years. At the same
time, reversing the army
’s decline and regaining its former might will take many years, and the Russian
armed forces will not be able to challenge America
’s military supremacy for decades. Indeed, my main argument here is that reports
of the Russian army
’s imminent resurgence, like those of Mark Twain’s death nearly a century ago, have been greatly exaggerated.
I will focus on three closely related aspects of Russian defense policy — reform, manpower, and expenditures — under Vladimir Putin’s reign to show that the U.S. and the West have no cause for alarm in the
foreseeable future. Before proceeding further, it ought to be acknowledged that
reality remains often at odds with the propaganda emanating from the Kremlin.
“Soviet statistics” was an oxymoron, as “hard data” originating from the ussr were notoriously unreliable. Though matters have improved somewhat since then,
Russian figures, particularly on defense and security issues, should still be
treated with caution. A recent example should suffice. In a January
11, 2006 Wall Street Journal article then-Defense Minister Sergey Ivanov boasted that in the armed forces “the number and level of large-scale exercises ha[d] grown to more than fifty” in 2005. In fact, only 31 of these were held at the regimental level and just one involved an entire
division, even though the Russian military contains more than
20 divisions and hundreds of regiments.1 The point is that, given the authorities’ full control of television — the news source for most Russians — and their expanding grip on radio and print media, the information for domestic
public consumption, let alone that intended for foreign audiences, is routinely
manipulated and distorted.
The contradictions of defense reform
Sixteen years after the collapse of the ussr, the Russian military remains fundamentally unreformed. The critical problem of
defense policy is that the failure of political and military elites to sort out
what type of conflicts the country should prepare for inevitably prevents the
formulation of a consistent grand strategy and doctrine. In other words,
politicians and generals seem not to have reached a solid consensus on who
their enemies are and how to fight them in a potential future war.
Nevertheless, the vast majority of Russia
’s top brass and many leading politicians are stuck in Cold War mode and continue
to insist that the main threat to their country remains the United States.
(Curiously, both political and army leaders seem to be bothered little by the
rapidly increasing military power of neighboring China.) Consequently, the
generals oppose the abolition of conscription because they want to retain the
capability of raising large armies with a deep pool of reservists. They have,
time and again, rejected the idea of creating a relatively small (
600,000- to 800,000-strong), mobile, well-trained and appropriately equipped force to fight in
local and regional conflicts while countering others with nuclear deterrence.
With the Kremlin”s control of TV and its grip on print and radio, information is routinely
distorted.
Official documents on doctrinal matters often lack internal logic. On the one
hand, they claim that Russia
’s is a defensive doctrine, that the country does not have a specific strategic
enemy, that the main challenges to its security are fundamentalism, armed
separatism, terrorism, smuggling, and other
“soft” security threats. On the other hand, the doctrine maintains that Russia needs a
large army along with heavy armaments, global capabilities, and a generous
budget. The problem is rooted in a basic conflict between a government that
needs to tailor defense according to the international security environment and
fiscal realities and the General Staff, which does not want to part with its
massive army. For instance, the first two parts of a new doctrinal document the
General Staff deliberated in October
2003 were insightful analyses of political and strategic-operational issues prepared
by the Ministry of Defense (MoD). The third part
— concerned with manpower, weapons, and budgets — however, squarely contradicted the first two sections.2 This part was formulated by the General Staff, still operating from its Cold War
mentality. The changing power balance between the MoD, the General Staff, and
the Security Council occasionally spawns discussions of the doctrine
’s impending modification, but until the fundamental questions are put to rest,
consistency between the plans and implementation will be lacking.
Boris Yeltsin demanded two things from the armed forces — manpower reduction and the speedy withdrawal of troops from Eastern and Central
Europe and the former Soviet republics. In return, he permitted army leaders to
run the army as they saw fit (and to get away with corruption and criminal
behavior on a shocking scale). Vladimir Putin
— astounded by the military’s appalling performance in Chechnya — came to power determined to radically transform the armed forces. Already as
acting president in
2000, he identified defense reform as a top priority. As time went by, however, his
resolve diminished, for numerous perfectly sensible reasons
— the absence of real reformers on his team and his disinclination to enforce
unpopular decisions on a key institutional support base, to mention just two.
The most important factor delaying substantial reform, however, has been the
generals
’ steadfast opposition to it. In March 2001, Putin appointed his friend and political ally, Sergey Ivanov, to head the
defense ministry and the effort to transform the military into a modern,
effective fighting force. Nearly six years later, Ivanov left his post having
failed in his task. This is not to say that nothing has been done or even that
what has been accomplished is unimportant; rather, the point is that the
post-Soviet armed forces desperately needed to undergo a comprehensive reform
that,
16 years on, has yet to be implemented.
The military has shrunk drastically since the fall of the USSR, when 3 million men wore its
uniform.
What has been done? First of all, the military has shrunk drastically since the fall of
the ussr, when roughly 3 million men wore its uniform. The MoD’s manpower has hovered around 1.1 million to 1.2 million uniformed personnel plus 875,000 civilians for nearly a decade. The exact figure may not be known to anyone.
Commanders routinely inflate the staffing levels of their units. That way, if
the MoD orders additional personnel cuts, they can be easily
“implemented” by scrapping vacant slots. In addition, overstating the number of troops
enables officers to collect food and equipment rations as well as salaries and
benefits allocated to nonexistent personnel which can then be used to alleviate
the unit
’s financial difficulties or, more likely, to line the officers’ own pockets. Russia’s is currently the world’s fourth largest military in personnel, after China (2.4 million), the U.S. (1.5 million), and India (1.3 million). In 2000, Putin pledged to reduce manpower by 365,000 officers and soldiers and 120,000 defense ministry employees. But this initiative — like so many others — has not only not been implemented but, in fact, it has been explicitly
abandoned. In any event, it is important to recognize that decreasing the army
’s size does not equal reform. Force reduction enhances neither the effectiveness
nor the combat-readiness of the armed forces; it just makes them smaller.
Second, various parts of the armed forces have been repeatedly reorganized since
1991 — occasionally reversing the previous “reform.” This pattern suggests the absence of a serious master plan or conceptual
design. Reorganizations have included the abolition of the Ground Forces
Headquarters, the merging of the air defense branch into the air force, and the
reduction of the number of military districts to six with the amalgamation of
the Siberian and Trans-Baikal districts and the Volga and Ural districts.
(Actually, the headquarters of the former Volga Military District were
redesignated the headquarters of the Second Army, and thus no units were
disbanded). Both the Ground Forces Headquarters
— their importance is underscored by the several armed conflicts on Russia’s borders — and the space forces were re-established as independent entities. There are now
three main services (army, navy, and air force) and three separate branches
(strategic rocket forces, space forces, and airborne forces). The result of all
these reorganizations and reversals is that the structure of the current armed
forces is actually not very different from what it was in the Soviet era.
The first bona fide civilian to head the MoD has no military background other than
as a conscript.
Third, the 1996 Defense Law granted the Ministry of Defense and the General Staff fundamentally
equal status, which virtually ensured that they would compete for
decision-making authority. In
2004, however, in response to the protracted conflict between the two institutions,
the Duma (the legislature
’s lower house) modified the Defense Law and formally established the defense
minister and the ministry
’s superiority over the general staff and its chief. The amended version of the
law entrusts the MoD with the administrative and operational command and
control of the armed forces. Although the Defense Law omits all references to
the role of the
gs, it may become a research institute or think tank, the “brains of the army,” charged with preparing threat assessments and doctrinal documents for the
ministry to review. This was potentially the most important defense-related
legislation in recent years, and it codified the
gs’s worst-case scenario. I say “potentially” because laws passed by a mostly rubber-stamp legislature can mean very little
in Russia: They can be open for varying interpretations or rewritten as
changing circumstances demand. Actually, since then, the
gs, led by its capable chief, Yury Baluyevskiy, has maintained its traditional
role, which was only confirmed following the February
2007 appointment of Anatoly Serdyukov as defense minister.
Serdyukov, the first bona fide civilian to head the MoD, has no military
background other than conscript service. Nor did he demonstrate any interest in
defense issues prior to taking his new job. Nonetheless, as the former head of
the Federal Tax Service, he might possess the skills that the armed forces most
need. Ivanov was unable to eradicate the culture of corruption that took root
in the military and the extensive hazing of conscripts that has gradually
emerged as an important societal concern. Given the absence of real civilian
oversight, how monies are actually spent remains a mystery to all but a few in
the ministry. Serdyukov vows to
“improve the financial efficiency of the military’s activities to ensure that they don’t spend a single ruble needlessly and so that the army suffers no losses.”
3 He intends to change the approach to planning defense spending and reporting procedures in
order to tighten the ministry
’s control, and to oversee the development of new technology that would allow the MoD to track all financial activity in the
armed forces. Serdyukov has called on officers to embrace more accountability
and has pledged to root out the pervasive criminality.
Inadequate human resources
The russian armed forces are staffed by officers and noncommissioned officers most of whom enjoy
few alternative career options, and by conscripts who are too inept or poor to
escape the draft. The most important question of the future of the Russian
military is whether its manpower is going to be based on volunteers,
conscription, or some combination of the two. Responding to the widespread
public aversion to the draft, Yeltsin famously promised in the
1996 presidential campaign to abolish mandatory military service and create a fully
professional army by
2000. This has not happened, even though until 2003 there were still opposition parties in the legislature with sound reform
proposals aimed at the creation of an all-professional force. In fact,
conscription has been expanded.
One of the main problems surrounding the draft is that only a small proportion
of young men (
9 percent to 11 percent) actually serve. There are many ways to legally avoid military service,
and those who cannot avail themselves of one often bribe the appropriate
officials. About
40,000 a year — a sufficient number to staff three and a half divisions — simply dodge the draft. The military ends up with the least desirable men of
their cohort. Data on the 2005 conscription cycle show that 70 percent of those called up for service were medically unfit, 45 percent had never held a job or studied at the postsecondary level, 5 percent had criminal records, 25 percent had not finished high school, nearly one-ninth were alcoholics and/or
regular drug users, and some were illiterate.4 For tens of thousands of youths every year, the way to evade conscription is to
enroll at a civilian college or university where military training (in
so-called
“cadet departments”) is available. This allows students to qualify as reserve officers without
actually serving in the armed forces. In recent years these departments have
produced about
150,000 to 180,000 reserve officers annually, about ten times more than needed.
In 2005, the number of civilian institutions of higher education where this option was
available was reduced from
229 to 35. The remaining institutions are being upgraded to orient them toward students
who genuinely want to serve in the military, and they will have to do so as
contract officers for a period of five or six years, depending on military
specialty.
This change was in line with a key provision of the Defense Ministry’s 2003 reform proposal, which expanded conscription and simultaneously shortened the
draft period. Reducing the number of deferrals for conscripts, another
important step in this direction, was accomplished in
2006, when nine of the 25 draft deferment categories were abolished. Rural doctors and teachers,
athletes, artists and cultural workers, young men with pregnant wives or very
young children, and those caring for elderly parents are no longer exempt. The
new restrictions will come into effect in
2008 together with a halving of the length of military service. The latter is
actually going to be a two-step process. Under the terms of the 2006 bill the period of military service will be reduced to 18 months starting in 2007 and to 12 months from 2008 for men between the ages of 18 and 27. The MoD’s hope is that the outcome of these reforms will significantly improve the size and quality of its conscript pool.
Draftees are treated as serfs, and brutal hazing drives thousands to desertion, suicide, or
violent crime.
The right of draft-age young men to opt for civilian service instead of
conventional military duty was already enshrined in the
1993 constitution. This right, however, was not only unguaranteed by proper legislation for nearly a decade, but, in fact, individuals who intended to
choose alternative service were hauled off to jail as recently as
2000. A 2004 law specified that alternative service must be performed away from the
individual
’s permanent residence. This stipulation creates new opportunities for corruption
(i.e., influencing the decision of where civilian service might be performed)
and makes it an expensive substitute for regular duty because those electing
alternative service must pay for their accommodations. A recent MoD directive
reduced the period of alternative service from
36 months to 18 months. Still, in January 2007, only 51 draftees out of a total of 123,000 selected this option of national service, even fewer than in the spring 2005 conscription cycle (186 out of about 155,000).5 There are many reports of military commissioners demanding bribes even to accept
applications for alternative service.
Once in the service, draftees are commonly treated as serfs, and the widespread
and brutal hazing drives thousands to desertion, suicide, or violent crime
annually. Low morale breeds poor discipline, which in turn causes frequent
mishaps. According to the MoD
262 servicemen died in the first half of 2007: 37 in combat in Chechnya, 7 as a result of hazing, and 147 committed suicide (often provoked by hazing). In 20066,700 soldiers were victims of battery; 33 of them died.6 The chief military prosecutor, Sergey Fridinsky, announced that 994 soldiers were the victims of bullying and harassment in the first three months
of 2007 while, in 2006, crime had continued to grow among officers (11 percent), warrant officers (19 percent) and by contract enlisted personnel (more than doubling from 1,439 cases in 2005 to 2,892 in 2006).7 It bears mentioning that these statistics refer to reported and registered
instances; it is widely believed that the real numbers are several times
higher. Not surprisingly, opinion polls show growing public opposition to the
draft, especially when the respondent
’s close relative is the putative conscript (74 percent in 2002, 77 percent in 2004
).8
At 58 years for men and 72 for women, life expectancy in Russia is the shortest
in Europe.
Conscription must be expanded, nevertheless, as long as Russia does not commit
itself to an all-volunteer army. This is especially so given the recent
reduction in the term of service and, more important, owing to the dire
demographic situation recently identified by Putin as the most serious problem
facing the country. Demographers predict that by
2050 Russia’s current population (about 142 million) will decline to between 122.6 million and 77.2 million. At present, the population decreases by about 800,000 annually, a trend that is unlikely to be soon reversed given Russians’ life expectancy (the shortest in Europe at 58 years for men and 72 for women) and relatively low birthrate (9.95 per 1,000 people).9
The MoD has seen at least part of the solution in establishing and expanding
contract-based military service. In March
2006, according to then-Defense Minister Ivanov, there were 60,000 professional soldiers and sergeants on active duty. The ministry has not been
fully satisfied with the quality and discipline of the recruits
— one-third of those deployed to Chechnya left the army ahead of schedule — and most of them, in turn, have not found the terms of service attractive
enough to renew their contracts. In late August
2006, the army was said to be in a “feverish state over the mass cancellations” of service contracts by soldiers and sergeants. An MoD document noted that no
more than
19 percent of contract soldiers reenlisted, due to low wages and poor living
conditions.
10 Still, the ministry’s plans call for 72 permanent readiness all-volunteer units with some 130,000 contract soldiers and an additional 130,000 contractors to serve in other units by the end of 2007. It is difficult to be optimistic about the fulfillment of these targets,
particularly because the MoD did not create a professional recruiting service.
In fact, as an independent Russian defense expert contends,
“most of the contract soldiers are recruited by unit commanders from conscripts
who often are forced by longer-serving soldiers to sign contracts while
undergoing hazing.
”11
Problems plague the corps of noncommissioned officers, who should be the
backbone of the armed forces. Unlike in Western armies, where
ncos constitute a highly-trained, effective, and competent middle-managerial cadre,
they remain the most underutilized human resource in the Russian military. They
seldom receive specialized training, hold minimal independent decision-making
powers, and command little respect from officers and soldiers alike. Owing to
meager wages, inadequate living conditions, and antiquated equipment, tens of
thousands of
nco positions are vacant. Since 1991 more than 450,000 officers have quit military service for similar reasons.
Full colonels are often paid less than bus drivers, and tens of thousands of officers are without proper dwellings.
Salaries, though repeatedly raised under Putin, remain very low: Full colonels
are often paid less than bus drivers, and there are still tens of thousands of
officers without proper dwellings. Most of those possessing a skill-set that
permits alternative employment long ago left the armed forces. At the same
time, the rank structure remains top-heavy, with more than
800 generals (about 200 in the MoD central staff alone), who often remain in rank even after their
positions are reclassified to colonel status. Though the Russian army is about
20 percent smaller than the U.S. armed forces, it employs twice as many officers.
The quality of military training and education on all levels remains inferior.
Conscripts are ordinarily trained by longer-serving draftees given the shortage
of
ncos and junior officers. Many military training institutions (three out of four
colleges and academies) have been abolished because of the army
’s reduced size, lack of funding, streamlining of specialized schools, and the
dearth of lecturers. The instructors who remain, like their students, are
seldom the best and brightest Russia has to offer. Particularly expensive
training programs, such as those for pilots, have suffered disproportionately.
In 2003 air force pilots flew just 12 to 44 hours a year, a fraction of the regulation 160 to 180 hours (abided by their Indian and Chinese colleagues); little wonder that pilot
errors caused seven of the eight aviation accidents in the first
10 months of that year.12 Conditions since then have improved — pilots flew an average of 25 hours in 2005 and 40 hours in 2007 — but their training still has a long way to go before it approaches Western
standards.
The military profession was considered one of the most highly esteemed and
rewarding in the
ussr. Since then the social prestige of the uniform has plummeted owing to — among other things — the army’s active involvement in the August 1991coup attempt and the October 1993 shelling of the White House in Moscow, the widespread corruption that
accompanied the withdrawal from Eastern Europe and elsewhere, the weak
performance in the Caucasus, the seemingly unending brutal hazing of fresh
conscripts, and a multitude of avoidable accidents that have claimed hundreds
of lives annually. Quite simply, even with the recent infusion of funds into
the defense sector, it is hard to see why the kind of people the MoD would like
to attract would want to become professional officers,
ncos, or soldiers.
Growing budgets, misguided spending
Russia’s military outlayshave increased steadily since the low point of 1998 and precipitously (by more than 10 percent annually) since 2000. The 2005 defense budget, at $18 billion, signified a 28 percent increase compared to 2004, and the 2006 budget a 20 percent boost over 2005 (although at $20 billion it was nonetheless smaller than that of Saudi Arabia). Defense outlays
for
2007 increased faster yet, but at just under $28 billion they were less than 5 percent of the U.S. defense budget. In 2006 Russia spent $3,800 per soldier; the American figure was $190,000, the British $170,000, the German $94,000, and the Turkish $12,700.13 Still, defense and security expenditures have increased by nearly 500 percent during Putin’s presidency. Another useful perspective is that Moscow’s military spending is several times greater than its appropriations for health
care and education combined.
The MoD’s goal is to split funds evenly between maintenance and development by 2011, and by 2017 this ratio should be 30 percent to 70 percent — that is, precisely the reverse of the 2001 spending pattern. Much of the recent windfall is going to be devoted to new
weapons systems. In
2007 about 40 percent of defense spending (about $11 billion) are earmarked for research and development, the purchase of new
armaments, and the maintenance of existing weapons. In December
2006 Putin announced a new $200-billion seven-year (2007–2015) rearmament program with great fanfare, but it is useful to recall that
similarly ambitious initiatives (such as the last one for
2001–2010) have been introduced before and quietly abandoned some time later without
realizing most objectives.
The Russian Army inherited the bulk of the Soviet Army’s arsenal, consisting of 635 intercontinental ballistic missiles (icbms), 22,800 main battle tanks, 30,000 artillery pieces, 14 strategic and 37 tactical submarines, 600 bombers, 900 fighter jets, 7,800 operational nuclear warheads (4,400 strategic warheads and 3,400 tactical nuclear weapons), among a plethora of other equipment.14 Supplying the military with new armaments was not a priority for the Kremlin in
the
1990s, but the MoD has been able to complement its arsenal in recent years. Spending
on new weapons has drastically increased, by
50 percent in 2006 over the year before, for instance. The most important acquisitions are 36 ss-27 (Topol-m2) icbms, each with 6–10 launchers, by the strategic rocket forces; the s-400, the world’s most powerful air defense rocket systems; several diesel submarines and
anti-submarine ships by the navy; the new Iskander tactical theater missile
system by the army; and the recently developed
mi-28n (“Night Hunter”) helicopter by the air force. A whole range of ships is being designed,
including an aircraft carrier. Many are already under construction, and new
nuclear-powered submarines will soon join the navy, armed with ss-nx-30 (Bulava) ballistic missile systems. In 2007, Moscow announced the successful development of an aviation vacuum bomb with
destructive potential comparable to nuclear weapons
— though, according to U.S. claims, it is inferior to the new 14-ton American superbomb publicized the next day.
The Kremlin views Russian-American relations as a zero-sum game: Bad for the U.S.? Good for Russia.
The recently proclaimed long-term armament program could mean a major improvement in Russia’s arsenal, but there are profound problems regarding the kind of weapons that have been and are to be purchased by the MoD. The primary cause
of these shortcomings is rooted in the enduring confusion about the type of
challenges Russia faces and can expect to face in the future. The idea behind
the new program is that Russia should be able to fight one global war, one
regional war, and several localized wars simultaneously. There are internal
contradictions in this notion
— for instance, fighting a global war requires colossal mobilization, while local
wars demand mobile professional forces
— that remain unaddressed. And this is quite apart from the consideration that if
Russia has had a difficult time defeating Chechen separatists, it is hard to
foresee Russia fielding an army that could even come close to meeting the
challenges assigned to it in the foreseeable future.
At a time when the American and British militaries are increasingly relying on
unmanned vehicles, airplanes, and robotics preparing for noncontact wars, the
Russian defense industry continues to produce upgraded versions of weapons that
were designed in the
1970s and 1980s and are less suited for future wars. About 60 percent of the funds provided by the new program are to be spent on the
purchases of 1,400 tanks, thousands of infantry vehicles, heavy artillery pieces, and new
generations of missiles and planes. These weapons might be in line with the
preferences of the generals who anticipate fighting World War
III, but they are hardly going to be useful in localized conflicts or
anti-terrorist operations. Many of the funds are designated for the
modernization of old weapons whose usefulness, even if modified, is questioned
by experts. A presidential aide recently acknowledged that
“the share of modern armaments and military hardware is only 10–20 percent [of the total],” that the armed forces had “over 40,000 weapons that [can] hardly ever be used and whose storage costs a lot,” and that “the number of useless weapons still exceeds the number of new weapons
commissioned by the government.
”15
The vast majority of Russian armaments are obsolete and poorly maintained. For
instance, the tank and aircraft inventory remains mostly unchanged since the
Afghan war. Owing to inadequate funds for maintenance and due to sheer
negligence, a great deal of easily salvageable expensive equipment just rusts
away. Submarines sink because of corrosion (as in
1997 and 1999), vehicles and machines leak dangerous fuels, and personnel are forced to
cannibalize weapons for spare parts unavailable elsewhere. According to the MoD
’s statistics released in 2005, 60 percent of deployed icbms are past the service life planned for them; about half the tanks require major
repairs and only 20 percent meet modern requirements; and no more than 30 percent of fighter planes are combat ready.16
Not a credible threat — yet
The russian military
at present is far more frightening on paper than in reality, but even on paper
it is not a force that could pose a credible threat to the U.S and its
nato allies in the foreseeable future. As was widely noted, a significant
shortcoming of Putin
’s first term was the failure to carry out his pledge to comprehensively rebuild
the Russian armed forces. Nearing the end of his second term and the
16-year mark after the Soviet collapse, the radical reform the military needs has
not been implemented.
Nevertheless, the period of deterioration and stagnation seems to have ended and
the recovery has begun. Even if all the new defense minister achieves is
curbing corruption and rooting out hazing, he will have surpassed his
predecessor
’s lackluster record in transforming the military and will have increased both
societal support for and the prestige of the armed forces.
In the meantime, Western supporters of nato expansion may congratulate themselves for prevailing in the face of opponents’ arguments throughout the past decade that Russia was unable and disinclined to
threaten the countries on its western borders. Thanks to the recent rounds of
the Atlantic Alliance
’s expansion, the nations suppressed by the Soviet Union for half a century no
longer need to face an aggressive Russia on their own. Little wonder that they
are the most enthusiastic American allies in Europe.
As for the United States, it is time to focus on Russian deeds rather than
words. Notwithstanding its frequent
declarations of cooperation and partnership, the Kremlin’s actions show that it has, for quite some time now, viewed Russian-American relations as
a zero-sum game: Whatever is bad for the U.S. must be good for Russia. There
are many examples. A rift develops between the United States and some of its
nato allies following the 2003 invasion of Iraq? Moscow steps into the fray to forge new ties with France and
Germany. The U.S.
— and the West — strongly objects to Iran’s nuclear program? Russia insists on continuing to supply Iran, even though an
unstable nuclear power on Russia
’s border might not be the wisest policy. Hamas — an organization that openly repudiates Israel’s right to exist and with whose leaders the U.S. refuses to bargain — wins the Palestinian elections? Russia is quick to hold talks with its leaders
in Moscow. Venezuela
’s virulently anti-American president, Hugo Chávez, wants to re-arm to “deter or repel any invasion by U.S. forces”? Russia is happy to oblige with a sale of
100,000 Kalashnikov rifles, a new Kalashnikov factory, and 24 Sukhoi-30 fighter jets. Calling Putin “our friend” does not alter the fact that Moscow considers Washington its primary potential
enemy.
Still, despite the recent infusions of resources, Russia’s army remains a pale shadow of its former self. If it is, indeed, on the road
to recovery, it has a very long way to go considering its present condition,
confusion about its future direction, and the enormous advances the U.S. armed
forces have made since the Cold War.
Zoltan Barany is Frank C. Erwin, Jr. professor of government at the
University of Texas, W. Glenn Campbell and Rita Ricardo-Campbell
National Fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, and the
author of Democratic Breakdown and the Decline of the Russian Military
(Princeton University Press, 2007).
1 Aleksandr Golts, “Saber Rattling Sans Saber,” Moscow Times (January 17, 2006).
2Zoltan Barany, “The Politics of Russia’s Elusive Defense Reform,” Political Science Quarterly121:4(Winter 2006–7).
3 “Building a New Model Army,” Daily Telegraph (June 28, 2007).
4Zoltan Barany, Democratic Breakdown and the Decline of the Russian Military (Princeton University Press, 2007, 64.
5 Irina Isakova, “The Russian Defense Reform,” China and Eurasia Forum Quarterly5:1 (February 2007).
6 Ivana Kuhar, “Russia Builds Up Its Military,” Voice of America (August 27, 2007).
7 All data from “Dreadful Statistics,” Nezavisimoye Voyennoye Obozreniye (August 14, 2007).
8 “We Love the Army, But in a Strange Way,” Vremya Novostei (February 22, 2002); and “Most Russians Do Not Want Relatives To Serve in Army,” Rosbalt (February 24, 2004).
9 Nicholas Eberstadt, “Russia, the Sick Man of Europe,” Public Interest158 (Winter 2005); and Otto Latsis, “Russia Faces Demographic Disaster,” Moscow News (September 7, 2005).
10 Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty Newsline 1 (hereafter rfe/rl) 10:157 (August 25, 2006), citing an article in Nezavisimaya Gazeta (August 24, 2006).
11 Pavel Felgenhauer, “Russian Military: After Ivanov,” Perspective17:3 (May–June 2007).
12“Military Unready To Face Threats, Says Putin,” Moscow Times (November 19, 2003).
13 “Russia’s Defense Spending Declines Faster Than for Other Nations,” Interfax-avn (Moscow, March 10, 2006).
14The Military Balance 2004
–2005 (London: iiss, 2004),104–110.
15 Article in Krasnaya Zvezda (April 10, 2006), summarized in rfe/rl 10:66 (April 10, 2006).
16 “Demands for Military Reform,” ria Novosti (July 12, 2005).
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