Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 27 – At the recent
Russian-African summit in Sochi, the president f the Central African Republic
said that his government was studying the possibility f having a Russian
military base established there, but Russian officials said that they were not
engaged in any talks about such a project.
Nonetheless, the report has touched off
a debate in Moscow on whether such a base would be a good idea. Andrey Riskin, a former naval officer who is deputy
chief editor of Nezavisimaya gazeta says it is entirely understandable
why the CAR would want a base but not clear why Russia should (ng.ru/columnist/2019-10-25/100_car25102019.html).
There is a civil war in the CAR and
the government has been under siege, he ntes; and the regime certainly feels it
would benefit both domestically and in terms of its international status if Moscow
were to expand its military aid program by establishing a permanent military
base there (cf. windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2018/11/kremlin-rapidly-losing-control-of.html).
But Moscow has no real interest
given that the CAR is landlocked. In Soviet times, the USSR did have bases in
Africa along the coast of that continent to support its naval activities. But it
did not create them in the interior. Today, the Russian fleet, much reduced, doesn’t
need such bases; and Moscow has no compelling need for ones in the interior,
Riskin says.
Setting up temporary training
centers is one thing -- Russia has already done that in the CAR – but
establishing a base is another matter. The first costs millions f rubles; the
second, “billions.” And Moscow should not be taking such a step unless it
serves Russia’s interests and not just the country where such a base would be located.
Anther Russian commentator,
Aleksandr Zapolskis of the Rex news agency, despite being generally more
supportive of the projection of Russian military power more generally raises
the same points and argues that Moscow should not be drawn into places without
a clear vision of its own strategic interests and goals (iarex.ru/articles/71861.html).
Without such a concept, he suggests,
Russia could be drawn int another Afghanistan, spending a great deal in lives
and treasure but suffering a serious disaster as a result.
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