Paul Goble
Staunton,
December 23 – Despite all of Vladimir Putin’s talk about super weapons that no
opponent can stop, the aging of Soviet-era missiles and growing delays in
bringing new Russian missiles on line mean that “the era of nuclear parity
between Russia and the US is rapidly coming to an end,” Stanislav Vorobyev
says.
And
it is ending in a way that leaves the Russian Federation in an ever worse
position, one that will call into question its pretensions as more than a regional
power given that the only basis for its claims to be a super power is its
nuclear arsenal, the Moscow commentator says (svpressa.ru/blogs/article/220022/).
That in turn, Vorobyev suggests,
will have ever more significant consequences for what Moscow can and cannot do internationally
and may go a long way to explaining why the Kremlin is talking about nuclear
war now, given that it is likely to be far less capable of waging one in only a
year or two.
In his article, the commentator
provides a detailed description of the fact that many of the delivery systems
on which the Russian nuclear weapons depend are in danger of going out of
service before new ones can come on line.
Missiles and submarines from Soviet times are aging and ever less
capable, and the production of replacements is plagued by ever greater delays.
Vorobyev lists the ships which will
soon have to be refitted or retired and documents that the time between
announcement of a new weapons system and its being made operational has more
than doubled between the Brezhnev era and the Putin one. This has three major consequences, he
suggests.
First, it is leading to “a sharp
imbalance between Northern Eurasia and North America in the sphere of strategic
arms. The Russian Federation will be forced to reduce by almost a third the
number of its nuclear weapons” that are ready to be used. “Put in simplest
terms,” the commentator says, “the era of nuclear parity is receding into the past.”
Second, he continues, “the Russian
Federation is losing its most threatening weapon; the only argument which is
has to present itself as ‘a strategic partner’ for the US. And third, the lengthening delays in putting new
weapons systems on line may mean that they will never go operational at all.
Statements by Russian military
officials about just how long this is going to take suggest that “at a minimum,”
there will be several years in which Russia will see a decline in the number of
nuclear weapons it can actually and credibly threaten to deliver. And that number may in fact grow over time if
factories can’t produce more and tests can’t be conducted more rapidly.
“In the best case,” Vorobyev says, “we
are now at the edge of serious changes in the balance of nuclear forces between
the Russian Federation and the US, something which inevitably will have an
impact on future developments.” If Russia is unable to replace the Soviet
nuclear weapons delivery systems on which it now relies, it will be reduced in
importance.
Possibly reduced even to the rank of
a regional or local power like “present-day Iran,” the commentator says. “This may look extraordinarily categorical,”
he says, “but there are practically no chances for changing this trend.”
No comments:
Post a Comment