Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 24 – Russian forces
demonstrated their prowess in the destruction of the opponents of the Syrian
regime of Bashar al-Asad, Russian Defense Minister Sergey Shoygu says; but ten
kinds of Russian weaponry, especially those in high-tech sectors like cruise
missiles and communications, did not perform well.
Shoygu’s comments came on Thursday at
an expanded collegium of his ministry at which Vladimir Putin also spoke and
were quickly overshadowed by the Kremlin leader’s claims that Russia is
stronger than any potential aggressor and is modernizing its nuclear forces (vedomosti.ru/politics/articles/2016/12/23/670902-obraztsov-vooruzhenii-proverku).
At that meeting, Putin said that “we
must do a lot to strengthen the nuclear triad … do more with the navy … and
perfect the systems of intelligence and communications.” But despite that, he
added, he could “with confidence say that today we are stronger than any
potential aggressor. Any” (kremlin.ru/events/president/news/53571).
That provoked a response by US State
Department spokesman John Kirby that he “doesn’t think that in the entire
history of humanity have there been armed forces … stronger than those of the United
States at the present time” (forbes.ru/news/335981-gosdep-napomnil-putinu-o-luchshey-armii-v-istorii-chelovechestva).
And that in turn led to another
comment by Aleksey Pushkov, chairman of the Russian Federation Council’s
Commission on Information Policy. In a Tweet, he said that “the State
Department has called the US armed forces the strongest in history. But Iraq,
Libya, and Afghanistan show the impotence of force: the US can win a war but
then lose the peace” (regions.ru/news/2597270/).
As this back and forth was taking place,
an article in Warsaw’s “Gazeta Polska” suggested that the Russian army is “Potemkin”-like
and less capable than many believe (radiopolsha.pl/6/172/Artykul/285644),
an argument that a Russian commentator has now rejected with vigor (svpressa.ru/war21/article/163193/?rpop=1).
The Polish analyst, Antoni
Rybczyński, says that Moscow’s “lightning-fast annexation of Crimea,
participation in the military operations in the Donbass and Syria, increases in
defense spending, and orders for new weapons have all generated euphoria [in
Russia] and serious concern in the West.”
“One
might think,” he continues, “that Russia’s armed forces are a worthy opponent
of the US and NATO.” But there are
reasons to view the Russian military as less capable than many fear. The Russian
military lags behind Western standards, but it can avoid the consequences of
that when it is in a position to “choose the time and place of confrontation.”
For example, Rybczyński
points out, many of the weapon systems Russia uses are out of date. “The modernization of the Russian army has always
been based on Western ideas and technologies. Today, sanctions and the economic
crisis are having their effect [and] especially backward is the sector of
precision weaponry.”
Indeed, he
continues, a major reason that Russian forces did so much damage to the Syrian
city of Aleppo is that they were using “primitive arms” rather than the more
precise ones that fill the arsenals of Western powers. Russia faces similar
problems in other weapons sectors as well, including tanks.
“The only element
of the arsenal in which Russian can compare with the US and which the Americans
fear is nuclear arms,” a fear that is entirely justified but that does not
necessarily determine outcomes on particular battlefields.
Not surprisingly,
Svobodnaya pressa commentator Vladimir Tuchkov rejects all of Rybczyński’s
contentions except the part about nuclear weapons. But he does so in the usual Russian manner of
comparing gross numbers of categories of weapons like tanks, something where Russia
has an advantage in numbers but not in technology.
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