Paul Goble
Staunton,
September 25 – The Vostok-2018 exercise, launched with such pomp and advertised
as the largest Russian military exercise since Soviet times, has ended, with
even Russian descriptions less effusive and elaborate than they were at its
beginning. (Cf. https://vpk-news.ru/articles/45198.)
As they got under way, it became
obvious to Moscow analysts at least that the maneuvers would not be as large or
as impressive as the Kremlin and its controlled media suggested (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2018/09/moscows-much-ballyhooed-vostok-2018.html).
And the exercise has passed with less attention than its advance notice would
have led one to expect.
But the most important coverage of
the exercise may have come from Chinese media outlets who have been anything
but impressed with what Moscow did, an assessment that should be taken
seriously because Chinese troops took part and thus could see at firsthand what
the Russian military was up to.
A Russian
blogger whose observations have been repeated by Novyye izvestiya today notes that the Chinese “love to discuss the shortcomings
of their northern neighbors” and thus it is no surprise that for them “’Vostok-2018’
became not so much a triumph of the Russian army … as a demonstration of its
shortcomings” (https://zloy-odessit.livejournal.com/2513653.html, repeated in newizv.ru/news/world/25-09-2018/kitayskie-smi-vysmeyali-taktiku-rossiyskih-voennyh-na-ucheniyah-vostok-2018).
“Numerous Chinese
state media outlets including even CCTV devoted attention to the fact that
their Russian colleagues in the course of the exercise used” exactly the same tactics
that Soviet commanders had used 37 years ago, an indication that Russian
operational art has not advanced since then.
They also
pointed to the presence of outdated military equipment in many areas, although
they acknowledged that the Russians did make use of some of their most advanced
tanks when acting as the attacking force, the blogger says. But the Chinese also suggested that their
equipment was better than the Russians in both cases.
That is especially
the case regarding maneuverability. “Chinese
experts noted,” he says, “that if Russia were to apply similar tactics against
average brigades of the Chinese Peoples’ Liberation Army, its losses would be
colossal.”
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