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#9 - RW 263
Christian Science Monitor
June 27, 2003
Russia's armsmakers operating on borrowed time
An expected slowdown in sales to China and India will slice into Russian
exports.
By Fred Weir | Special to The Christian Science Monitor
MOSCOW – Roaring back after a decade of decline, Russia's international
weapons sales hit almost $5 billion last year, a post-Soviet record that some
say signals a turnaround for the country's defense industry. But some experts
are warning that Russia's peak arms sales over the past three years may actually
be a last hurrah for the scientific and industrial machine that once drove the
USSR's superpower ambitions.
"Russia's defense industry has been living off accumulated Soviet fat
for the past decade, and now the banquet is ending," says Vitaly Shlyikov,
a former deputy defense minister of Russia and now an independent military
expert. "Going by current trends, Russia will have no military industry
within 10 years."
A narrow customer base, lack of innovation, reckless waste of resources, and
a stubborn refusal to reform have doomed the former Soviet economy's crown
jewel, observers suggest.
According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI),
Russia was 2002's most prolific exporter of armaments - surpassing even the US -
with 36 percent of all global deliveries. Rus- sian factories supplied advanced
fighter planes, tanks, warships, and other equipment to 60 countries last year,
including India, China, Iran, Greece, Syria, and Algeria. Although SIPRI's
method of counting volume rather than value has been challenged, Russia's rising
arms trade has made it, by any measure, one of the top three global arms vendors
- along with the US and Britain.
"We have contracts worth more than $13 billion in hand. The future looks
good," says a spokesman for the state-owned arms agency, Rosoboronexport,
which handles about 90 percent of Russian weapons sales. At a press conference
last week, President Vladimir Putin hailed Russia's "developed
military-industrial complex" and pledged state support to continue its
revival.
But a closer look reveals flaws in that optimistic picture. Normally, a
country's own armed forces are Customer No. 1 for its defense firms. In the US,
exports account for about 15 percent of arms -makers' profits. But Russia's
military has procured almost no new equipment in the past decade, leaving its
weapons builders to export or die. "More than 70 percent of the total
income of Russian arms firms today is based on exports," says Sergei
Kazyonnov, an expert with the Institute for National Security and Strategic
Research in Moscow.
Consequently, critics say, Rus- sian manufacturers can no longer produce a
range of military materiel; nowadays they churn out a few lucrative items for
foreign clients. "We haven't produced any ammunition in over a
decade," says Mr. Shlyikov, who spent 30 years as a top Soviet war planner.
"All the little things that make a military machine go are no longer made
in Russia."
Russia dominates Africa's arms bazaar, supplying several countries -
including both sides in the Ethiopia-Eritrea war - with everything from
Kalashnikov rifles to MiG fighters. But most of the hardware has been pulled
directly from Soviet-era army warehouses, critics say. "The USSR had
enormous stockpiles of every military component imaginable, and there's still
quite a lot of it left," says Pavel Felgenhauer, an independent military
expert. "But we will run out of the Soviet stores within a few years, then
production costs will skyrocket. Russia will no longer be competitive in any
markets."
More than 80 percent of all Russian arms contracts are with just two
countries, China and India, the world's biggest importers of weaponry last year.
More than half of Russia's total $4.8 billion in arms exports in 2002 came from
sales of a single item: the Sukhoi Su-30 heavy fighter. "India and China
want Soviet technology and expertise because they can't get it elsewhere,"
says Mr. Felgenhauer. "But these markets are becoming saturated. They will
absorb what we have to offer, and then move on."
Former Soviet weapons' design bureaus, who kept their US counterparts
scrambling through decades of cold-war rivalry, are running on empty. "The
underlying truth is that Russia has produced no truly new items since the
collapse of the USSR," says Maxim Pyadushkin, deputy director of the
independent Center for Strategic and Technological Analysis and coauthor of a
recently-released survey of 20 leading Russian arms manufacturers. "Our
armsmakers have been selling slightly modernized versions of old Soviet weapons
to our clients for years, and most have not been reinvesting the profits in new
research and development."
In the case of the Su-30 - an update of the USSR's frontline Su-27 heavy
fighter - the Indian government reportedly paid $200 million to develop the
plane. In the deal, India won the right to produce its own Su-30MKI under
license - meaning Russia will lose that export niche. India will also soon begin
producing copies of the T-90 tank.
Experts say that Russian military leaders are wary of sharing technology with
China, fearing its long-term strategic intentions. Yet Moscow has allowed
Beijing to copy the Su-27, and is selling it submarines, warships, cruise
missiles, and air-defense systems.
While a few small deals are being made elsewhere, "there will be no
replacing India and China as customers," Pyadushkin says. The US, by far
the world's major arms producer, holds most markets - including the USSR's
former Eastern European clients.
Some pin hopes on Russia's own armed forces. This year, $3 billion was
budgeted for military modernization. "The Kremlin promises that our armed
services will begin procuring new weapons in quantity within three years, and
let's hope they mean it," says Pyadushkin. "But we still have no
comprehensive military reform. If we don't know what our Army is supposed to do,
how can we know what weapons to build?"
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