Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Corruption in the Russian Military


Thankfully, layovers in airports give you time to catch up on stuff, like blogging! Woo-hoo!

This new report popped up in the Barents Observer on the level of corruption in the Russian Military. Last year (2009) approximately 3 billion rubles of defense spending was lost to bribes. While corruption is a given in any military system due to the fairly large commit of national funds to militaries these days, what stands out in this story is the fact that the amount from this past year was double from last year.

So far, eight generals were relieved and sentenced to jail time ranging from three to five years. While it is good to have heads roll at the top for crimes such as this, it is indicative that corruption and bribery is indemic at all levels of russian government, from the justice system, to education. President Medvedev has made anti-corruption a major facet in his term as president insisting that govt officials have complete transparency in their financial dealings and compensation so as to make it apparent when someone is living outside the means one would expect of such an official.

As reforms continue (or don't) especially in the military realm, more such convictions at all levels must be a facet to make it clear that the Russian military is leaving the old ways behind as it strives to make professionalism a hall mark of its reformed military. Reform of the military is more than just new purchases of equipment, it is a major change in the way that the officers and sergeants see their service.

OK, time to go catch a jetplane!

Credit to Barents Observer for the pic. Sphere: Related Content

Thursday, December 31, 2009

How to welcome in 2010 like a true Russian


With an AK-47 shaped bottle of Vodka, that's how! Thank you Mikhail Kalishnikov.

H/T to Danger Room Sphere: Related Content

Monday, November 30, 2009

Start of the 2012 Presidential elections already?


Over the weekend it was reported that the Nevsky Express was derailed by a bomb on the track as it traveled from St. Petersburg to Moscow. While the details are still coming out and no one has yet to claim responsibility for the attack, one has to wonder if this is the opening act of the elections for 2012. While Putin may be a lock for another term as the President of Russia, will there be similar attacks with other murky identities of terrorists and terrorist groups? As Patriarch Kirill stated in his sermon Sunday "“Russia is a peaceful country,” he said, “but when the hand of the enemy is raised up against our way of life, we will ably protect our fellow citizens.”

So this raises the question, who is the enemy in this latest bombing? The Chechen wars were partly driven by the bombings of the apartments in Moscow, in which several things seemed askew, such as the third bomb which failed to go off and also the fact that none of the government building in Moscow were never bombed. Is this a ploy to manipulate voters feelings of security ahead of 2012? It will be interesting to see how this plays out. Sphere: Related Content

Friday, October 16, 2009

More Military Modernization Woes



In the past in this blog I've written about Russia's ongoing military modernization efforts. One point I have made is whether or not Russia can financially sustain its modernization efforts. The latest ISCIP Analyst presents a good argument that Russia will have a very difficult time paying for its modernization.

According to the posting, Russia has begun to underfund it's modernization efforts and many of the technical, command and control, and other like functions and the ability to produce them have atrophied in Russia in the past couple of years. The fact that Russia is now looking to purchase UAVs from Isreal and a Command and Control Helicopter Carrier from France is indicative of the fact that Russia has fallen so far behind in this area that it is willing to buy them from the outside in an effort to jumpstart their ability understand both how systems like this are created but then also are integrated both doctrinally and operationally speaks to how far Moscow still has to travel before it can truly leave the old cold war ghost of the Red Army behind it. Sphere: Related Content

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Wow, vodka cures anything...


From Danger Room this morning. Apparently vodka helps cure you of radiation poisoning. Whoda thunk? Sphere: Related Content

Monday, September 28, 2009

Project Sapphire, the good old days


The early nineties were great. Your biggest concern was not bumping into an unmarked, left over minefield in the Former Republic of Yugoslavia, Russia and the US held joint manuevers, it was good times for all.

Meanwhile, in Kazakhstan, the US paid the Kazakh government 27 million dollars to take several hundred tons of highly enriched uranium off of its hands. David Hoffman, in the Washington Post, tells the story of a US counter proliferation project called Project Sapphire. While it's not George Clooney chasing a rogue nuclear bomber around the world, it does show how good policy can effectively keep nuclear genies in the bottle. Nuclear material has value to countries as either a source of energy, or a source of power to cow their neighbors or bring parity with another nuclear power in the region.

Our best policy in this region would be to keep encouraging Russian and Central Asian counter proliferation efforts both within their borders and in the region. The latest revelation about Iran's nuclear weapons efforts only make their cooperation more important. Sphere: Related Content

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Shades of '91


Pavel Felgenhauer has reported on a Russian Army incursion into Moscow earlier this week. What is most disturbing about this incident is that is was a senior military officer who had chosen to use his own power to subvert what appeared to be a legal investigation into the mis-doings of his son-inlaw.

The sending of armed troops, unasked for by the Russian government, into Moscow does bring to light some serious command and control issues for both Medvedev and Putin. Felgenhauer rightly points out the implications for the Kremlin. This may result in Medvedev and Putin becoming prisoners in their own city unless Shamonov is crushed and made an example of.

Shumanov has also been a very vocal supporter of COL Budanov, a Russian Tank Regiment who was charged with and found guilty of the murder of a teenage Chechen girl during Russia's campaign there. The Budanov case has been an irritant for Moscow due to the constant attention brought to it by Anna Politkovskaya in her articles and books. While Putin has poo-poo'd her death, the reason she was killed can probably be tied back to her work on Chechnya, amongst other things. Shumanov unearthing Budanov in his defense probably does little to help him. Shumanov did serve in Chechnya.

While this does provide Moscow with an embarrasing and very thought provoking incident, their is a silver lining in all of this. Defense Minister Anatoliy Serdyukov has been leading the charge for Medvedyev's military reforms and professionalization of the military. His biggest obstacle so far has been the general officer corps, who see the changes as a threat to them and the Russian military officer corps as a whole. What better hammer to have to beat them into submission than that of a russian general officer using elite special troops to barge into Moscow for his own personal interests.

Use it wisely, well and often is the only advice I could give. Sphere: Related Content