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#17 - RW 10-15-04 - RW Home
The Jamestown Foundation
www.jamestown.org
EURASIA DAILY MONITOR
Volume 1, Issue 103
October 12, 2004
Russian generals still looking for a few good men
RUSSIA'S VISION FOR PROFESSIONAL SERVICEMEN FALTERS
By Roger N. McDermott
Russia's perennial introspection within its security elites, pondering the
troubles that have so beset its armed forces generally and in Chechnya
specifically, has again broached the idea of creating professional servicemen
within its units deployed in Chechnya, and Tajikistan. Hailed as a potential
panacea for improving the capabilities of the Russian military in these key
locations, recent failures to secure adequate levels of contract servicemen
highlight the depth of the crisis within the armed forces and the deep-seated
difficulties being encountered by bureaucrats tasked with implementing such
plans.
The military commissioners offices in each of Russia's military districts
have failed to recruit their assigned quota of contract personnel. The extent of
the failure was evident within all military districts; the Moscow Military
District only secured 17% of its target. The North Caucasus Military District
succeeded in raising 45%, while the Urals Military District scraped together 25%
(Interfax, October 8). Aware of the serious implications of the shortfalls, the
Ministry of Defense has been quick to examine and release its views on the
reasons for the unpopularity of professional service in the Russian armed
forces. According to the Ministry of Defense, 43% of Russia's young men avoid
signing contracts to serve on a professional basis because they are simply
unwilling to live in barracks and around 30% believe that the wages on offer are
too low for the level of risk involved.
They evidently understand that the government will send contract personnel to
trouble spots within Russia, such as Chechnya, or elsewhere within the CIS, such
as Tajikistan. At the root of these attitudes lies the unpopularity of the
conflict in Chechnya, viewed by many young Russian men as being beyond the
interests and cares of ordinary Russians. Deeper still, despite the efforts of
the security elites to reassure people that barracks and infrastructure will be
built and modernized to standards in keeping with professionalizing the army,
there are continued concerns over institutionalized bullying or dedovschina
within the very culture of the barracks. Curing this problem requires a
wholesale shift in attitudes within Russia' planning staffs, combined with
systematic efforts to root out this cancer at the heart of a failing manning
system. Equally, while the Kremlin seeks a primarily military- or security-based
solution to the conflict in Chechnya, there is little hope of encouraging
Russia's finest young men to sign contracts to serve there.
The shortfall in contract servicemen has also been felt within the 201st
Motor Rifle Division, stationed in Dushanbe. This fall, over 1,000 young
draftees have been sent there to swell the ranks of the 201st MRD, owing to
problems experienced in recruiting enough men to serve on contracts. Such
geographical areas are vital, since they are at the center of Russian plans to
staff units serving in "hotspots"; failure to furnish sufficient professionals
for these units is a blow to the overall plan to professionalize the armed
forces.
Valentina Melnikova, executive secretary of the Union of Russian Soldiers'
Mothers Committees, was more forthright in her assessment of the failure,
saying: "Forty-two months of dirty work that must be done, as a rule, far away
from home, is too much for healthy young men, let alone those whose health is
weak, and nearly all of our potential recruits are sick." It is not as simple as
she suggests, however, since reducing the length of service may not be
sufficient to transform the cultural attitudes and perceptions that Russia's
youth hold towards military service (Interfax, October 7).
These problems, like many aspects of the military's contemporary dilemmas,
seem destined to worsen before there is any sustained effort to arrest the
decline. Transition to professional service in Russia's high-readiness
formations is due to begin in earnest in January 2005, aiming at recruiting a
total of 54,500 privates and sergeants. This would place an even greater strain
on the system and is likely to statistically worsen the figures, as the numbers
needed will go up, while the number of willing recruits will remain scarce.
The continued shortfalls in attracting sufficient contract personnel to serve
in Chechnya or Tajikistan represents a clear failure to convince the target
group of the military's commitment to carrying out real reform. Young Russian
men are not keen to sign contracts for professional military service precisely
because they do not trust the system, have little interest or motivation to be
deployed in conflict areas where they may feel forgotten by the rest of the
population, and know all too well that they will likely face poor treatment
within the barracks. Moreover, the authorities are unable to interest able
bodied and well-educated young men to pursue a long-term professional career in
the army. These realities appear set to continue to challenge planners in Moscow
for the foreseeable future.
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