
#7
Moskovsky Komsomolets
October 24, 2002
DEFENSE SPENDING SECRETS
Open secrets of the military have been revealed
Author: Yuri Gavrilov
[from WPS Monitoring Agency, www.wps.ru/e_index.html]
THE DUMA HAS MANAGED TO LIFT SECRECY RESTRICTIONS ON SOME DEFENSE SPENDING
ITEMS. HOWEVER, IT SEEMS THERE WAS NOTHING SECRET IN THE ITEMS DECLASSIFIED.
MEANWHILE, THE REMAINING SECRETS LEAD TO CONTRADICTORY ESTIMATES OF WHETHER
DEFENSE SPENDING IS SUFFICIENT.
Whenever there is any talk of declassifying the items of the Russian defense
budget, the military resists. However, the year-long battle of the parliament
with the Defense Ministry has produced an effect - specific enforcement
structure spending figures first reached the Duma last week.
Basically, the deputies had demanded declassifying 65% of the
"military" items. However, the public item list on, for instance, the
Defense Ministry has currently made only 59 items out of 850. According to Duma
defense committee chairman Andrei Nikolaev, "pursuant to the government
decision declassifying concerns expenses on current maintenance and outfit of
the armed forces, interior agencies, and the federal Border Service (FPS), as
well as complete expenses of the Federal Taxation Police Sevice (FSNP)".
A few more "military" items of the budget are scheduled to be made
public next year. Only some 10% of expenses will remain completely closed -
secret designing, funding of the Main Intelligence Administration (GRU), and the
like.
The Duma has gained its ends, but the deputies do not hurry up to celebrate
victory. First, they are not satisfied with the terms to study the document - a
little more than a month. Second, there are doubts concerning the urgency of the
published items (for example there is yet no knowing how much we annually waste
on the Chechen war). Be that as it may, but something prevents from believing in
the transparency of the hurriedly (and plainly selectively) declassified defense
budget.
We have been able to get the public item list. Here are some of the items.
Next year, 4.73 billion rubles is planned to be allocated for clothing
allowance, 66.227 billion rubles for money allowance, 21.66 billion for
subsistence, and 55.246 billion rubles for combat training and logistic support.
The Defense Ministry's funding along the line of development work may reach 45.5
billion rubles, purchase of arms and military materiel - 52.2 billion rubles,
repair - 9.1 billion rubles, special construction - 11.9 billion rubles, etc.
Is it much or little?
The Duma defense committee has counted that the draft budget for 2003 lacks
at least 18.8 billion rubles to ensure the defense needs. Two years ago the
Security Council resolved defense spending could not be less than 2.84% of GDP.
The Finance Ministry has currently on its own brought it down to 2.56%, hence
the nearly 20 billion gap.
The Duma committee for defense: "The funds for subsistence include
rations in kind and mess board for 67% of the service people. For the rest, it
is suggested to substitute a 48-50 ruble food kit with a 20 ruble compensation
in money. The draft budget provides for ensuring the military only with camp
uniform. Only half of the necessary funds will be apportioned for the vacation
or treatment trips of the military and their families. The same concerns cargo
transportation (meanwhile, the Defense Ministry's debt to transporters has
currently reached almost 3 billion rubles). Accommodation, medical and
sanatorium-and-spa treatment for the military will be financed only by 50% next
year".
To cut it short, not enough money has been allocated to the military, in the
view of the defense committee. However, even a cursory examination of the public
item list rouses doubts that the scanty funds apportioned are distributed in
items with flawless expediency.
For example, it turns out the maintenance of the military administration
institutions will cost the taxpayers 1.5 times as much as the aggregate expenses
of the Defense Ministry on education, schools and preschool institutions for the
children of the military, sanatoria, boarding houses, and holiday centers. Some
expenditure is perplexing, to put it mildly. Thus, the Defense Ministry will
allocate a total of 3 million rubles for the state program for patriotic
upbringing of the Russian citizens in 2001-2005. It turns out, love of the
homeland will cost the military five rubles per Russian head annually!
Comparing the planned national defense expenditure with that of the last few
years is quite another matter.
Judging by the rapid leap of 136 billion rubles (from 2001 to 2003), the
state either creates hothouse conditions for the military or notably increases
its defense power. However, it is neither this nor that in reality. The military
have not grown richer because of the summer rise in the money allowance and
simultaneous abolishment of a number of privileges. As far as the maintenance of
the army is concerned, expenses on it must go down every year in theory, since
we've been trumpeting reduction in the armed forces for quite a few years
already, haven't we?
And food for thought once again. Expenses on the mentioned item of
maintaining the military administration institutions have grown by two-thirds
over the last three years - from 912 million rubles in 2001 to 1.526 billion in
2003. Sure enough, the Russian generals care about themselves.
What actually was so secret in the figures voiced? What kind of an open
secret, why the deputies and the taxpayers were prevented from it until very
recently?
Andrei Nikolaev, chairman of the Duma defense committee: "It's hard to
say. In any case, one cannot speak about declassifying military or state secrets
- Russia annually provides the UN approximately the same data".
However, Nikolaev finds it useful that some defense budget items have been
made public: "Today not only the deputies, but also every taxpayer can
learn how much money is spent for example on medical care of the military or
their board. Not only know - but really evaluate the poverty into which the army
has been plunged. For example, monthly expenses of public healthcare cost the
state $9, while this sum for the military does not exceed $4 apiece. A daily
food basket is estimated at 60 rubles on average in the country, while
"ration" pays in the army as before make 20 rubles a day".
The plain contradiction in the estimations of the military budget by our
chief defense experts is just another evidence that not everything is that
simple in this kingdom, not everything is that unambiguous. However, this idea
is best confirmed with the attitude to the battles between the Duma and
government of those whom they are supposed to care about - garrison slogger
officers. "We have no trust in any one already," service people from
the Vidnoe settlement (Moscow region) wrote us. "Officers have been
promised and cheated so many times that their patience has given way. Let those
who hang about the bureaucratic pork break a lance over the budget. Our wallets
will gain nothing from either public or secret defense items..."
(Translated by P. Pikhnovsky)
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