Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 21 – The Kremlin
is shifting money from social welfare programs to the military, but Russia’s
economic situation is now so dire that there are indications that it can’t
afford to expand its military effort as much as it would like or to engage in a
long-term struggle with a major adversary.
Those like Lev Shlozberg who have
pointed to the cutbacks in the budget for schools, hospitals, pensions and the
like have a strong case: the Putin regime is throwing Russian society under the
bus in its pursuit of military strength and doesn’t seem to care how much
Russians suffer as a result (gubernia.pskovregion.org/blogs/byudzhet-prizvali-na-voynu/).
Money taken from health care and
pensioners is certainly being shifted to the military, although exactly how
much is difficult to determine given that a quarter of the budget is
classified, something that allows the powers that be to claim they are cutting
military spending when they aren’t (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2016/10/19/70222-byudzhet-2016-eto-bomba).
But there are three steps the
Kremlin has already taken and one major one now under discussion that suggest
the Russian government doesn’t have enough money to pay for all the defense
buildup it would like to have and is trying to cut those parts of the defense
budget where it can.
The three steps it has already taken
include:
·
Using
Cossacks rather than uniformed service personnel to guard Russia’s borders,
something that will allow the center to cut personnel costs in the military (nazaccent.ru/content/22159-kazaki-zajmutsya-ohranoj-granic-rossii-s.html).
·
The
introduction of short-term military contracts so that Moscow can raise forces
for specific tasks and then send the personnel home as soon as that task is
completed or dismissed, another way to save money while building up forces (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2016/10/a-dangerous-warning-sign-moscow-wants.html).
·
New legislation has been introduced to allow Moscow to
use private armies abroad, groups that may cost more on a per capital basis for
any given time they are employed but that can be dropped and in any case will
not require the government to come up with pensions and medical care (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2016/10/18/70218-tyuning-psov-voyny).
But
there is a fourth measure, apparently only under discussion, that highlights
just how difficult a budget crunch the Kremlin faces even in the case of the defense
sector. According to the URA.ru news
agency, officials in Moscow are discussing cutting pensions for those who
retire from the military (ura.ru/news/1052264793).
That is a step a government would
only take under duress because one of the most important “contracts” any regime
makes with its soldiers is that if they survive and reach pension age, they
will be taken care of. Calling that into question has serious implications for
unit cohesion and recruitment.
The URA.ru news agency publishes its
report about this under the headline “Russia risks remaining without an army”
and says that if Moscow is forced to go ahead with this, something it says is
now being discussed in the finance ministry, that one step will undermine the
prestige of officers and the effectiveness of the military.
Viktor Murakhovsky, a retired
colonel who edits the journal “Arsenal Otechestva,” says that “the idea under
discussion is genuine insanity. I very much hope that it will not pass in the
Duma [because] if we want again to destroy our armed forces … this is a very
good way to do exactly that.”
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