Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 31 – Like the
citizens of most countries, Russians are generally prepared to sacrifice to
support national security, but they can become outraged if they learn that
money taken from programs that helped them and supposedly given to the military
is being diverted as a result of corruption.
And that can have immediate
political consequences. Perhaps the best example is provided by Harry Truman who
rose from being a virtually unknown US senator to Franklin Roosevelt’s vice
president and eventual successor largely on the basis of the authority and
popularity he acquired by exposing corruption in US military spending during
World War II.
Consequently, the Kremlin has to be
concerned about the growing number of stories in the Russian media documenting
the fact that money that had gone for schools, hospitals and public welfare and
that now is supposedly going to the Russian armed forces is ending in the hand
of corrupt oligarchs and officials.
In the current issue of “Kommersant-Vlast,”
three articles document the most well-known cases of corruption in this sector
over the last two decades, point to the measures that the authorities have put
in place to stop it without much success, and detail oft-repeated official
statements that corruption in military spending is equivalent to “treason” (kommersant.ru/doc/2796116, kommersant.ru/doc/2797924
and kommersant.ru/doc/2797925).
The
journal’s Ivan Safronov points out that “Russia has never regretted spending
money on the armament of the army and fleet, but this funds not always have
gone where they are supposed to.” In
such cases, and almost 200 of them have been identified in recent years,
Russians are more than a little angry.
In
February 2012, Vladimir Putin said that “corruption in the military-industry complex
is absolutely impermissible.” And officials have suggested that the actions
they have taken in recent years are sufficient to prevent it. But reports of
new corruption cases, some of them massive and high-profile, suggest that they haven’t
succeeded.
In
the current environment where Russians know that they are being forced to
tighten their belts in order to finance Moscow’s military policies, they may no
longer be willing to treat this phenomenon as simply business as usual. And it
is not implausible to think that there are some Russian politicians who might
like to use this issue to boost themselves and their causes.
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