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Russian Army Lacks Recruits, but Will Not Draft North Caucasians
Jamestown Foundation Eurasia Daily Monitor ^ | 11/28/2012 | Valery Dzutsev

Posted on 11/29/2012 12:33:24 AM PST by bruinbirdman

On November 22, the authoritative Russian newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta published a report on how the Russian army is becoming increasingly undermanned. According to the paper’s sources in the Russian military, the new Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu was “extremely displeased” with a report by General Vasily Smirnov about Russian military units lacking about half (40–60 percent) of their assigned staff. The best-manned military units, unsurprisingly, are located in the Southern Military District, which encompasses the North Caucasus and nearby areas, where the military reportedly has 90–95 percent of the listed staff. On November 21, Deputy Defense Minister Nikolai Pankov stated that the Russian army would add 50,000 contract personnel every year, and by January 1, 2017, there would be 425,000 contract soldiers in the army. However, the Russian parliament’s defense committee reported that the finance ministry budgeted money for 2013 that would provide only for an additional 30,000 contract soldiers, while for 2014–2015 no funds were allotted for additional contract soldiers. Experts say that if the Russian army’s numbers fall under the one-million-man benchmark, the whole defense doctrine for the world’s largest country will have to be reviewed. The well-known Russian military expert Alexander Goltz reckons that the defense minister has two plausible options—either to cut the number of military personnel well below one million men and make the army fully professional in ten years, or to increase the conscript service term from the current one year to two or, even better, three years (http://www.ng.ru/nvo/2012-11-22/3_kartblansh.html).

Even the contract personnel apparently do not feel much attachment to their work and service, since it is estimated that 35 percent of them will not extend their contracts. This suggests that more government funds will have to be spent on already existing contract personnel. The Russian army is trying to cut costs by transferring hundreds of cantonments where officers’ families reside to the civil authorities. In the Primorye region in Russia’s Far East, the region’s authorities and the defense ministry reached an agreement to transfer nearly 400 such cantonments along with over 100,000 hectares of land to the civil authorities (http://news.ng.ru/2012/11/22/1353564396.html).

Increasing the term of conscript service back up to two years is a highly unpopular measure that the Russian government appears intent to avoid. Military service is unpopular in society, with nearly 170,000 potential conscripts currently shirking mandatory military service. After the chairman of the parliamentary defense committee, Vladimir Komoedov, proposed increasing conscript service to one and a half years, the negative feedback was overwhelming, even from the military themselves. The last Soviet Defense Minister Mikhail Moiseyev told Izvestia: “Raising the question today about increasing conscript service means putting the army at loggerheads with public opinion and hugely damaging the country” (http://izvestia.ru/news/540297#ixzz2DNlK4Lsa).

Russia’s military draft takes place in Russia twice every year, in the spring and fall. According to some observers, this fall’s draft campaign has been by far “the strangest in the history of the country.” While the army is evidently undermanned and there are many runaways among the conscripts, young men from the North Caucasus are kept from serving in the Russian military. The new policy introduced across the region in the fall of 2011 is not even officially recognized. To hide the exclusionary policies, the military still drafts people from each republic, but only those of “Slavic origin.” Out of 3,320 conscripts who were to be drafted from Dagestan in fall 2011, only 121 Slavs were drafted, while the rest were put “on reserve”—as if there were too many conscripts available and no shortages of personnel in the Russian army (http://kavpolit.com/armiya-vymiraet-a-kavkazcy-smotryat-v-les).

According to some sources, the Russian military did not want to draft North Caucasians because they feared they would learn martial skills and use them against the Russian military forces fighting the insurgency in the North Caucasus. Others alleged that drafting North Caucasians resulted in the spread of radical Islamist ideas among Russian military personnel, including some officers, and Moscow decided to resolve this issue by cutting off all of the North Caucasus from the draft (http://kavpolit.com/gde-vsya-dagestanskaya-rat/).

Those who do not go into the military are barred from government jobs, including the police. So the combination of refusal to draft North Caucasians and restrictions on access to government jobs leads to a further increase in alienated young men who will be even more likely to join the insurgency. Military service is a serious issue even in relatively peaceful republics of the North Caucasus like North Ossetia. The number of conscripts in North Ossetia in the fall of 2012 dropped to under 1,000, while just a year ago, in the fall of 2011, more than 2,200 conscripts were drafted from the republic (http://regnum.ru/news/1366982.html).

The chairperson of a non-governmental organization that works with conscripts, Lora Gogaeva, told Regnum news agency that the level of prejudice against North Caucasians in the Russian army is very high. “Some [among the Russian command] do not like young people from our region; some may harbor personal resentment against our young men and take revenge on innocent soldiers,” Gogaeva told the news agency. “They beat up the soldiers, provoke them; and the conscripts are always at fault. Our young people endure until the last moment, and only then they respond” (http://regnum.ru/news/1586724.html).

The situation in the Russian military shows that a process of separation of ethnic Russians from the North Caucasians is under way, despite solemn proclamations by officials of unwavering protection of the unity of the country.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 11/29/2012 12:33:33 AM PST by bruinbirdman
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To: bruinbirdman

The result of 70 years of free abortions on the Russian people.


2 posted on 11/29/2012 12:46:48 AM PST by Amberdawn
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To: bruinbirdman

Russia’s military draft takes place in Russia twice every year, in the spring and fall. According to some observers, this fall’s draft campaign has been by far “the strangest in the history of the country.” While the army is evidently undermanned and there are many runaways among the conscripts, young men from the North Caucasus are kept from serving in the Russian military. The new policy introduced across the region in the fall of 2011 is not even officially recognized. To hide the exclusionary policies, the military still drafts people from each republic, but only those of “Slavic origin.” Out of 3,320 conscripts who were to be drafted from Dagestan in fall 2011, only 121 Slavs were drafted, while the rest were put “on reserve”—as if there were too many conscripts available and no shortages of personnel in the Russian army (http://kavpolit.com/armiya-vymiraet-a-kavkazcy-smotryat-v-les).

According to some sources, the Russian military did not want to draft North Caucasians because they feared they would learn martial skills and use them against the Russian military forces fighting the insurgency in the North Caucasus. Others alleged that drafting North Caucasians resulted in the spread of radical Islamist ideas among Russian military personnel, including some officers, and Moscow decided to resolve this issue by cutting off all of the North Caucasus from the draft (http://kavpolit.com/gde-vsya-dagestanskaya-rat/).

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I guess they don’t want their own Nidal Hassanski.


3 posted on 11/29/2012 1:08:31 AM PST by cunning_fish
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To: cunning_fish; Amberdawn

The first two posts on the thread sum up the situation well. Common here.

I would also add that part of the reason people don’t like to serve is the reputation the Russian (Red) Army has for brutalizing recruits / lower ranks.

Here’s a good article on the overall issue which touches on your point, Amberdawn, and the hazing issue.

The Baby Bust Buries The Russian Army
http://www.strategypage.com/dls/articles/The-Baby-Bust-Buries-The-Russian-Army-10-30-2011.asp

Excerpt covering my point:

The military is so unpopular for conscripts because of the brutal treatment they receive. This has not been getting better, and earlier this year it was revealed that “hazing” incidents were up 16 percent last year. This is serious stuff. There are a lot of reasons for not wanting to be in the Russian Army, but the worst of them is the hazing (of new men by guys who have been in a few years, or months longer). It was thought that this sort of thing would speed the demise of conscription in Russia, once the Cold War ended in 1991. Didn’t work out that away. The government has found that, even among the “contract soldiers” (carefully selected volunteers who are paid much more than conscripts) the old abuses lived on, and that most of the best contract soldiers left when their contract was up. It was because of the brutality and lack of discipline in the barracks. The hazing is most frequently committed by troops who have been in six months or so, against the new recruits. But this extends to a pattern of abuse and brutality by all senior enlisted troops, against junior ones. It’s out of control. What made it worse last year was the growing animosity against troops who are not ethnic Russians.

This hazing originally developed after World War II, when Russia deliberately avoided developing a professional NCO corps. They preferred to have officers take care of nearly all troop supervision. The NCOs that did exist were treated as slightly more reliable enlisted men, but given little real authority. Since officers did not live with the men, slack discipline in the barracks gave rise to the vicious hazing and exploitation of junior conscripts by the senior ones. This led to very low morale, and a lot of suicides, theft, sabotage and desertions. The hazing has been one of the basic causes of crimes in the Russian armed forces, accounting for 20 to 30 per cent of all soldier crimes. This has caused a suicide rate that is among the highest in the world. Poor working conditions in general also mean that Russian soldiers are nearly twice as likely to die from accidents, or suicide, than American soldiers. Long recognized as a problem, no solution to the hazing ever worked.

With hazing, and the resulting poor morale and discipline, the military is also unable to keep many of its experienced and capable NCOs. Many of the best ones have been leaving the military, despite better pay and living conditions. All noted the problems, caused by hazing, as a major reason for getting out.


4 posted on 11/29/2012 5:02:04 AM PST by FreedomPoster (Islam delenda est.)
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To: bruinbirdman
the Russian military did not want to draft North Caucasians because they feared they would learn martial skills and use them against the Russian military forces

They're smarter than us in the US -- we have Moslems in our army...

5 posted on 11/29/2012 6:52:42 AM PST by Cronos (**Marriage is about commitment, cohabitation is about convenience.**)
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To: FreedomPoster

Thank you for the article and response. I have heard about the brutal hazing and I wonder why it is allowed to continue. You would think that Putin would crack down on stupid practices that make ‘his’ military weaker.


6 posted on 11/29/2012 4:55:23 PM PST by Amberdawn
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To: Amberdawn

He is just a man, and hasn’t been in power all that long in the grand scheme of things. Overcoming 60+ years of organizational inertia is nontrivial.


7 posted on 11/29/2012 5:22:20 PM PST by FreedomPoster (Islam delenda est)
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To: FreedomPoster

True, but he’s not ordinary either.


8 posted on 11/29/2012 6:27:31 PM PST by Amberdawn
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