
#5
Moscow Times
August 1, 2002
Saber-Rattling No Solution
By Pavel Felgenhauer
Last Sunday, Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov visited Kaliningrad, the main
base of the Baltic Fleet, and told journalists that the situation in the Baltic
region may destabilize when the former Soviet republics of Estonia, Latvia and
Lithuania join NATO and the European Union.
Ivanov announced that Moscow would continue to maintain a strong naval
presence in the Baltic Sea, and that the fleet will continue to control the
Baltic Sea and defend Kaliningrad from outside attacks. There will be no further
cuts in the Baltic Fleet and new ships will be provided to keep it battle-ready.
Moscow is at loggerheads with the EU about visa requirements for Kaliningrad-based
citizens traveling through Lithuania to the Russian mainland. It's possible that
Ivanov's belligerent rhetoric about the totally peaceful Baltic Sea again
becoming a future theater of confrontation was an ill-advised attempt to add
some military muscle to the debate. But no one is planning any attack on
Kaliningrad, and the rusty old Baltic Fleet does not strengthen Moscow's
bargaining hand.
In fact, this untimely belligerence may backfire.
For several years Russia has been arguing that the status of ethnic Russians
in Estonia and Latvia should be improved before those countries are allowed to
join NATO and the EU. The West partially agreed, especially since there was no
visible threat coming from Russia.
Now Moscow is clearly putting political pressure on Lithuania to allow a
visa-free corridor for Russian citizens through its territory and is threatening
possible military or economic sanctions. The result will surely be the
acceleration of the formal accession of the Baltic states into Western
institutions to give them additional security guarantees, and Russian influence
in the region will further decrease.
Today, more than 10 years after the end of the Cold War, Russia still has a
fleet that -- on paper -- is second only to the mighty U.S. Navy. But the
battle-readiness of the force is very low, especially its non-nuclear
capabilities.
Russia has only one aircraft carrier -- the Kuznetsov. But the last time the
Kuznetsov air wing flew from its deck was in 1998, when the ship traveled to the
Mediterranean. Another voyage of a big Russian naval task force into the
Mediterranean, led by the Kuznetsov, was planned for the fall of 2000, but the
sinking of the Kursk nuclear submarine stopped it. (Many Russian naval officers
still believe that the United States and NATO deliberately sunk the Kursk to
prevent a strong Russian fleet from going south. It's also believed that the
appearance of this flotilla near the Balkans in late 2000 would have somehow
saved the Milosevic regime in Yugoslavia from collapse.)
The Kuznetsov was used during the Kursk salvage operation as a stop-off for
helicopters, but its air wing stayed on terra firma. Now the Kuznetsov is in a
shipyard for repairs and will not sail until 2004. Due to a lack of funds and
apparently serious problems with the Kuznetsov's main engines, it's possible it
will never do much sailing again.
Russia's best carrier pilot, General Timur Apakidze, plunged to the ground in
his naval air force Su-33 at an air show near Pskov a year ago and died from his
injuries. Apakidze was the first Russian pilot to take off and land on deck.
Most experts agree his death was the result of too little flight practice.
This summer Ukraine allowed the Kuznetsov air wing to use the aircraft
simulator airfield that the Soviets built in Crimea to do some simulated
landings and takeoffs. But with no real sea practice for several years and no
prospect of any in the immediate future, it's safe to say that Russia's naval
air capability is zero.
It would seem pragmatic for our defense establishment to concentrate its
limited resources on having at least one operational aircraft carrier group to
fly the flag worldwide, if it is serious in its talk of preserving Russia as a
naval power of any significance. Instead, resources are being spread thinly in a
futile attempt to keep all former Soviet naval holdings alive, including the
Baltic Fleet.
The military is stubbornly retaining a Soviet defense posture against all
odds. This senseless doggedness is today in itself one of the main reasons for
the further decline of Russia's international status and obviously contradicts
President Vladimir Putin's stated pro-Western policies.
However, the Kremlin seems incapable or unwilling to put this to rights.
Pavel Felgenhauer is an independent defense analyst.
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