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#2 - RW 262
Russia to cut military by just 100,000 soldiers:
official
June 19, 2003
AFP
Russia will cut its armed forces by just 100,000 men and will complete the
reduction of its chronically underfunded military by year's end, the country's
deputy chief of staff said Thursday.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has faced stiff resistance from
Soviet-trained army generals in his plan to cut the size of the country's armed
forces, which counted some 1.16 million people before reforms began late last
year.
"We have already nearly reached the minimum -- around one million men --
and the military leadership thinks this is the number of troops Russia needs in
the short, medium and long term," Yury Baluyevsky said.
"Perfecting the military's structure will continue, but the reduction
process will end in 2003," he said, quoted by Interfax news agency.
Part of the reform plan proposed by Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov includes
setting up a professional force of some 166,000 soldiers by 2007, while filling
the rest of the armed forces' ranks with drafted conscripts.
The draft -- which obliges Russian men over 18 to serve either two years in
the army or three years in the navy -- is notorious for widespread violence and
cruel hazing practices.
Yet Soviet-era generals fear the military would collapse without it, with few
Russians likely to choose to serve in an armed forces with few social benefits
while the war in separatist Chechnya continues to rage.
Baluyevsky also ruled out a proposal by leading Russian liberal politician
Boris Nemtsov to cut the Russian army to 800,000 soldiers, saying the move would
diminish Russia's global standing.
"If we want to be purely a regional power we should follow the example
of the armed forces of (small ex-Soviet) countries such as Georgia and
Moldova," he said.
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