ID | 144604 |
Title Proper | Revival of the Russian military |
Other Title Information | how Moscow reloaded |
Language | ENG |
Author | Trenin, Dmitri |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | After the collapse of the Soviet Union [2], the Russian military rotted away. In one of the most dramatic campaigns of peacetime demilitarization in world history, from 1988 to 1994, Moscow’s armed forces shrank from five million to one million personnel. As the Kremlin’s defense expenditures plunged from around $246 billion in 1988 to $14 billion in 1994, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, the government withdrew some 700,000 servicemen from Afghanistan, Germany, Mongolia, and eastern Europe. So much had the prestige of the military profession evaporated during the 1990s that when the nuclear submarine Kursk [3] sank in the Barents Sea in 2000, its captain was earning the equivalent of $200 per month. |
`In' analytical Note | Foreign Affairs Vol. 95, No.3; May-Jun 2016: p.23-29 |
Journal Source | Foreign Affairs Vol: 95 No 3 |
Key Words | NATO ; Vladimir Putin ; Military Reforms ; Moscow ; Revival - Russian Military ; Russia’s Creaky Military |