We all know about Russia's invasion...
here's some of the first news about the rise of the Soviet Union... again
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We all know about Russia's invasion...
here's some of the first news about the rise of the Soviet Union... again
Russian TV Sounds Like Soviet TV (Starring “top U.S. author” Justin Raimondo)
aim.org ^ | August 19, 2008 | Cliff Kincaid
Denunciations of U.S. ‘imperialism,” which were a regular staple of Soviet TV, are back on the Russian version.
...recent guests on Russia Today have included Alexander Cockburn, “an American political journalist,” and Justin Raimondo, said to be “a top U.S. author.” Cockburn denounced John McCain as a warmonger, while Raimondo warned the Russians to investigate what’s on those humanitarian flights to Georgia. “I would check that out, if I were you,” he was quoted by Russia Today as saying.
The Russian channel declared, “‘Say No to War’ has been Justin Raimondo’s slogan for over a decade―from the U.S. intervention in Bosnia to the war in Iraq and Afghanistan. Now he has denounced U.S. support for Georgia.”
In reality, Cockburn is a leftist who writes for The Nation and other publications. Raimondo was described by Russia Today as “a top U.S. author,” in order to give him a measure of credibility, but his main claim to fame is running a website, antiwar.com, that describes itself as opposed to imperialism.
This apparently doesn’t mean opposition to Russian imperialism.
The Russian invasion of Georgia has made it clear beyond doubt that the old Soviet KGB disinformation operations have been revived, using Americans as puppets to make Russian points. But the propaganda is being distributed on a worldwide basis, even on U.S. cable networks. ...
A May 8 New York Times article on Russia Today and its increasing availability in U.S. media markets noted that “The station is part of the state-owned news conglomerate RIA Novosti, and news organizations routinely refer to it as ‘state-run,’ including The New York Times, which has said it was created to promote ‘pro-Kremlin views.’”
(Excerpt) Read more at aim.org ...
Yep... you heard me. Here's the thread to post the articles in. I'll start with this one:
Quote:
http://www.strategypage.com/qnd/russ.../20111119.aspx
Two Against The World
November 19, 2011: Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan have agreed to establish a free-trade union over the next four years. Russia denied that it is trying to rebuild the Soviet Union (which was itself a Russian empire that had taken several centuries to create). But the 14 nations that were created from the dissolution of the Soviet Union left a lot of trade links that were now encumbered by national politics, tariffs and all sorts of obstacles that hurt the economies of all concerned. While this union makes economic sense, many Russians make no secret of getting their empire back, and this makes the neighbors, who used to be part of that empire, nervous. Russia continues to back dictatorships in places like Syria, Libya and Iran. Russia is not happy with the demise of the Kaddafi tyranny in Libya. While backing democracy in Syria and calling for the government there to stop slaughtering its own people, Russia opposes pressure for the Assad dictatorship to step down. Despite increasing evidence that Iran is building nuclear weapons and backing terrorism worldwide, Russia supports the religious dictatorship there.
What is this fondness for tyranny in a country that is supposed to be a democracy? It's all about needing an enemy, and providing a distraction for domestic politics. Neighbor China has the same needs, and is an ally with Russia in supporting the same tyrants, for many of the same reasons. This kind of loyalty arises from several causes. First, there is the need to stick it to the West. The Cold War may be over, but not the antagonism of Russian and Chinese leaders towards those Western upstarts. This is a centuries old antagonism. Both China and Russia resent the Western cultural, economic and military power that led to the decline in Chinese and Russian influence in the world. Secondly, the support for Iran, Syria, Libya and other despotisms is also a way of gaining profitable commercial links with those nations (a source of raw materials, and arms and industrial sales.) Neither China nor Russia sees the terrorist links of their tyrant clients as a major liability. In fact, the connection with terrorist sponsoring states as a form of immunity from some terrorist activity.
A new international survey found that Russian and Chinese companies are the most likely to use bribes when trying to obtain sales, or anything else. China and Russia are among the most corrupt nations on the planet.
November 17, 2011: Tajikistan backed off in an extortion attempt against a Russian air freight company. Two foreign pilots (a Russian and Estonian) will be released from jail, after Tajikistan recently sentenced them to eight years in prison for smuggling. The charge was bogus, and the Russian government countered by starting to expel thousands of illegal Tajik migrants to Russia (who send home millions of dollars a year.)
November 16, 2011: Two decades after the Cold War ended, Russia has finally moved to recycle 10 million tons of obsolete weapons. The stuff, mostly armored vehicles, ships and aircraft, will be taken apart and sold as scrap metal. Several million tons of ammunition will be carefully taken apart, and the explosives safely disposed of. In the last two decades, Russia had spent over half a billion dollars in trying to maintain this junk, just in case.
November 13, 2011: Russia will continue shipping weapons to Syria, despite the growing unrest there. As long as Syria can guarantee the safety of Russian ships and aircraft carrying the goods, and the stuff is paid for, deliveries will continue.
November 11, 2011: Russia reiterated its claim to most of the Arctic Ocean (where a quarter of the world's undiscovered oil may be). Russia is seeking backing (in the UN and elsewhere) for the novel claim that a 2,000 kilometer long underwater mountain range, that begins off the Russian coast, gives Russia control of all the underwater territory in or near this submerged terrain. Other nations bordering the Arctic oppose this claim.
November 7, 2011: In St Petersburg, Russia hosts a meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO). This is a regional security forum founded in Shanghai in 2001 by Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Russia, and China. The main purpose of the SCO was originally fighting Islamic terrorism. Russia, however, hopes to build the SCO into a counterbalance against NATO. SCO members conduct joint military exercises, mostly for show. They also share intel on terrorists, which is often useful. Iran, India, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Mongolia and Turkey also want to join the SCO. These nations are allowed to send observers to meetings.
November 3, 2011: Former Russian Air Force officer Viktor Bout was convicted of terrorism in an American court, three years after he was arrested in Thailand. Last year, after numerous court battles, judges in Thailand ordered Russian gunrunner Viktor Bout extradited to the United States. Russia tried to halt the process, fearing what Bout might say to American prosecutors about Russian government involvement in many illegal arms deals in the last two decades. Bout was the major exporter of illegal weapons since the early 1990s. Russian officials were bribed, or persuaded by their own government, to look the other way as Bout sold Cold War surplus weapons to anyone who could pay.
November 2, 2011: The U.S. has again accused Russia and China of carrying out, sponsoring or just tolerating enormous Internet based espionage operations in the West. Large quantities of commercial, military and government data have been stolen. China and Russia deny it all. Britain, and other Western nations, agree with the American accusations, and often make their own when hit by a particularly heavy Internet based attack.
October 31, 2011: The American FBI released video of their surveillance of Russian spies (arrested and exchanged last year) who were operating in the United States. This was yet another embarrassment for Russian intelligence agencies. These vids showed the ten Russians who had, for the last decade, been trying to pass themselves off as Americans, and operate as "illegals" (spies without diplomatic cover and protection). The FBI caught on to this bunch early on, and was watching them for years, trying to obtain more information on how Russian espionage operated in the United States. The FBI finally arrested these ten when it became apparent that the Russians had detected that they were being watched.
The FBI was puzzled by how little useful information these ten were able to obtain. As far as the FBI could tell, these ten spies never obtained anything important. Moreover, the ten agents were not very professional, or effective. That may be why the Russians were eager to get them back, and avoid a trial in the United States. Russian state media said very little about the spy swap. The spy exchange was organized in less than a month, with the U.S. eager to get four valuable people back, and Russia equally intent on getting its ten embarrassing spies out of the news.
It's unclear why Russia undertook such an inept operation. There are indications that many other Russian espionage operations are similarly sloppy (and will be revealed when arrests are made). This is in sharp contrast to the Cold War when, after it was over, it was revealed that the Russians were much better at the spy game than their Western counterparts. But those super spies appear to have moved on to more lucrative work in the civilian sector, or the government. In any event, the past masters are no longer running the show. Its amateur hour now and the Russians would rather not talk about it, or have anyone see videos of their overseas spies in action.
Russia backs Assad as pressure grows
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AMMAN – Russia is standing by Syrian president Bashar al-Assad as Arab and Western countries seek to pile pressure on him to halt a violent crackdown on his opponents.
The Arab League has suspended Syria and given it until the end of the week to comply with an Arab peace plan to end bloodshed that has cost more than 3,500 lives, by a UN count.
The 22-member league, which has suspended Syria’s participation in its meetings, warned that it would impose economic sanctions on the government and turned down Dr Assad’s call for an Arab summit.
Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov, whose country is one of Syria’s few remaining foreign friends, said demands for Mr Assad’s removal would destroy the initiative, which calls for dialogue between the Syrian government and its foes.
“If some opposition representatives, with support from some foreign countries, declare that dialogue can begin only after President Assad goes, then the Arab League initiative becomes worthless and meaningless,” Mr Lavrov said.
He was speaking after talks with European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, who said the world must bring all the influence it could bear on Syria to change course.
“The future of Syria now depends on the ability of all of us to keep pressure on them to see that there is a need to stop this violence, to listen to the people, and to find a way to move forward,” Ms Ashton told a joint news conference in Moscow.
Mr Lavrov said earlier a raid on Wednesday by the Free Syrian Army on an Airforce Intelligence complex on the outskirts of Damascus was “already completely similar to real civil war”.
Opposition sources said Syrian army defectors had killed or wounded 20 security police in the early morning attack, the first of its kind in an eight-month revolt against Assad.
It was not possible to verify the casualty toll. The authorities have not mentioned the attack. Syria has barred most foreign media since unrest began in March.
Washington said it had few details and no confirmation of the incident, but that Mr Assad was courting trouble.
Residents of Harasta, the suburb where the Airforce Intelligence compound is located, said army deserters had fired rocket-propelled grenades and machineguns for 10 minutes, provoking a security sweep that netted about 70 people.
Together with Military Intelligence, Airforce Intelligence is in charge of preventing dissent within the armed forces.
Syria blames the violence on foreign-backed armed groups it says have killed more than 1,100 soldiers and police.
Hundreds of people have been killed this month, one of the bloodiest periods in the revolt that began in March.
Catherine Altalli, of the opposition Syrian National Council, said Wednesday’s assault was understandable after the violence, detention and torture used on peaceful protesters.
“I am not saying this is right, there have to be limits,” she said. “But what is unacceptable is that every day bodies come out with marks of torture from Air Force Intelligence buildings and other secret police dungeons across Syria.” – (Reuters)
Russia sends warships to Syrian waters
Sat Nov 19, 2011 3:8PM GMT
http://www.reddit.com/static/spreddit1.gifReddit
http://previous.presstv.ir/photo/201...9150503640.jpgRussian warships expected to enter Syria. (File photo)
Russia is sending its warships to Syrian waters in a move aimed at preventing any foreign attacks against Syrian territories.
According to Russian sources, the recent move conveys the message that Moscow will block any NATO-led attack under the guise of “humanitarian intervention,” The Nation reported.
Russia has been voicing support for Syria, which it says is currently going through a civil war.
The Western military alliance, NATO, has been making efforts to demonize the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and his forces, while downplaying attacks by opposition forces.
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has also recently warned the West against any 'Libya-style' military intervention in Syria.
Syria has been experiencing unrest since mid-March, with demonstrations being held both against and in support of Syrian President Assad.
According to the United Nations more than 3,000 people, including members of the security forces, have been killed in the turmoil.
The opposition and Western countries accuse Syrian security forces of being behind the killings in the country, but the government blames what it describes as outlaws, saboteurs and armed terrorist groups for the deadly violence, stressing that the unrest is being orchestrated from abroad.
SZH/JR/HGH
Companion Post and Thread:
Medvedev: Russia may target missile defense sites
http://l3.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/kj...p_logo_106.pngAP – 1 hr 2 mins ago
http://www.eu-russiacentre.org/wp-co...3/medvedev.jpg
MOSCOW (AP) — Russia will deploy new missiles aimed at U.S. missile defense sites in Europe if Washington goes ahead with the planned shield despite Russia's concerns, President Dmitry Medvedev said Wednesday.
Russia will station missiles in its westernmost Kaliningrad region and other areas if Russia and NATO fail to reach a deal on the U.S.-led missile defense plans, he said in a tough statement that seemed to be aimed at rallying domestic support.
Russia considers the plans for missile shields in Europe, including in Romania and Poland, to be a threat to its nuclear forces, but the Obama administration insists they are meant to fend off a potential threat from Iran.
Moscow has agreed to consider NATO's proposal last fall to cooperate on the missile shield, but the talks have been deadlocked over how the system should operate. Russia has insisted that the system should be run jointly, which NATO has rejected.
Medvedev also warned that Moscow may opt out of the New START arms control deal with the United States and halt other arms control talks if the U.S. proceeds. The Americans had hoped that the treaty would stimulate progress further ambitious arms control efforts, but such talks have stalled over tension on the missile plans.
"The United States and its NATO partners as of now aren't going to take our concerns about the European missile defense into account," a stern Medvedev said, adding that if the alliance continues to "stonewall" Russia it will take retaliatory action.
The U.S. plan calls for placing land- and sea-based radars and interceptors in European locations over the next decade and upgrading them over time.
Medvedev warned that Russia will deploy short-range Iskander missiles in Kaliningrad, a Baltic Sea exclave bordering Poland, and place weapons in other areas in Russia's west and south to target U.S. missile defense sites.
Medvedev added that prospective Russian strategic nuclear missiles will be fitted with systems that would allow them to penetrate prospective missile defenses.
He and other Russian leaders have made similar threats in the past, and the latest statement appears to be aimed at domestic audience ahead of Dec. 4 parliamentary elections.
Medvedev, who is set to step down to allow Prime Minister Vladimir Putin reclaim the presidency in March's elections, leads the ruling United Russia party list in the parliamentary vote.
A sterm warning to the U.S. and NATO issued by Medvedev seems to be directed at rallying nationalist votes in the polls.
Ummmm this article is incorrect.
There is no "May" involved in this. It was stated CLEARLY that missile DEFENSE sites in Europe ARE going to be targeted. That's their policy.
There is no backing out of the Missile Defense Shield... and if Russia THINKS we're about to back down, well, they can just look at our brass-balled President and know...
Oh wait, we're fooked.
Ok.... I rest my case, I was right.
Quote:
Official: U.S. Will Not Change Plans for Missile Defense Despite Russia Warning
Published November 23, 2011
| FoxNews.com
- http://a57.foxnews.com/static/manage...DAlogo_320.jpg
MDA.mil
U.S. Missile Defense Agency
The U.S. is not planning on making any changes to its missile defense system in Europe, a U.S. official said Wednesday, despite a warning from Russia's president that Moscow will target the U.S. system if Washington goes ahead and deploys the planned shield.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said Russia will station missiles in the country's westernmost Kaliningrad region and other areas if the U.S. goes ahead with deployment. The warning came less than two weeks after Medvedev met with President Obama in Hawaii and the two offered vague assurances on cooperation.
National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor responded that the U.S. has explained through "multiple channels" the purpose of the defense system and that it's not aimed as a strategic deterrent to Russia. He said the U.S. will make no changes to the program.
"Its implementation is going well and we see no basis for threats to withdraw from it," Vietor said in a statement given to Fox News. "We continue to believe that cooperation with Russia on missile defense can enhance the security of the United States, our allies in Europe and Russia, and we will continue to work with Russia to define the parameters of possible cooperation. However, in pursuing this cooperation, we will not in any way limit or change our deployment plans in Europe."
Earlier, Capt. John Kirby, a Pentagon spokesman, emphasized that the U.S. missile defense program is not a threat to Russia's security or its forces.
It "is focused on addressing the growing missile threat from Iran," Kirby told Fox News, adding that the U.S. has been forthcoming with Russia about its plans
"We have been addressing Russia's concerns through an intensive dialogue and detailed briefings at senior levels. The U.S. and NATO have welcomed Russia to participate in missile defense cooperation. This is the best way for Russia to receive transparency and assurances that missile defense is not a threat," he said.
Russia considers the plans for missile shields in Europe, including in Romania and Poland, to be a threat to its nuclear forces, and while Moscow had agreed to consider NATO's proposal last fall to cooperate on the missile shield, the talks have been deadlocked over how the system should operate. Russia has insisted that the system should be run jointly, which NATO has rejected.
Speaking in Hawaii on Nov. 12, Obama said his relationship with Medvedev had led to "successfully" establishing "the reset of U.S.-Russia relationships," which had "borne concrete fruit" in the form of a new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty and sanctions on Iran.
But Medvedev was more hesitant about the measure of success shared between the two nations, and specifically mentioned the missile shield.
"Over the recent years, we achieved progress on matters where there was no progress. Barack has just recalled the START treaty. If we manage to emphasize similar efforts on European missile defense, just like other issues, I’m sure we'll succeed," he said.
On that same trip, Deputy National Security Adviser for Strategic Communications Ben Rhodes said the U.S. has a commitment to protecting itself and its allies, and suggested Washington will move forward with the missile defense system.
"We've made clear to the Russians that this is based not against Russia, but against the threat of ballistic missiles from states that are outside of international norms," Rhodes told reporters. "At the same time, we decided to pursue with the Russians a dialogue about missile defense. But, again, we have our interests that we're very clear with the Russians about."
Medvedev warned Wednesday that Moscow may opt out of the new START deal and halt other arms control talks if the U.S. proceeds.
"The United States and its NATO partners as of now aren't going to take our concerns about the European missile defense into account," Medvedev said, adding that if the alliance continues to "stonewall" Russia it will take retaliatory action.
Medvedev warned that Russia will deploy short-range Iskander missiles in Kaliningrad, a Baltic Sea exclave bordering Poland, and place weapons in other areas in Russia's west and south to target U.S. missile defense sites. Medvedev added that prospective Russian strategic nuclear missiles will be fitted with systems that would allow them to penetrate prospective missile defenses.
Medvedev's comments come ahead of Dec. 4 parliamentary elections in Russia. He leads the ruling United Russia nationalist party list in the parliamentary vote. They also follow a U.S. announcement on Tuesday that Washington will stop sharing data with Russia on U.S. forces in Europe. That decision was a reaction to talks stalling over reviving a conventional forces treaty that governs the number and position of troops and conventional weapons stationed in Europe.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- NOVEMBER 25, 2011, 10:05 A.M. ET
Putin's Party Faces Losses in Elections
By ALAN CULLISON And GREGORY L. WHITE
MOSCOW—Vladimir Putin's United Russia party could lose as many as 50 seats in parliament in the elections on Dec. 4, pollsters and analysts said Friday, amid disillusion with sluggish economic growth and the Kremlin's ability to cope with the effects of the world financial crisis of 2008-09.
The loss in seats would mark the first such setback for Mr. Putin since he came to power 12 years ago. But the direct political impact is likely to be limited.
United Russia should keep a majority in the State Duma, the lower house, and the Kremlin's grip over the political system remains tight. Pollsters say United Russia is likely to get about 53% of the vote next weekend, down from 64% four years ago. The poll results are the last that can be released under Russian law before the election.
The economic crisis has been the most serious challenge to the top-down political system assembled by Mr. Putin, which he plans to formally head again when he returns to the presidency next spring for another six and possibly 12 years. Stagnant living standards and rising corruption have fueled disillusionment with the Kremlin's pledges of stability, analysts say. United Russia, which has never been as popular as its charismatic leader, Mr. Putin, has suffered especially.
Russia's newly-minted middle-class voters "are worried about the specter of stagnation and they are critical of what is happening in the country," Lev Gudkov, head of the independent Levada polling center, told reporters Friday. "Half of them believe the government has no plan to get out of this crisis."
Valery Fyodorov, director of the state-run polling agency Vtsiom, said the likely drop in United Russia's results is "rather moderate" compared to the huge electoral reverses ruling parties in Europe and the U.S. have seen since the global financial crisis. "We made it through the crisis rather smoothly," he said.
But the elections come as Mr. Putin's own star-like qualities appear to have dulled, despite the fawning coverage from state-run television that helped vault him to power in previous years. Last week Mr. Putin, 59 years old, was booed when he appeared at a martial arts event in Moscow.
Party officials brush off the sagging poll numbers, but in recent weeks have scaled back their public forecasts for how many seats they expect to win in parliament. Gone are previous pledges to match the current majority of more than two-thirds of the seats—enough to make changes to the constitution.
Instead, party officials this week said they'd be satisfied with a simple majority of the 450-seat house. Immediately after the 2007 elections, United Russia used its commanding majority to amend the constitution to extend the presidential term from four to six years.
Vtsiom Friday forecast United Russia would get about 264 seats in the Duma, while Levada put the figure at 253. Those compare to 315 seats in the last elections in 2007.
The Communist Party and the ultranationalist Liberal Democratic Party are expected to pick up the most seats.
Analysts said the situation could still change in the last week of the campaign, with United Russia using its dominance of TV and other media for a final push. Mr. Putin and President Dmitry Medvedev have stepped up anti-Western rhetoric—long a vote-winner for them—and are both scheduled to speak at a United Russia congress Sunday.
Opposition parties and vote monitors also say they're already seeing rising pressure on other parties from local authorities and fear efforts to manipulate the vote could grow.
Andrei Buzin, head of the Golos vote-monitoring group, said the authorities' most powerful tool is the ability to hamstring rival parties' campaigns, reducing their reach or keeping them off the ballot. Outright falsification, he said, wouldn't likely exceed 4% or 5% of the vote.
Meeting with United Russia leaders Thursday, Mr. Putin exhorted them "to attain the maximum result in these elections." "If we mess up the parliament," he warned, Russia would risk the kind of political gridlock that he blamed for blocking efforts to resolve the economic crises on the part of "our friends in Europe and our partners in the U.S.A."
Russia's economy has bounced back strongly from the bruising it took in the global financial crisis in 2008-09. But heavy government spending has made Russia more vulnerable to any weakness in prices for oil—its main export. Economists warn that a deepening of economic problems in the rest of the world could stall growth in Russia and trigger a sharp drop in the ruble.
Write to Alan Cullison at alan.cullison@wsj.com and Gregory L. White at greg.white@wsj.com
Russia, China... both have predicted war with the US ....
Shifting on my tin foil hat, didn't "Titor" suggest a war in 2014 or 2015 in which Russia was involved but they were not the enemy to him, the US was? Paraphrasing of course and not trying to derail. Just a ponderance.
Turn off the tin foil.
He said by 2004, not 2015. Then he said later 2012. Not 2015.
The CHINESE have STATED clearly, QUITE CLEARLY in several papers, all of which has been written up and published by the CIA if anyone wishes to look it up.
I've documented it in the past on Anomalies, and here.
Well, yes, small wacos which we did not have were 04/05 and the big war in 14 or so. Still missed the first marks.
Titor was a hoax.
The Chinese aren't hoaxing anyone when they say they WILL be at war with the US by 2015.
The Russian Bear Is Back, The Soviet Union Is Being Revived And The Cold War Is Not Over
http://www.thehindu.com/multimedia/d...re_626883f.jpg
If you believe that the United States is the "sole superpower" in the world, then you really need to read the rest of this article. Most Americans have very little idea what is actually going on in the rest of the world and how the global balance of power is shifting. For example, can you name the country that is the number one oil producer in the world, the number one oil exporter in the world, the number one exporter of natural gas in the world and that also has the second most powerful military in the entire world? In case you need a hint, it is not Saudi Arabia, it is not China and it is not the United States. The correct answer is Russia. The Russian Bear is back in a big way. Did you know that Russia is rapidly becoming one of the top suppliers of oil to the United States? Russia has vast natural resources, a national debt that is very low (ratio of publicly held debt to GDP is less than 10%) and an economy that has boomed over the past decade. Russia is busy flexing its muscles in many different ways. For example, many are pointing out that the "Eurasian economic union" that Russia is putting together is a significant move in the direction of a revival of the Soviet Union. Russia is also rapidly modernizing its military and developing very powerful new weapons systems. Most Americans believe that the Cold War is over and that Russia is a toothless bear that no longer represents a threat. It is difficult to find words to describe how wrong that assessment of the situation is.
The other night during the Republican debate the candidates said next to nothing about Russia. It was almost as if the second most powerful superpower on the planet did not even exist.
That debate was yet another example of just how bizarre our foreign policy has become. As you will see below, if there is one country on the face of the planet that could defeat the United States in a war, it is Russia.
And if you believe that Russia is now our "friend", then you have been seriously deceived.
The Cold War is not over. In fact, activity by Russian intelligence agents inside the United States and other western nations is now at least at Cold War levels.
And tensions between the United States and Russia are rising on multiple fronts.
For instance, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has announced that Russia is going to deploy new nuclear missiles that will be specifically targeted at U.S. missile defense installations if the United States proceeds with plans for a missile defense shield in Europe.
The following comes from a recent article posted on Yahoo News....Medvedev warned that Russia will deploy short-range Iskander missiles in Kaliningrad, a Baltic Sea exclave bordering Poland, and place weapons in other areas in Russia's west and south to target U.S. missile defense sites.In addition, we are starting to see some major treaties between the United States and Russia totally break down. For example, the U.S. State Department has announced that the United States will no longer be observing the provisions of the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe. Russia stopped observing the treaty back in 2007.
Medvedev added that prospective Russian strategic nuclear missiles will be fitted with systems that would allow them to penetrate prospective missile defenses.
The world is changing and the American people need to wake up.
While the United States spends hundreds of billions of dollars chasing around goat herders in Afghanistan, Russia is preparing for nuclear war with the United States.
Did you know that Russia has been spending huge amounts of money building a vast system of underground bunkers and shelters?
In Moscow alone, 5000 new "emergency bomb shelters" are being constructed. The goal is to have enough shelters to hold nearly the entire population of Moscow and the plan calls for all the shelters to be completed by the end of 2012. When construction is finally finished, virtually the entire population of Moscow will be able to reach a bomb shelter within a matter of minutes. You can see a video news report about this development right here.
So what is the U.S. government doing to prepare all of us?
Nothing.
Instead, the Obama administration is doing the best that it can to disarm America.
In a previous article, I described what the new START Treaty is going to do to the U.S. strategic nuclear arsenal....The treaty restricts both the United States and Russia to a maximum of 1,550 deployed strategic nuclear warheads. For the U.S. military this would represent a decline of well over 90% from a peak of approximately 31,255 strategic nuclear warheads in 1967. The treaty would also limit the total number of deployed ballistic missiles or nuclear bombers to 700.In that same article, I discussed the fact that this treaty will leave Russia will a significant advantage in nuclear weapons because it does nothing to address their overwhelming superiority in tactical nuclear weapons....The treaty completely ignores the very serious imbalance that exists between the U.S. and Russia when is comes to tactical nuclear weapons. Today it is estimated that the Russians have approximately 10,000 tactical nuclear warheads while the U.S. only has a few hundred. These tactical nuclear warheads can be delivered by cruise missiles, long-range artillery or aircraft.Over the last several years, Russia has also been quite busy updating and modernizing their strategic nuclear forces. The United States has not been doing the same. U.S. officials still believe that the U.S. has a technological edge in this area, but everyone agrees that this gap is rapidly narrowing.
The treaty does nothing to change those numbers. This would put the United States at a very serious strategic disadvantage.
In recent years Russia has also developed submarines that are too "quiet" for us to track and ballistic missiles that can evade all of our missile defense systems.
While the U.S. has been making strategic mistakes like helping al-Qaeda take over Libya, Russia has been developing devastating new weapons systems. The following are just a couple of examples....
*In 2010, Russia introduced their new "fourth generation" nuclear submarine to the world, which is apparently quieter than any other submarine in existence.
*A while back, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin climbed into the cockpit of Russia's new "fifth generation" fighter jet and announced that it was far superior to the F-22 Raptor.
But most Americans don't know any of this.
As the United States drowns in debt, Russia is thriving.
According to an article in Forbes, Moscow is now the third most expensive city in the world in which to live. An article posted by CNN says that Moscow is the fourth most expensive city.
In fact, the cost of living is higher in Moscow than in any city in the United States.
Now there are even fears that Russia is trying to put the old Soviet Union back together.
It didn't get much press in the United States, but the initial members of the "Eurasian Union" were recently announced.
Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia will be the first three members, and it has been made clear that all of the nations there were formerly part of the Soviet Union will be welcome to join.
The following comes from a recent AFP article....Three ex-Soviet states were Friday to agree the first steps towards creating a Eurasian economic union, a project backed by Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to bind closer the former USSR.So why isn't the U.S. press reporting on this?
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and his Kazakhstan and Belarus counterparts Nursultan Nazarbayev and Alexander Lukashenko were to sign a declaration on further economic integration at a summit in Moscow, the Kremlin said in a statement.
"The declaration will set out the ultimate aim (of economic integration) as the creation of a Eurasian economic union," it said.
Back when Reagan was president, Russia was the number one foreign policy issue.
But today nobody wants to talk about Russia.
Everyone in America so desperately wants to believe that the Cold War is over.
Everyone in America so desperately wants to believe that Russia is no longer a threat.
But the truth is that Russia is much stronger politically, economically and militarily right now than the Soviet Union ever was.
And significant portions of the Russian population have developed a great fondness for Soviet nostalgia. Many of them wish that the Soviet Union was never broken up. The following is a brief excerpt from a recent news report from Australia....Mikhail Chernysh, a professor at the Institute of Sociology in Moscow, says constant exposure to a lost country has clearly rubbed off on Russians.If the United States continues to underestimate Russia it will be a gigantic mistake.
"What is striking, that there is nostalgia about the Soviet past even among young people who never lived in the Soviet period, who were never part of Soviet history," he said.
From new retro Soviet-era vending machines to statues of Lenin in central squares, to the ubiquitous hammer and sickle, reminders of the USSR's past glory are everywhere and for many in the new Russia, the past is too good to forget.
The Cold War is not over. Anyone that runs around saying that does not know what they are talking about. The top politicians and military leaders in Russia do not view us as a friend at all.
If Russia was ever able to pull off a successful first strike and take out most of our remaining nuclear warheads (remember, our nuclear arsenal is now less than 10% the size it used to be), it is entirely possible that Russia would be able to totally defeat the United States in a future war - especially if they are allied with China at the time.
Most people in the U.S. think that this can never happen, but the top brass in Russia and in China spend long hours on exactly such scenarios.
Sadly, very little about Russia will be said during the entire 2012 election season. Instead, everyone will be focused on the "massive threat" posed by the goat herders that are running around the hills of Afghanistan.
The blind are leading the blind and meanwhile the world is dramatically changing.
The Russian Bear is back, and Russia is going to play a huge role in world events in the years to come.
***UPDATE***
During the speech he made to formally launch his campaign to reclaim the Russian presidency, Vladimir Putin made the following statement....
"In the next five to 10 years we must take our armed forces to a qualitatively new level. Of course, this will require big spending .... but we must do this if we want to defend the dignity of our country"
Isn't going to happen.Quote:
"In the next five to 10 years we must take our armed forces to a qualitatively new level. Of course, this will require big spending .... but we must do this if we want to defend the dignity of our country"
The US isn't going to "take our armed forces to a qualitatively new level." OR do any "big spending"/
We're just not. The DOD is about to get whacked. We're not going to spend MORE money, we're going to lose positions, personnel, jobs and equipment over the next 5-10 years. Worse than Carter, WORSE than Clinton.
The DoD is gonna get slashed and burned.
Then nuked.
Putin May Shift Blame for Vote Setback to ‘Fall-Guy’ Medvedev
December 05, 2011, 12:25 PM EST By Henry Meyer
Dec. 5 (Bloomberg) -- Russian Premier Vladimir Putin may be able to insulate himself from his first election setback by shifting the blame to President Dmitry Medvedev, said political scientists and economists from Moscow to London.
Medvedev, 46, led the campaign of Putin’s United Russia party and is set to switch jobs with him next year. The party won 49.5 percent of yesterday’s vote for the State Duma, the lower house of parliament, preliminary results show. That compares with 64.3 percent four years ago and is the first time the party’s support declined from one nationwide vote to the next since it was set up a decade ago.
Medvedev, 46, may inherit the day-to-day running of a government that expects the budget to open up a deficit of 1.5 percent of gross domestic product next year after ending 2011 in a surplus of about 0.5 percent. He will also have to contend with a more fractured parliament than during his presidency.
“It won’t mean anything for Putin, all power will remain in his hands,” Mikhail Kasyanov, a former prime minister under Putin who now opposes the government, said in a telephone interview. “The fact that United Russia under Medvedev got far fewer votes than it did four years ago when it was led by Putin may end up being quite convenient.”
The Micex Index added 0.8 percent to 1,517.89 at the 6:45 p.m. close in Moscow after falling as much as 0.4 percent earlier. Steelmakers OAO Severstal and OAO Novolipetsk Steel both climbed more than 2.5 percent. The dollar-measured RTS index rose 0.9 percent to 1,559.28. The ruble strengthened 0.1 percent to 30.9046 per dollar.
Appeal to Voters
Medvedev was promised the job of premier after he agreed in September to make way for Putin’s return to the Kremlin. While Russia needs to tighten its finances to limit the fallout from the euro zone debt crisis, Putin, 59, who is focused on securing election as president in March, may pump more money toward appealing to voters, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and Aberdeen Asset Management.
Putin would get 31 percent of the vote in a presidential election, compared with 7 percent for Medvedev and 8 percent for Communist leader Gennady Zyuganov, according to a Levada Center poll last month. A third said they were undecided. The Nov. 18-21 poll interviewed 1,591 people and had a margin of error of 3.4 percentage points.
‘Fall Guy’
Medvedev may become the “fall guy” for United Russia’s election setback, allowing Putin to appoint former finance minister Alexei Kudrin as prime minister in his place, Tim Ash, head of emerging-markets research at RBS in London, said in an e-mailed research note today.
The president sacked Kudrin in October after the finance minister, who is well-respected by investors, criticized him for increasing military expenditure, warning that spending was approaching a critical level if global economic conditions sour.
Medvedev lost political stature after surrendering his chance of a second term to Putin and paid the price in credibility, Lilit Gevorgyan, a London-based analyst at IHS Global Insight, said by e-mail today.
“Putin is likely to hold his end of the deal and appoint Medvedev as his prime minister once he finalizes his return to the Kremlin,” she said. “But Medvedev’s term in the prime minister’s office is unlikely to be long,”
After balancing this year’s budget, Russia will probably run a 2012 deficit of 1.5 percent of gross domestic product, Putin said Nov. 16. The country, which posted budget surpluses between 2000 and 2008, faces deficits of as much as 3 percent through 2014 as oil prices fall, presidential aide Arkady Dvorkovich said in June.
‘Tough Task’
“The government is going to have a tough task in Russia, as maintaining good debt ratios would require cuts in social spending and pensions over the medium-term, which is politically difficult,” Charles Robertson, global chief economist at Renaissance Capital in London, said in an e-mail today. “Any prime minister is going to need support from the president to push through the necessary reforms.”
The cost of insuring Russian government debt against default over five years with credit default swaps has risen 85 basis points, or 0.85 percentage point, since June 30 to 227, according to data provider CMA, which is owned by CME Group Inc. and compiles prices quoted by dealers in the privately negotiated market. That compared with an increase of 46 basis points to 156 for Brazil so far this half, the data show.
The ruble has dropped 9.7 percent against the dollar since the end of June, heading for the worst half-year since the six months through December 2008. The Russian currency gained 0.2 percent to 30.8737 per dollar today.
‘Post-Election Hangover’
A surge in spending on state salaries and social benefits “could well create a large post-election hangover” by increasing the oil price required to balance the budget, said Ash at RBS.
Russia may need an average oil price of $126 a barrel to balance its budget next year, compared with an earlier forecast for $118, after a bigger-than-estimated increase in military salaries, Alfa Bank said last month. The price of Russia’s main export, Urals crude oil, traded at about $110 a barrel today.
The budget deficit will widen unless the country continues to benefit from “high oil and gas prices,” European Bank for Reconstruction and Development President Thomas Mirow said in a Nov. 30 interview. The world’s largest energy exporter relies on oil and gas revenue to fund 40 percent of its budget.
While Putin rewarded Medvedev’s loyalty during his four- year term as president, the Russian leader would benefit from replacing him as prime minister with a “strong figure who could manage the government,” Masha Lipman, an analyst at the Moscow Carnegie Center, said in a telephone interview today.
“I can imagine him being pushed aside,” Lipman said, listing possible replacement candidates as Sergei Naryshkin, head of the presidential administration, and First Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov.
--With assistance from Jack Jordan in Moscow. Editors: Balazs Penz, Andrew Langley
To contact the reporter on this story: Henry Meyer in Moscow at hmeyer4@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Balazs Penz at bpenz@bloomberg.net
Can Russia's Communist Party Make A Comeback?
Quote:
December 6, 2011
The bloom has fallen off Vladimir Putin‘s rose.
This Sunday’s routing of his ruling United Russia party came as a surprise not only to people who watch Russia politics, but to Russian politicians as well. Does it mean the opposition parties, led by the communists, stand a fighting chance to beat Putin to the presidency in March 2012?
United Russia went from 315 seats in the national parliament to 238, meaning it no longer has a lock on making amendments to the constitution without asking the old Communist Party and the anti-immigrant Liberal Democrats for support. The biggest winner of the night was the Communist Party, going from 57 seats to 92. The ousting of United Russia legislators is a essentially in spite of Putin, the country’s Prime Minister and United Russia’s chosen one to lead the country, again, in 2012.
The trouncing looked a lot like the 2006 U.S. mid-term election campaign, when President George W. Bush received a no confidence vote that sent every Republican incumbent packing.
To make matters worse, some Russians allegedly documented election fraud. Opposition politicians and election monitors said United Russia would have lost even more seats if not for ballot-box stuffing in some cities. That prompted Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to promptly criticize Sunday’s election, saying they were neither “free, nor fair” with no tangible evidence that they were not. “Russian voters deserve a full investigation of electoral fraud and manipulation,” Clinton said in the Lithuanian capital on Monday. The State Department said that the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s International Election Observer Mission claimed there were attempts to stuff ballot boxes, manipulate voter lists and other practices during the campaign period.
Complaints of irregularities in Russia’s recent legislative elections need to be investigated but videos purporting to show fraud are not incontestable proof of cheating, President Dmitry Medvedev said on Tuesday.
Just days before, Putin had warned the West not to “tamper” in Sunday’s elections as if he saw this coming.
“This has been a recurring theme of Putin,” said Jonathan Harris, a professor of political science at the University of Pittsburgh. Putin has been critical of Western NGOs and other election monitoring groups, like the website Golos, a Wikileaks for voter fraud. When Putin discussed Western interference, he likely had Golos on his mind. The site is partially funded by U.S. and European grants and allows people to comment and post videos of voter tampering. Putin sees groups like this as Westerners asking for trouble.
If there was not fraud at the ballot, there was most likely pressure on some to vote for United Russia at the ballot.
“The presidential administration, which is essentially the West Wing of the Kremlin, told governors of the states to get out the vote for United Russia. The governors and mayors are all United Russia because it makes no sense to be in any other party at that level. The program of United Russia is simple: support Putin,” said Harris. “In this case, the Kremlin doesn’t actually threaten their jobs if they don’t vote along party lines, but they can be pretty stern. It’s unofficial pressure. Actual voter fraud accusations are harder to prove,” Harris said.
The Communist Party complained and documented voter fraud by United Russia in 2007. In Chechnya for example, United Russia managed 99% of the vote, unheard of in a country where there are four large political parties to choose from. That year, the OSCE did not send election monitors to the country due to persistent delays in passport visas.
And now this year the same allegations have popped up.
But in addition to the fraud storyline marking United Russia again, low voter turn-out should be seen as a rejection of Russia’s regained status as a one-party town. According to a recent poll by the Levada Center in Moscow, 52% said United Russia was a political instrument for Putin. Only 30% believed it was an independent party. This September was a stark reminder of that political reality, when Medvedev said that he would swap roles with Putin. Voters saw it as cynical and they turned on both leaders soon after.
Putin first came to power when Boris Yeltsin chose him as his Prime Minister in 1999. Putin became Russia’s second president soon after. From 2000 onward, oil prices rose and blessed the Russian economy with loads of money. Russia is dependent on oil and gas. It’s the country’s main commodity and a government cash cow. It was all good times, and in 2004, Putin was re-elected.
“People have forgotten how crappy it was under Yeltsin and before Yeltsin now. Under Putin’s first two terms we saw a huge jump in living standards, but not anymore. It’s harder to replicate. Income divides are widening. Medvedev is seen as a wimp. Sunday’s vote wasn’t the start of a rebellion, but it was a sign of disenchantment with the Kremlin,” said Walter Connor, an international relations professor at Boston University.
It’s not that Russians are angry about economic policy, or unemployment. The economy is not growing as fast as the other big emerging markets, but as Putin has pointed out, it is doing better than it did under the Communists. Voters are mostly fed up with corruption. Transparency International ranks Russia as the most corrupt of the big emerging markets, even more corrupt than some countries in Africa.
“Russian political leaders don’t seem too worried about corruption,” said Shan Nair, founder of Nair & Company, an international business consulting firm with clients in Russia. “Corruption is a major political issue in India this year, for example, and all the politicians are talking about it. It’s not even discussed seriously in Russia.”
Whether or not people are waking up to crony capitalism in Russia remains to be seen, but young people did take to the streets on Monday and again on Tuesday to protest political foul play.
That’s a story line that Putin will have to deal with carefully. The government has orchestrated the Putin image as Russia’s James Bond — bold, decisive and even sexy.
The current protests don’t bode well for the more media friendly youth movement, known as the Nashi, which means “ours” in Russia. Nashi was set up by the government as a response to the Orange Revolution in 2004 Ukraine, where young people protested against voter fraud in the presidential elections there.
“The Kremlin realized young people could effectively mobilize and cause a problem to the political power system so they created the Nashi to co-opt the youth movement,” said Olena Nikolayenko, a political science professor at Fordham University. “Some of the pro-Putin rallies you see with young kids singing happy birthday to him are probably just from Nashi. These election show discontent across the age groups. It’s a new image problem for Putin, and the ‘political technologists’ will have to deal with that. The problem is the Communist Party doesn’t have the charismatic political leaders who could take Putin to a second round vote in March,” she said. For Russian political youth groups, the best case scenario has them modernizing the Communist Party to be more like a social democratic/Chinese developmentalist hybrid. That won’t happen before next year’s election.
Putin’s challengers are Gennady Zyuganov of the Communist Party, Sergei Mironov of A Just Russia Party, and Vladimir Zhirinovsky of the Liberal Democratic Party. A Levada Center poll shows they don’t have a chance. When asked which political party represented their political interests, United Russia got 30%. The Communists got 11%; Liberal Democrats 8% and A Just Russia received 5%.
United Russia maintains the leader in the parliament. Putin will be the next president, Arizona Senator John McCain told National Public Radio Tuesday morning.
Sunday’s vote means Putin can no longer count on the elections going smoothly without proposing a serious election program. United Russia at least “looks weaker” and the three other parliamentary parties “look stronger” than they did before the election. But a Communists comeback won’t take them to the presidency next year.
“The only party that has Western friendly policies is United Russia and that is one reason why people keep voting for them,” said Harris. “The social liberal opposition is like the Greens or the Libertarian party in the U.S., they have no power in parliamentary politics. If they wanted to put a guy on the ballot they would need two million signatures. And then the Kremlin could just say a few of them were phoney and dismiss the whole thing.”
Russia deploying arms in Kaliningrad is legal – FM
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Published: 07 December, 2011, 15:02
Russia is not violating its international obligations by stationing advanced weapon systems in its westernmost exclave, Kaliningrad, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has said.
Speaking at a media conference in Vilnius, Lavrov stressed that Kaliningrad is a sovereign territory of the Russian Federation. “We are not abusing any international commitments,” the minister underlined, as cited by Itar-Tass.
Over the past five to six years Russia has removed hundreds of units of heavy weaponry. “And, of course, we will replace them with more modern arms,” Lavrov said. He noted though that this is being done in the context of the Russia-NATO dialogue.
Moscow and Brussels remain at odds over the planned US missile defense shield in Europe. Even though Russia was invited to be involved in the project, the sides have so far failed to come to an agreement as to what role exactly Russia would play. The Russian side is only ready to take part in the plan as an equal partner rather than being just a passive observer. In addition, Washington has refused to provide any legally-binding guarantees that the missile defense system would not be used against Russia.
Speaking on Wednesday, Sergey Lavrov pointed out that NATO is well-aware of the situation. He stressed that the dialogue between the sides can only progress when the alliance finally hears what Moscow says on the matter.
“The situation is not changing, but we are continuing consultations. Our legitimate concerns are not taken into consideration. Our NATO friends flatly refuse to record on paper what they say verbally, namely, that the missile defense in Europe would not create a threat to Russia,” Lavrov said.
The minister said that Moscow’s major concern is that foreign arms and military infrastructure are being placed around the territory of Russia and its neighbors.
On November 23, President Dmitry Medvedev outlined military measures Russia would take in response to any further development of America’s controversial missile defense shield. Those included the deployment of strike systems in the west and south of the country and Iskander missiles in the Kaliningrad region. Shortly after that, the head of state launched a radar system in Kaliningrad, which protects the country from missile attacks and covers all Europe and Atlantic.
On Thursday, Sergey Lavrov will discuss the tricky missile defense issue in Brussels, at a Russia-NATO Council meeting of foreign ministers.
Moscow’s permanent representative to the alliance, Dmitry Rogozin, told Itar-Tass that in light of President Medvedev’s recent statement, the talks are expected to be “rather serious”.
“Out NATO colleagues will have to answer why they, while calling Moscow their partner, create potentials which might pose a threat to our country’s security,” he said.
Lavrov was speaking in the Lithuanian capital, Vilnius, where he was attending a meeting of foreign ministers from Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) member states.
Speaking at the gathering a day earlier, the Russian diplomat called for a profound reform of the organization. Without it, he said, the OSCE would eventually lose its role. Lavrov reiterated his stance at a media briefing on Wednesday.
The Russian Foreign Minister said that, apparently, the West prefers to keep the organization in a “messy state” since that way it is easier to manipulate it, cites Interfax.
He described work procedures at the meeting as “funny,” saying that ministers are not very involved in decision-making. They do take part in discussions, but most decisions are made by experts. It is “disappointing,” but Russia is trying to change the situation.
Lavrov noted that Moscow, together with its partners from the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), has been pushing for OSCE reform for several years. However, Western partners have shown only muted enthusiasm for the idea.
i believe russia and china plan to go war with usa and our friends.people say that cold war is over.i believe cold war is still going on.
Wallyboy78! Good to see you post! Welcome to the non lurking world. :D
Another way I would put your statement is the Cold War never ended, it just evolved.
Welcome Wally! :)
And I agree, the Cold War is still on. Unfortunately, most people refuse to acknowledge it is and that it is heating up.
Putin Prepares The Russian Empire To Strike Back
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The reincarnation of the current PM as president poses a challenge to western powers for which they seem ill-prepared
December 1, 2011
As prime minister for the past four years, Vladimir Putin never really went away. But his looming reincarnation as the all-powerful, executive president of Russia – the country's "paramount leader" in Chinese parlance – poses a stark challenge for which the US, Britain and other beleaguered western powers seem ill-prepared. As president, potentially until 2024, Putin has one overriding objective: the creation of a third, post-tsarist, post-Soviet Russian empire.
Putin famously described the collapse of the Soviet Union, the "evil empire" of Ronald Reagan's imagining, as "the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century". His aim, once this weekend's heavily managed parliamentary elections and next March's presidential coronation are out the way, is to put this disaster to rights. Reinstalled as president, and with his political potboy, Dmitry Medvedev, pushed aside, Putin will again exercise unchallengeable control over Russia's external affairs.
Never much interested in domestic policy, Putin's only political trick is a hyper-nationalism that pits a proudly embattled Russia against a hostile, US-led, world conspiracy. But the trick works. Despite mounting criticism during the Duma campaign, both supporters and opponents acknowledge his perceived achievement in restoring Russia's standing in the world following Boris Yeltsin's chaotic 1990s decade.
Accepting the presidential nomination of his United Russia party last month in an otherwise tedious speech, Putin said: "When I hear people shout out 'Russia', I think the entire audience should do that." The response, according to witnesses, was a deafening chant of 'Ro-see-ya! Ro-see-ya!" while Putin pounded his fist on the podium.
Elements of Putin's strategy to make Russia great again are slowly coming into focus. Much of the plan is defined by Russia's opposition to the US, the traditional foe. Thus the Kremlin announced last week that it would renounce the strategic arms reduction treaty (known as New Start) agreed with Washington two years ago if the US did not abandon its European missile defence plans.
This announcement, coupled with the unveiling of a new Russian missile base in Kaliningrad on Nato's doorstep, has striking implications. New Start was the centrepiece of Barack Obama's 2009 "reset" of bilateral relations. The reset is viewed by the White House as a major foreign achievement (and 2012 re-election asset) for a president who has but few to his name.
Missile defence ostensibly aimed at deterring Iran is seen as another success. With the US preoccupied by wars in the Middle East and South Asia and fixated by the Arab spring, a quiet Russian "front" has been deemed essential by Washington. Putin appears set to change all that.
On his eastern flank, meanwhile, Putin is busy reviving the idea of a remodelled union embracing the former Soviet republics of central Asia, an arrangement that prospectively boosts Russian political and military influence. "Russia will begin this new iteration of a Russian empire by creating a union with former Soviet states based on Moscow's current associations, such as the customs union and the collective security treaty organisation. This will allow the 'EuU' [a Eurasia union] to strategically encompass both the economic and security spheres … Putin is creating a union in which Moscow would influence foreign policy and security but would not be responsible for most of the inner workings of each country," said Lauren Goodrich in a Stratfor paper.
Putin's third empire project also includes, crucially, a tightening of Moscow's politicised grip on Europe's strategic energy supplies.
Following last month's Gazprom deal with Belarus, industry analysts suggest up to 50% of Europe's natural gas could be controlled by Russia by 2030. This is hugely significant: Putin's new Russian empire can only be financed by continuing, high-priced energy export revenues. In effect, Europe could be paying for its own future domination.
The empire-fights-back scenario has numerous other aspects. Recent remarks by Medvedev about the lack of wisdom, in the context of the 2008 Georgia conflict, of unchecked Nato enlargement vividly illustrated Russia's visceral opposition to any interference in what used to be called its "near abroad" – and Putin's desire to roll back the western encroachments of the past 20 years. Russia's determination to defend wider spheres of traditional influence in the non-aligned and developing world can be seen in its obdurate refusal to penalise Syria, in the face of almost universal outrage over the crackdown there; and in its de facto defence of Iran's nuclear programme. Putin, meanwhile, continues to prioritise Russian military modernisation.
Western countries inclined to take issue with this external empire-building, or with Russia's lamentable internal democracy and human rights deficit, have been told to save their breath. "All our foreign partners need to understand this: Russia is a democratic country, it's a reliable and predictable partner with which they can and must reach agreement, but on which they cannot impose anything from the outside," Putin told the United Russia convention. Attempts to influence the election process or the reform agenda were "a wasted effort, like throwing money to the winds".
As Putin – former secret policeman, physical fitness fanatic and hyper-nationalist – prepares to resume Russia's presidency, his third empire ambitions become ever clearer. March's election will be no contest. Only when it is over will the real fight begin.
Putin Clings to Victory as Russia’s Voter Turnout Exceeds 146%
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December 4, 2011
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Perhaps that ad for Vladimir Putin's United Russia that turned a voting booth into a capsule sex hotel worked a little too well, as a record-setting 146% of the Russian electorate turned out for Sunday's parliamentary elections. (The figures pictured above are actually those of Rostovskaya Oblast, a region about 440 miles south of Moscow.)
But not everyone thinks the math adds up:A YouTube user in east Moscow illustrated how the pens at booths in school #1114 were filled with invisible ink. In the Siberian city of Novokuznetsk, a user showed how ballot boxes had arrived at a polling site one-third filled with votes.Despite certain, um, voter precautions taken by the ruling party, the victory was far from the landslide that Prime Minister Putin expected. The three minority parties (the Communist Party, the nationalist Liberal Democratic Party and social-democratic party Just Russia) all made huge gains, splintering United Russia's two-thirds supermajority and requiring a "more complex configuration" in parliament, as President Dmitri Medvedev put it.
A Moscow user filmed an election official at polling station #2501 filling out ballots as he sat at his desk. Several users filmed buses, nicknamed "carousels", which appeared to be carrying the same people to various stations so they could vote over and over again.
"Today we have witnessed the dirtiest, foulest elections of the last 20 years," one opposition leader, said Boris Nemtsov, a former deputy premier. "We can't even call them elections – it's the theft of votes from the Russian people."
Even Chechnya proved a disappointment: Where in past elections the region — which has lost tens of thousands of citizens fighting against Putin's troops — voted 100% in favor of United Russia, this time the prime minister's party took a comparatively paltry 99.51%. This despite a sworn pledge from Chechnya's war criminal President (and Hilary Swank BFF) Ramzan Kadyrov that Putin would receive "more than 100%" of the votes! Poor Putin's mojo must really be slipping.
Always the sportsman, however, the prime minister said that "the will of the Russian people has rung out loud and clear across Russia," and that he would not sleep until "each and every voter who challenged my unyielding supremacy has their kneecaps shattered by my own, viselike fists." He then crushed a frying pan to illustrate. [NYT, The Guardian, Screeengrab via avmalgin.livejournal.com]
Medvedev on US: ‘If they continue to push us around, we’ll push back’
Published: 17 December, 2011, 19:29
Edited: 17 December, 2011, 23:22
President Dmitry Medvedev has spoken out after a telephone conversation with his US counterpart, saying Obama’s comments on Russia’s recent parliamentary elections were “unacceptable”.
Speaking to a number of United Russia MPs, Dmitry Medvedev stated that, correctly delivered, thoughts and comments on a country’s electoral process are acceptable – and welcome. But when they are reminiscent of Cold War-era statements, it is outrageous. “That is not a reset [in relations], and I’ve had to remind my colleague of that”, said the president.
Domestic criticism is of course welcome and constitutionally-justified, Medvedev told MPs. “The streets are not the US State Department. The streets reflect the mood of our people.” The Russian leader was referring to a recent comment made by the Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who called these past elections “neither free nor fair.”
Medvedev summed up his statement by saying that he will not stand for intimidation. Russia will continue to pursue its interest within the international arena. “If they want to push us around, we’ll push back. But if they hear our concerns, then we can work together.”
Russia: Back to the Future
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December 28, 2011
Last weekend’s massive protest in Moscow’s Prospekt Sakharova will result in a new Soviet-style Russia not an Arab Spring-like revolution. The West had better beware because the Russian bear is coming out of hibernation.
Twenty years ago this month the Soviet Union crumbled and from those ashes rose a promising Russian democratic republic. But Soviet-era corruption reared its ugly head in Russia’s December 4th parliamentary elections. That corruption sparked numerous protests, calls for new elections and earned Russia’s prime minister an accusatory message from a U.S. senator.
Senator John McCain (R-AZ) tweeted Russia’s Prime Minister Vladimir Putin a satirical message. “Dear Vlad,” tweeted McCain, “the #Arabspring is coming to a neighborhood near you.”1 That tweet linked a news article about allegations of fraud in Russia’s parliamentary elections.
Predictably Putin dismissed McCain’s ribbing as dunce naivety. Yes, Russia’s elections were likely corrupt, but they were also a gauge of the country’s mood for change which Putin intends to leverage to earn another term as president.
Putin’s political party, United Russia, lost State Duma seats in the elections in spite of widespread corruption but nationalist parties which also support Putin for president gained those same seats. On balance the election confirms Putin’s political support for a back-to-the- future Russia propelled by growing nationalism.
Putin intends to ride the nationalist sentiment to rebuild Russia where his former Soviet masters failed 20 years ago. Putin memorably described the Soviet Union’s demise as the “greatest geopolitical catastrophe” of the 20th century. Then two weeks ago Putin, in full campaign mode, expressed a similar sentiment on Russian television. The Soviet Union “should have started timely economic reforms and changes,” Putin said, instead the regime collapsed.
Putin, a former KGB – Soviet-era secret police - lieutenant colonel, sees himself as Russia’s savior, the man destined to bring about “reforms” and “changes.” But first he must win back the presidency this March, a virtual certainty. Then Putin intends to restore Russia’s grandeur using Soviet-style politics, building a new Warsaw Pact-like geopolitical alliance, growing the military, and implementing a popular anti-West foreign policy.
Putin’s politics are right out of a Soviet-era playbook. In September Putin and outgoing President Dmitriy Medvedev confirmed their intent at the United Russia congress to extend the Putin dynasty, which started in 1999, ran through two terms as president and recently four years as prime minister.
Medvedev told the congress that Putin will stand for the presidency in 2012 and he [Medvedev] is to replace him as prime minister. The party rubber stamped the Putin nomination and the prime minister accepted the unanimous endorsement “with gratitude.” Putin said between chants of “Putin, Putin” that he would build “a strong and happy Russia,” translated financial benefits for his supporters.
Putin’s critics saw in that congress visions of the Soviet era. Liberal-democratic party leader Vladimir Zhirinovskiy compared the United Russia’s “Putin, Putin” congress to ones held by the Soviet Communist Party. “The same milkmaids, officers, and steel workers" with "hired hands shouting all the slogans," Zhirinovskiy said, according to RIA Novosti.
Putin played to Soviet-era nostalgia when he called for building a Eurasian Union. On October 4, Putin published an article in Izvetiia announcing his Eurasia Union initiative that will have an economic focus similar to the euro zone, though led by Russia politically and bears a suspicious resemblance to that of the former Soviet Union.
The objective is not to rebuild a unified state dependent financially on Moscow, but create a supranational political and economic structure that gives Moscow strategic oversight of countries on its periphery. Russia already has a customs union with Belarus and Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan has indicated it intends to join. That union integrates their economies and reduces restrictions on movement of goods across their borders.
A Russian-led Eurasia Union will attract former Warsaw Pact countries especially now that Europe is collapsing. It also suggests a reorientation of Russian foreign policy strategy under soon-to-be-president Putin that de-emphasizes Europe and puts Moscow in the catbird seat.
Keep in mind even though the proposed Eurasia Union starts as a political and economic association it could become a defense alliance. The former Warsaw Pact was the military compliment to the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance, the regional economic organization for the former communist states of Eastern Europe.
Putin is modernizing Russia’s military already armed with the world’s largest atomic weapons arsenal. Last month Putin declared, according to Interfax, the Russian armed forces will be brought up “to a new level in the next five to 10 years” so that both the army and the military-industrial complex “are capable of guaranteeing Russia stable peace without undermining the national economy.”
Moscow is aggressively rebuilding its atomic strike capability, doctrinally the nation’s primary means of defense. For example, just last week Russia’s Northern Fleet successfully carried out the salvo launch of two Bulava intercontinental ballistic missiles from the Yuriy Dolgorukiy, a submersed nuclear submarine in the White Sea. Such strategic modernization of its nuclear forces does not contravene the new Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty with the U.S., but it is leaving the U.S. in the dust because America stopped atomic weapon modernization projects.
Moscow is also aggressively building conventional expeditionary platforms. It is constructing over 100 naval ships, over 1,000 helicopters and 600 military aircraft including the fifth generation Sukhoi PAK-FA fighter.4 Meanwhile, Russian ships and aircraft are returning to distant seas and air space to challenge the U.S.
Putin promises an anti-U.S. foreign policy. He told the United Russia congress he “will continue to pursue an active foreign policy” while “straightforwardly and honestly” defending Russia’s interests. He cautioned that dialogue with Russia is "possible only on an equal footing" and that "nothing can be imposed on Russia from outside."
These comments are aimed at the U.S., which Putin considers Russia’s primary adversary. His concern is with NATO’s expansion into Eastern Europe and America’s European-based ballistic missile defense (BMD), which he claims threatens Russia’s sovereignty.
Putin is especially weary of America’s BMD which he says is intended to neutralize Russia’s nuclear deterrent and is a pretext to station American forces in Eastern Europe. Washington argues the BMD is to counter the emerging Iranian missile threat.
But President Medvedev and by assoication Putin threaten that if the U.S. continues to refuse cooperation with Russia regarding the BMD, Moscow will deploy its Iskander mobile ballistic missiles and early warning system on its border with Poland and Lithuania. He will target the American BMD and fit the Iskanders with advanced maneuverable re-entry vehicles and penetration aids.
On other fronts Moscow is re-engaging the Middle East, such as building a military port in Syria to re-establish a Mediterranean presence. It is playing an active and unhelpful role in the ongoing nuclear crisis with Iran, leveraging its control of the Northern Distribution Network into Afghanistan, contesting arctic region claims, and moving back into areas that haven’t seen Russians for two decades.
The election protests express genuine discontent with Russian corruption. But the real story is the Putin dynasty is strong and soon will shed any pretense of reform. It will tap into the growing Russian nationalism to rebuild Moscow’s stature Soviet-style with a back-to-the-future agenda which means the Russian bear is back with a vengence.
Russian Army Must ‘Instill Fear in Enemies’ – Rogozin
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Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin
© RIA Novosti. Alexey Kudenko
00:59 09/02/2012
NOVOSIBIRSK, February 9 (RIA Novosti)
Tags: weaponry production, Dmitry Rogozin, Russia
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The Russian defense industry must produce only those types of weaponry that would allow the Armed Forces to operate effectively in the conditions of modern warfare, Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin said.
“The production of weaponry must reflect the fact that modern wars will be brief and unpredictable in nature, they will not rage on for years,” Rogozin said on Wednesday at a meeting with defense industry officials.
“We need a very compact, mobile, armed to the teeth army and fleet that instill fear in our enemies, and strategic nuclear forces that would ensure our [national] security,” he said.
Rogozin insisted that Russia must abandon the model of arms procurement used during the Soviet era because at that time the production of weaponry got out of control and ate up enormous resources.
“The Defense Ministry used to order a wide range of military equipment without even knowing what it was for,” he said. “Today, it’s all scrap metal – we cannot use or sell it.”
Rogozin, who oversees the Russian defense industry, is facing a formidable task of streamlining the development and production of weaponry in the country.
He proposed on Wednesday to create a strong link between the designers of weaponry, manufacturers and the military to ensure the effectiveness of a new arms procurement model.
LOL
Go for it.
Companion Post:
Russia Wants to Build New Missiles to Hit the U.S.
by Taylor Dinerman
February 15, 2012 at 4:30 am
The US has the nerve to have missile defenses that actually defend it?
Get this: The General commanding Russia Strategic Rocket Forces, Lieutenant General Sergei Karakayev, said in December that the new Russian Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs) are needed -- because the existing ones are vulnerable to US missile defenses.
This is apparently the result of all that nice goodwill generated by the Obama administration's "reset" of relations with Vladimir Putin's Russia and the ratification of the New Start Arms Control Treaty. It should come as no surprise: nuclear weapons, along with oil and gas exports, are just about the only thing that still qualifies Russia as a "Great Power."
If Russia's leaders still resent their loss of superpower status and feel they have a strategic need to challenge the US wherever possible, then spending the money to build a new type of nuclear missile aimed at the US makes sense.
On December 23, the Russian navy completed the test firing of their "Bulava" submarine-launched ballistic missile; and the Russian Navy's high command says that it is ready to be entered into service. This missile has an 8000 kilometer range and can carry 8 to 10 nuclear warheads. Though similar to the older land-based "Topol" ICBM, the Bulava went through a long and painful development process and experienced a relatively large number of test failures -- indicating that Russia's once formidable ability to build and deploy powerful missiles such as SLBMs, ICBMs and technologically similar space launch vehicles is nowhere near as well financed as it was during the Soviet era.
In December 2010, Russia's top-of-the-line space launch vehicle, the Proton, failed to put a number of Glonass navigation satellites into orbit. In February 2011, a Rokot launch vehicle, put together from recycled ICBMs, failed. In August 2010, both a Proton and a Soyuz, carrying a Progress cargo capsule to the International Space Station failed; and last month, the launch of another Soyuz rocket , carrying a military communications satellite, ended in disaster.
While not directly related to the space launch vehicle involved, the failure of Russia's Phobos/Grunt Mars probe which crashed back to Earth on January 15, 2012, indicates that Moscow's space industry, which is embedded in their military industrial complex, has serious problems.
This string of failures seems to reveal that the December 16, 2011, announcement by General Karakayev of the Strategic Missile Forces that Russia will build a new heavy ICBM , to replace the older SS-18 missiles aimed at the US, was probably motivated by the need to demonstrate that Russia's missile-building abilities have not been affected by these accidents. Moscow's nuclear missile forces are just about the only major military asset that Russia has left.
Even more significant is that, according to a story published by Russia press agency RIA Novosti, is the admission by General Karakayev that "Russia's solid propellent ICBMs may be unable to penetrate missile defenses." There can only be one missile defense system that the General was talking about ,and that is the Ground Based Missile Defense (GMD) system, based in Alaska and California that provides at least a minimal protection to the US homeland.
Ever since Ronald Reagan gave his famous "Star Wars" speech in March1983, which lead to the rebirth of American missile defense efforts, opponents of the idea that it is not only possible but desirable to build defensive systems that can shoot down incoming nuclear missiles and their warheads have claimed that the technology cannot be developed. Yet now, a senior Russian officer has publicly admitted that America has built a system that can shoot down the solid propellent missiles that Reagan and his team thought were the most dangerous ones in the Soviet inventory. This is a major development: it proves that Ronald Reagan was right not to overestimate Soviet technological capacities.
Of course, as the US GMD system has fewer than 30 operational interceptors, the ability of Russia's missile force with its hundreds of ICBMs and SLBMs to overwhelm the US defense system is obvious. However, if the US were to chose to build a much larger number of interceptors, and to build up a "multilayered" national missile defense system, as has been promised by Republican Presidential candidate Mitt Romney, Russia would no longer have an unquestioned ability to hit a wide array of US targets with nuclear warheads. The reliability of Russia's missile strike force would be compromised.
If this is the motivation for Russia's announced decision to build a new type of nuclear missile, then Russia's commitment to "reset" its relationship with the US is based on a wildly false premise. After all, if the US does not threaten Russia's territorial integrity, why should Russia worry about America's ability to defend itself ? Or do Russia's leaders still believe that a balance of terror, based on the old doctrine of Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD), is necessary?
Russia to test over 70 new missile systems in 2012
About 70 new rocket and missile systems will be tested at Russia’s Kapustin Yar test range in 2012, an increase of 150 percent from last year, a Defense Ministry spokesman said on Friday.
The systems are part of more than 160 ongoing projects, said Col. Vadim Koval, without providing any details.
Last year, more than 500 missile test launches were made at the Kapustin Yar rocket launch and development site, he added.
Almost all the missile and rocket related branches and services of the Russian Armed Forces, including the Strategic Missile Forces, the Air Defense Forces, and the Missile Forces and Artillery conduct their tests at Kapustin Yar, located in the Astrakhan region, between the cities of Volgograd and Astrakhan.
Russia retains right to play nuclear card’ – Gen-Staff Chief
Published: 15 February, 2012, 16:18
http://rt.com/files/politics/russia-...r-mobile.n.jpg
Mobile launcher 'Yars' missile system. (RIA Novosti / Sergey Pyatakov)
TAGS: Military, NATO, Nuclear, Russia
The Russian Armed Forces are ready to retaliate to any threat to national security, and will not rule out using nuclear weapons, General Nikolay Makarov, head of the Russian General Staff, said on Wednesday.
*"If there is a threat to the integrity of the Russian Federation, we are entitled to use nuclear weapons,” Makarov said in an interview with the Ekho Moskvy radio station.
Stressing that Russia’s nuclear deterrent remains the primary prerequisite for strategic stability, Makarov says the Russian Armed Forces will not cut corners.
"As regards our nuclear forces, we invest the allocated funding up to the last kopek,” Russia’s top military commander said. “We are working very seriously to upgrade our nuclear potential.”
Makarov then provided a glimpse at Russia’s shopping list for state-of-the-art military hardware.
In particular, the country’s Defense Ministry is purchasing new-generation underwater nuclear missile carriers, planning to renew and upgrade its strategic bombers, and introducing new missile systems, including Yars, for Russian Strategic Missile Troops, he said.
Makarov went on to recall that even during its darkest economic moments, Russia always provided the necessary funds for maintaining and developing its strategic nuclear forces.
"We have sufficient funds to implement the state armament program for the period until 2020,” he said. “The problem is that the national defense sector is sometimes unable to meet our demand.”
Makarov also noted that efforts are being made to develop general purpose forces. Nuclear weapons, he admitted, cannot take the place of a well-trained army.
"Unfortunately, we are facing threats from a number of unstable states, where not nuclear weapons but well-trained, strong and mobile armed forces may be required to resolve any conflict situation," the General noted.
He also mentioned that battling NATO as a whole would not be an aim Russia would pursue.
"[Russia] is not going to fight against the entire NATO," he said. "We do not have such goals and objectives.”
Russia will target US missile defense sites if no deal - Medvedev
Published: 23 November, 2011, 16:21
Iskander missile (RIA Novosti / Aleksey Danichev)
Responding to Washington’s failure to bring Russia on board the European missile defense system, President Dmitry Medvedev announces sweeping plans to address what Moscow is calling a threat to national security.
Medvedev said he will deploy strike systems in the west and south of the country and deploy Iskander missiles in the Kaliningrad region in order to counter the risk posed by the European missile defense system.
“By my order the Defense Ministry will run in a warning system radar station in Kaliningrad without delay,” the Russian President said, commenting from his resident of Gorki on the outskirts of Moscow
Russia may also refuse to undertake additional steps toward disarmament in the event that its national security remains at risk.
“In the event of unfavorable developments (in regards to European missile defense), Russia reserves the right to halt further steps in the disarmament sphere and, respectively, weapons control,” Medvedev said.
“Besides, given the inseparable interconnection between the strategic offensive and defensive weapons, grounds may appear for our country’s withdrawal from the START treaty.”
New START, which limits the number of deployed strategic nuclear warheads to 1,550, was signed on April 8, 2010 in Prague and went into force on February 5, 2011.
Meanwhile, Medvedev stressed that Russia remains open to dialogue with the US and NATO regarding missile defense issues, but the cooperation must have clear legal parameters.
"We are not closing the door to further dialogue on missile defense with the US and the North Atlantic alliance, nor to practical cooperation in this area. We are ready for further dialogue," the Russian leader stressed. "The path towards such work depends upon the creation of a clear legal basis for our cooperation that will reflect our legitimate interests."
There is still time to come to mutual understanding, the Russian leader said.
Medvedev reiterated his belief that the formation of a “joint and sectored missile defense system,” which he proposed at the Russia-NATO Council summit in Lisbon, would open up the prospects for a “real strategic partnership between Russia and NATO.”
"Europe doesn't need new demarcation lines,” Medvedev said. “It needs a single perimeter of security with equal legal participation from the Russian side."
Medvedev said that US and NATO reluctance to cooperate is unfortunate because “even now such an approach is opening unique opportunities for Russia and NATO's advancement towards a truly strategic partnership."
President Medvedev also mentioned that in 2009 when US President Barack Obama decided to “scrap” the missile defense plans laid out by his predecessor, George W. Bush, Russia’s reaction was quite positive.He said the apparent change allowed the two states to sign the New START treaty.
Later, however, the United States started to implement the so-called stage-by-stage missile defense plan, while denying Russia’s participation in the project. Naturally, this concerns Russia, Medvedev said.
*Read the full text of President Dmitry Medvedev's address on missile defense.
I was notified about a briefing today, but can't attend, that is at a classified level. I wish I could go because they are talking about this very thing
Russia Would Use Nukes to Stave Off Threats - General Staff
http://en.rian.ru/images/16529/76/165297623.jpgChief of the Russian General Staff Gen. Nikolai Makarov
© RIA Novosti. Vladimir Vyatkin
16:12 15/02/2012
MOSCOW, February 15 (RIA Novosti)
Tags: Yars, Tu-95, Tu-160, Nikolai Makarov, Russia, Moscow
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Multimedia
- Missiles that can penetrate any defense - Yars systems on alert
- Russia develops unique Yars ballistic missile
- Russian Tu-160 Blackjack strategic bomber
Russia would use nuclear weapons in response to any imminent threat to its national security, Chief of the Russian General Staff Gen. Nikolai Makarov said on Wednesday.
“We are certainly not planning to fight against the whole of NATO,” Makarov said in an interview with the Ekho Moskvy radio, “but if there is a threat to the integrity of the Russian Federation, we have the right to use nuclear weapons, and we will.”
The general said Russia’s nuclear deterrent is the cornerstone of strategic stability and serious efforts are being taken by the Russian government to modernize the country’s nuclear triad.
The Russian Defense ministry is planning to acquire at least 10 Borey class strategic nuclear submarines, thoroughly modernize its fleet of Tu-160 Blackjack and Tu-95 Bear strategic bombers, and equip its Strategic Missile Forces with formidable Yars mobile ballistic missile systems.
Makarov also stressed the importance of maintaining highly-efficient, mobile conventional forces.
“Unfortunately, we are facing threats from a number of unstable states, where no nuclear weapons but well-trained, strong and mobile Armed Forces are required to resolve any conflict situation," Makarov said.
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© Сollage by RIA Novosti
Russian Tu-160 Blackjack strategic bomber
The Russian government has allocated 22 trillion rubles ($730 billion) on the state arms procurement program until 2020.
Putin plans asymmetric radar reply
MOSCOW
Russian Prime Minister and likely next president Vladimir Putin says Russia will counter NATO’s missile shield project with an asymmetrical and effective response by spending $770 billion over the next decade
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Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin walks after inspecting a new Russian fighter jet in this file photo. Putin says Russia will purchase more than 400 intercontinental ballistic missiles (inset.) AP photo
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin vowed yesterday that Russia would strengthen its military might and offer an “asymmetrical and effective” response to the deployment of a NATO missile shield.
Russia must implement strong countermeasures to respond to NATO’s planned deployment of a missile shield in Europe, Putin wrote in an article on national security in the state newspaper Rossiyskaya Gazeta, ahead of his bid for a third Kremlin term in the March 4 presidential polls.
“The time demands decisive steps to strengthen a single system of air and space defense of our country. We are being pushed towards these actions by the policy of the United States and NATO on the question of deploying a missile shield,” Putin wrote.
He said Russia should not try to create a “costly” rival shield but its strategic nuclear forces and air and space defense forces should aim to “overcome any system of missile defense.” “In this question there cannot be too much patriotism,” Agence France-Presse quoted Putin as saying.
Leaders of the NATO alliance gave their backing in 2010 for the Europe-wide ballistic missile shield – which officials say is aimed at thwarting missile threats from the Middle East, particularly Iran. Turkey hosts a radar system in the eastern province of Malatya as part of the NATO anti-missile project.
Putin has dismissed the U.S. claim the prospective shield was intended to counter the Iranian missile threat, saying its real goal was to erode Russia’s nuclear deterrent.
“Russia’s military and technical response to a global American missile shield and its segment in Europe will be effective and asymmetrical,” he said. “And it will fully correspond to the United States’ steps on the missile shield.”
Key instrument of modern warfare
While a nuclear conflict looks unlikely, scientific progress leads to the emergence of new weapons that could change the character of war, Putin said, the Associated Press reported. He specifically referred to precision long-range non-nuclear weapons, saying they emerge as a key instrument of modern warfare.
“We must not tempt anyone with our weakness,” Putin said. “Therefore we will never in any circumstances give away our potential of strategic deterrence and will strengthen it,” he said in his sixth campaign article laying out his political beliefs.
Putin said the government plans spending about $770 billion on modernizing its armed forces and defense industry over the next decade by purchasing more than 400 intercontinental ballistic missiles, more than 600 combat aircraft, dozens of submarines and other navy vessels and thousands of armored vehicles.
“Within the next decade, the armed forces will receive more than 400 modern ground- and sea-based intercontinental ballistic missiles, eight ballistic missile submarines, about 20 general purpose attack submarines, over 50 surface ships and some 100 military-purpose spacecraft,” Putin said, Russian Ria Novosti news agency reported.
He said the number will also include “over 600 modern aircraft, including fifth-generation fighters, more than a thousand helicopters, 28 regimental sets of S-400 [SA-21 Growler] surface-to-air missile systems, 38 division sets of Vityaz air defense systems, 10 brigade sets of Iskander-M (SS-26 Stone) tactical missile systems, more than 2,300 modern tanks, some 2,000 self-propelled artillery systems and guns, as well as more than 17,000 military vehicles.”