
#7
gazeta.ru
January 9, 2003
Defence chief briefs Putin on state of military
By Yelena Shiskhounova
A day after Russia’s Orthodox Christmas President Vladimir Putin summoned
Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov to the Kremlin to be briefed on the catastrophic
situation in Russia’s freezing provinces. The Justice Minister Yuri Chaika and
the Defence Minister Sergei Ivanov followed the PM. Ivanov shared his views with
Putin on the future of the Russian army, formed on the principle of
contract-based recruitment.
According to the Defence Minister, as of January 1, 2003 the numerical
strength of the Russian armed forces amounted to 1,162,000 military servicemen
and 860,000 civilian personnel. The initial plans for restructuring the Russian
army envisaged reducing the numerical strength of the armed forces to 1 million.
Judging by Ivanov’s latest statements, that target remains unchanged. The
cutbacks, along with an improvement of combat training still remain the key
objectives of the military reforms.
Ivanov reported to President Putin that in 2002 ''we managed to raise the
effectiveness of all sectors of the army, especially that of the Strategic
Missile Troops and the Space Troops''. According to the Minister, on the basis
of last year’s achievements more emphasis is to be put on combat training.
That provision, Ivanov assured the head of state, will be included in the
government’s target-oriented plan for transferring the army to a contractual
basis.
The plan is to be drafted by the end of May 2003, in line with a decision
that was endorsed last November at a special governmental session dedicated to
military reform. The cabinet then reviewed two alternative drafts – one
submitted by the General Staff of the Defence Ministry, and the other by the
liberal Union of Rightist Forces (SPS). As a result the government endorsed a
programme which was a peculiar hybrid of the generals’ conservative views and
daring proposals from the liberals.
The SPS were particularly proud of the fact that they had been entrusted with
a task together with the Defence and Finance Ministries to write a
target-oriented programme, but at the same time in their public statements
preferred not to mention that their radical deadlines for transferring the army
to contracts were postponed.
So far, it remains unclear how long compulsory military service or special
combat training will last in the new Russian army. Talking to journalists after
his meeting with the president on Wednesday Ivanov preferred not to mention
that. But then, together with Vladimir Putin they also spent some time
discussing servicing army units in so-called ‘hot spots’.
The president wanted to know whether civilian personnel will accompany a
contract unit if it is deployed in a hot spot. Ivanov told him that no such
plans exist, after which Putin expressed concern that this situation might be
harmful to the quality of services for soldiers and officers. The president
stressed that the quality of services for servicemen in ''hot spots should be
higher, not lower'' than outside such areas.
According to the defence minister, contracted soldiers would be provided with
accommodation in reconstructed army barracks, with 3-4 people living in a room,
as well as in newly built dormitories.
It is noteworthy, however, that initially the generals promised contracted
soldiers private apartments, but having calculated the cost of the project and
taking into consideration the current problem of homeless officers, took their
words back. This led to heated protests among the servicemen who had enlisted to
serve in the 76th Airborne Division, based near Pskov, where the military
launched an experiment to transform the division into a force of purely
professionals last September.
In his talk with the president on Wednesday Ivanov did not mention the
project, but noted with satisfaction that in the past year his agency managed to
curtail the growth in homeless officers and warrant officers on waiting lists.
More than 30,000 apartments were built for them. The minister expressed hope
that ''the situation will change radically thanks to a transfer to the system of
accumulation'' in the building of housing. The new system will take effect in
2004.
Among other issues discussed by the head of state and the defence minister
was the disastrous situation in the regions of Russia hit particularly hard by
severe winter conditions. Ivanov assured the president that the army is
providing ''all possible aid'' to areas suffering from unusually cold weather.
Specifically, Ivanov said he had ordered the commanders of the Leningrad and Far
Eastern military districts to urgently contact the administrations of those
regions to provide them with support, primarily by allocating fuel and clearing
snowdrifts. In particular, the minister mentioned the Leningrad, Novgorod and
Sakhalin regions and the Republic of Karelia.
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