THE PROJECT OF restructuring the European political system after
the Cold War is full of contradictions, a source of intellectual
confusion and political uncertainty. Radical changes in the military-strategic
situation on the old continent have created great temptations
for countries to take hasty, short-sighted steps which could permanently
damage the development of a new system of collective security.
At the same time, those changes have generated new possibilities
for more constructive relations between states. How, then, can
we take advantage of these opportunities while resisting the temptations?
How Much Is Russia Weakened?
The changed military-political realities in Europe are so well-known
that it suffices simply to list them: German re-unification; the
disintegration of the Warsaw Pact and of the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia,
and Czechoslovakia; the collapse of communism in Eastern Europe,
Russia, and other post-Soviet republics; and political instability
and economic crisis. These changes have reduced the danger of
great power conflict to a theoretical minimum. More immediately,
they have -- in conjunction with the 1990 Treaty on Conventional
Forces in Europe (CFE) and military reforms in many countries
-- radically transformed the military-strategic balance, producing
deep cuts in armed forces, massive withdrawals of troops from
foreign territories, curtailment of weapons programs, and a reorientation
of forces to missions other than a large-scale East-West war in
Europe. The CFE Treaty established, at lower levels, parity in
conventional offensive weapons between NATO and the Warsaw Pact
in the zone from the Atlantic to the Urals and in a number of
sub-zones within that region. The subsequent dissolution of the
Warsaw Pact and the breakup of the Soviet Union destroyed this
well-proportioned disarmament structure. It became necessary to
reach agreement on national arms ceilings for individual countries,
which in the East ceased to be allies. Later, in accordance with
the Tashkent Agreement of 1992, the military assets of the Soviet
Union were split between Russia and other former Soviet republics.
Together these changes have markedly transformed the balance of
military forces and the geo-strategic situation on the continent.
At the end of 1988, when Mikhail Gorbachev announced unilateral
cuts in the Soviet Armed forces and armaments, the Warsaw Pact
had a 2.7:1 advantage over NATO in the main classes of offensive
military assets (which were subsequently covered as limited items
in the CFE Treaty). The Soviet Union alone had a two-fold superiority
on the continent over all 16 NATO countries combined.
The implementation of the CFE Treaty was expected to shift the
balance dramatically in favor of the West by the second half of
the 1990s, moving the ratio of forces between Russia and NATO
to 1:2.8. By adding to NATO the former Soviet allies in the Warsaw
Pact, and, for the purpose of strategic extrapolation, the forces
of former Soviet republics that are now sovereign states in the
European zone, the ratio changes to 1:4.5 to Russia's disadvantage.
From Moscow's perspective, then, the military balance has shifted
rapidly from a nearly three-fold superiority to an almost five-fold
inferiority. The scale and speed of this reversal and the novelty
of the new balance have provoked considerable concern among Russian
military planners. Their reaction, despite all the reassuring
arguments designed to set their minds at ease, is natural and
predictable: they seek to concentrate as many forces as possible
in the European part of Russia and to emphasize reliance on nuclear
weapons as a deterrent, abandoning (even as declaratory policy)
the no-first use obligation assumed in 1982 by the USSR.
How Strong Should or Could Russia Be?
Surface appearances are not always accurate, and numbers can
mislead. Should the new military balance really be a source of
such great concern? Consider the situation from a purely pragmatic,
military-political standpoint. The Russian military currently
faces a wide range of problems: economic turmoil, the disintegration
of military-industrial cooperation with other republics, and the
need for military reform. Even without the CFE Treaty, then, Russia
would probably not be any stronger by the end of the 1990s.
In 1988, for example, the USSR's land forces comprised 1.6 million
men equipped with some 60,000 tanks, produced at a rate of 3,500
a year. The 1992 military reform plans of the Russian Ministry
of Defense projected a decline in the entire Russian armed forces
to 1.5 million men, including no more than 600,000-700,000 in
the ground forces. When and if a professional army is formed by
the year 2000, there will no longer be a need for the enormous
stockpiles of arms and equipment in cadre divisions which, in
the past, were to be complemented by a massive mobilization of
reservists in case of war.
The emphasis on lighter mobile forces for rapid reaction in local
conflicts further reduces the need for heavy equipment. According
to current projections, the new Russian army will need no more
than 10,000- 15,000 tanks, mainly for the defense of the southern
and eastern borders, with only 40-50% oriented to use in the European
theater (mainly for reinforcement and training purposes). The
CFE Treaty actually allows a higher ceiling than that. Thus the
principal constraint on tank holdings comes from Ministry of Defense
reform plans rather than treaty obligations.
Consider the matter from another angle. Since 1988, the production
of tanks has dropped fivefold, to 500-700 tanks a year. Even at
the much higher rates that previously prevailed, full modernization
of the vast tank inventory would have taken 20 years. This was
why such a large part of the equipment was always obsolete. The
new Russian professional army will be equipped with the most advanced
assets which, to military planners, means a complete turnover
of the tank inventory every ten to 15 years. If the present annual
production rate of 500-700 is sustained, then given the current,
huge stockpiles, there will be no near-term problem in maintaining
a 10,000-15,000 tank force. The same holds true for the other
principal classes of weapon system used by both ground and air
forces. Altogether, looking at the main classes of conventional
weapons, Russia will be allowed to have nearly 2.5 times those
of Germany, 3.7 times those of France, and 5.4 those of Great
Britain. In Europe, Russia will maintain twice as many weapons
as the United States.
Adding nuclear weapons to the picture serves to underscore Russian
military power. Under the START 2 treaty, in ten years Russia
would be in a position of parity with the United States, at a
ceiling of 3,000-3,500 warheads, five- to seven-fold more than
are held by any other nuclear power.
In sum, despite all the recent changes in the military balance,
Russia remains the strongest military power in Europe and one
of the most powerful states in the world.
To be sure, the Russian army is now in an extremely difficult
situation. Troop morale, already low as a result of poor living
conditions, has been further diminished by Russia's involvement
in ethnic conflicts. The army's role in the October 1993 events
in Moscow constituted another serious blow.
These problems and hardships, however, were largely self-inflicted,
the result of miscalculations and loss of control brought on by
the Yeltsin-Gaidar management of the economy, failures of democratic
political reform, as well as blunders in defense conversion, in
military reform, and in policies aimed at forming a new commonwealth
of nations to replace the collapsed USSR. These reflect Russia's
inability either to foresee or to adapt in time to recent social,
geopolitical, and geo-strategic changes.
The fundamental shifts in the military balance and the treaties
on arms reductions have not, then, contributed to Russia's current
weakness and insecurity. Even if the Russian army and weapons
stockpiles were to increase five-fold, the situation would not
improve. Indeed, a larger military would make everything worse.
Russia's problems would become so acute that in the end not only
the economy but the state and the army themselves would collapse.
The New Geography of Europe
Changes in the geo-strategic situation tell a similar story.
For 45 years, Soviet ground forces stood within two weeks of the
English Channel. Soviet aircraft and missile forces, armed with
nuclear and conventional weapons, could have obliterated the whole
of Europe west of the Elbe in a few hours. Behind the forward-based
forces stood another three operational echelons of combat-ready
forces in Eastern Europe and the western districts of the USSR.
Today Moscow's military power has been pulled back 1,500 kilometers
from the center of Europe: from Magdeburg and Prague to Smolensk
and Kursk. For the first time in 300 years (in peacetime) the
Moscow military district has turned from the deep rear into the
advanced defense line of Russia.
It should come as no surprise that this has aroused acute feelings
of vulnerability in the military. People accustomed to living
under the protection of thick armor feel ill at ease in open air.
For decades Western Europeans have been in a much more vulnerable
position -- but we considered that to be their problem, not ours.
Nonetheless, at present Russia has a decisive advantage in comparison
with post-war Europe. Unlike Western Europe and for the first
time in many centuries of its own history, Russia is not threatened
by invasion. This in itself is a unique phenomenon in the history
of collapsing empires.
The administrative and industrial heartland of Russia is now
beyond the operational combat radius of even the most advanced
tactical aircraft of the strongest military powers in the west,
south, and east. The current 1,500 kilometer corridor puts them
out of reach of Western aviation -- on condition, of course, that
the military bases of the United States and its allies do not
move further east.
In terms of force ratios and geography, then, the radical strategic
shifts of the past five years have not worked to Moscow's advantage.
So be it. The world is different now, objectively and unalterably.
If we stop bewailing the superiority of a past which is gone forever
and take a fresh look at reality, the situation does not look
so bad. But precisely how good it is depends to a considerable
degree on whether current Russian policies manage to make the
most of the positive aspects of the new situation. That, in turn,
depends on whether new national security policies and concepts
are guided by an understanding of recent changes and a series
of imperatives that arise from them.
Four Imperatives
The first imperative is to recognize that the implementation
of various disarmament agreements (including CFE, START 1 and
START 2) is, on the whole, consonant with Russian interests. To
be sure, the treaties have their individual shortcomings. But
these problems are more than compensated for and not only by the
political importance of the treaties. Even without them, Russia
would hardly be in a position to attain greater military power
in the foreseeable future. Indeed, the opposite is true. Other
powers have real underlying advantages, in terms of economic,
military-technical, and demographic potential, geostrategic positions,
and possibilities of collective defense policy. Given sufficient
political motivation, these powers would be capable of a rapid
military build-up, thereby acquiring clear-cut military superiority
over Russia. It would be extremely shortsighted of Moscow to issue
ultimatums or to denounce the treaties, even if in some respects
they fall short of what is desirable. To be sure, the quickly
changing situation makes parts of the agreements obsolete. But
perhaps these problems are not so formidable and can be solved
within the framework of the current treaties. The main point is
that, given favorable political conditions, we can move ahead
and conclude new agreements which take into account and address
new security problems. This, in turn, makes sense only if fresh
practical ideas are generated by decisionmaking bodies in Russia
and if the apparatus is capable of implementing them. The second
imperative, then, is to develop such ideas.
The third is determined by certain aspects of the changing strategic
balance. Russia remains a leading power in Europe and the world
and thus can count on respect and security -- at least to the
extent these are determined by a nation's military capabilities.
As a state confronting NATO or NATO together with the countries
of Eastern Europe, however (to say nothing of the western republics
of the former USSR), Russia doesn't stand a chance.
Nuclear first-use cannot address these problems. The issue we
must be most concerned with is not so much the possibility of
a global war in which the use of nuclear weapons by both sides
cannot be avoided, but a renewal of the Cold War with its military-political
pressures, attrition of the adversary in local conflicts, economic
blockade, geopolitical stranglehold. . . . Under such conditions
nuclear weapons cannot serve as an argument. Each side would have
more than enough nuclear weapons to neutralize any bluff or blackmail
implied by a first-use strategy. The Soviet Union was unable to
cope with the full panoply of Cold War pressures. Gorbachev tried
to find a way with his "new political thinking," but
the internal processes he set in motion finally led to the disintegration
of the communist empire.
Post-communist Russia is even less able to hold out. Nor should
that be the aim of its foreign policy. The actions that are required
to avoid the rebirth of an anti-Moscow coalition of states on
an expanded scale are clear enough and can be taken by Russia
itself. Russian foreign policy makers have only to establish democratic
reforms at home, create good relations with adjoining and more
distant foreign states (which does not mean following the United
States on every issue), suppress Russian neo-imperialistic ambitions,
and defend reasonably-formulated national interests in a consistent
and principled manner.
Finally, the fourth imperative. If the withdrawal of Russian
military power from the center of Europe brought unaccustomed
weakness to Moscow, it also created unprecedented advantages,
for it produced a wide separation between Russian forces and those
of the great Western military powers. Fortifying and legalizing
such a separation is one of the most important tasks of Russian
national security strategy.
This means ensuring the neutral and non-nuclear status, and the
independence and sovereignty, of the double belt of Eastern European
states and western republics of the former USSR. For centuries
these countries have served as a bridgehead for Western aggression
against Russia and Russian aggression against the West. In the
future, Western Europe, the United States, and Russia should become
the guarantors of the neutrality and security of these countries.
Instead of a military bridgehead, they should be a bridge for
economic and political cooperation between Russia and the West,
a bridge closed only to military advances either to the east or
to the west.
Nobody Needs the Drang nach Osten
From this standpoint, the extension of NATO to include Poland
and a number of other countries would directly oppose Russian
interests and new ideas of European security. Poland is not now
subject to foreign occupation or military threat from the east
or the west. Poland understandably desires to become part of Western
Europe, and to do so as quickly as possible. But NATO is hardly
the optimal vehicle for such integration. The main instruments
of European integration are the European Community and the West
European Union. Since its founding, NATO has been a military-political
coalition of states designed for collective defense against a
common foe. Perhaps Warsaw fears the rebirth of Russian aggression
and wishes to ward it off by joining NATO. But taking serious
steps on the basis of a hypothetical forecast can turn a worst-case
scenario into a self-fulfilling prophesy.
The situation in Moscow after the October uprising remains unstable.
But under these circumstances Poland and the West should refrain
from actions which could swing the pendulum in the wrong direction.
If, in the future, a new Russia's geostrategic offensive against
the West becomes a reality, Poland would have sufficient time
to take the measures necessary to protect itself (including joining
NATO).
From NATO's own point of view, eastward extension would be fraught
with trouble. Once such a movement begins, it may be difficult
to stop. Including Poland in NATO would immediately raise the
issue of including the Czech Republic and Hungary. Extending the
NATO frontline to the borders of Ukraine, Belarus, and Lithuania
will prompt these countries to ask whether the Alliance is directed
against them. If it is not, why not include them, too? Whereupon
the same question will arise in Russia as well: denying it membership
would suggest that NATO is directed against Russia. And so on,
through Central Asia to China and Japan.
Moreover, having proven itself an effective mechanism for collective
deterrence of a common adversary, NATO may well be inadequate
for coping with the new realities and tasks posed by the end of
the Cold War. The tragic events in Yugoslavia have demonstrated
NATO's inability (despite recent efforts) to bring about a cease-fire
and maintain peace. The main roles there are being played by the
UN, the CSCE, and multilateral diplomacy. In addition, actions
outside the zone of the Alliance to oppose regional aggression
or prevent the proliferation of nuclear weapons and missiles (for
example, in Iraq or North Korea) are being undertaken outside
the NATO framework.
This is not to suggest that the time has come to dissolve the
North Atlantic Alliance. NATO represents a factor of stability,
and without it a dangerous vacuum would form on the European continent,
not least because of uncertainty about the role and policy of
a united Germany. The armed forces of NATO countries are being
substantially reduced and restructured for new missions. The United
States is withdrawing a large portion of its troops from Europe.
Given their long experience in joint planning and joint actions,
NATO's administrative structures and forces could become important
building blocks in a future system of collective security in Europe.
We should, however, not be blind to other elements of the situation.
For the foreseeable future, the principal reason for maintaining
NATO remains the unpredictability of the course of events in Russia
and the evolution of its military and foreign policies. That is
also why Russia will never be accepted as a full member of NATO.
Returning to policies of imperial expansion and authoritarian
government would simply revive the original functions of NATO
as a mechanism for the geostrategic deterrence of a common enemy.
By contrast, enhancement of democratic principles in Russia's
domestic and foreign policies would eventually eliminate the need
for NATO. It would then be appropriate to replace NATO with a
different kind of organization for multilateral security, directed
not against an outside enemy, but designed to insure compliance
with the norms of a civilized relationship and the peaceful settlement
of conflicts among its members. Boris Yeltsin's message last
year to the leaders of a number of NATO countries contained the
right principle: instead of extending NATO eastward, NATO and
Russia should become joint guarantors for the security of the
countries located between them. But declaratory statements about
guarantees are not enough. What we need is a comprehensive and
practical military and political concept for the restructuring
of European security.
The Strategic Pillars of European Security
As a key element in such restructuring, the armed forces of the
neutral countries should be reduced and organized according to
principles of non-offensive defense. This reduction would be in
keeping with their modest economic capabilities and would reassure
those in Russia who think in terms of worst-case scenarios presented
by foreign threats. To reassure these states, Russian forces should,
in return, be further reduced and restructured. Setting aside
the quotas of the CFE Treaty, there is no good reason for maintaining
18,000 armored vehicles and more than 4,000 aircraft in the European
part of Russia more than on the eve of the Second World War. Similarly,
there is no good reason for Ukraine to retain 9,000 tanks and
armored vehicles, and 1,400 planes and helicopters. The territories
of Ukraine, Belarus and the Baltic states, as well as the Moscow,
Leningrad, and North-Caucasian military districts (at least its
western part) should become a zone of reduced concentration of
ground and air forces. In its European part, 7,000-10,000 armored
vehicles and 1,000-2,000 combat aircraft (including Air Defense)
should suffice for Russia's training and reinforcement purposes.
Other republics need even less.
The withdrawal of Russian troops from foreign territories requires
the preparation of infrastructure in the rear. This makes temporary
troop deployments in the European part of Russia acceptable. But
in the longer term, when the reduction and reform of the armed
forces have made sufficient progress, the rear infrastructure
should sort the needed deployment of troops and this, in turn,
should reflect potential military threats, which emanate mainly
from the south and east. Otherwise a vicious cycle will ensue:
bases, sites, and facilities built in the past for waging war
against NATO would continue to determine the deployment of Russian
forces. That deployment would frighten Russia's neighbors into
taking countermeasures. The countermeasures would create a military
threat which would justify the placement of the troops that provoked
it.
The agreements between Russia and the neutral countries should,
for greater certainty, be linked to NATO obligations. NATO should
take practical measures to prevent its own eastward expansion
and the members of the alliance should not deploy their forces
and military facilities there. The level of the NATO troops and
forces should be further reduced and restructured to accomplish
missions for the purpose of peace-keeping and conflict-resolution.
It would be useful to limit the development and deployment of
highly accurate, long-range conventional weapons of enhanced destructive
power. Finally, joint exercises and other forms of interdependence
between the rapid deployment forces of Russia and NATO should
be encouraged as a way of saving resources and as a reassurance
that military actions would not be carried out against each other.
Regret and Responsibility
Polish membership in NATO could end efforts to build an edifice
of European security with pillars in Western Europe, the United
States, Russia, and a large bloc of neutral states. The danger
is not that such membership would immediately create a military
threat to Russia: a number of NATO countries (France, Denmark,
Norway) have no foreign troops on their territory and Poland could
follow their example. The problem is that Polish membership in
NATO could initiate a chain reaction, eroding the neutral European
security belt between the West and Russia and leading once more
to confrontation. The Russian military, engaged in long-term strategic
planning, would reason as follows: Since NATO has, without any
valid reason, advanced to the east, Russia's duty is to move its
line of defense as far west as possible. Such a move would influence
Moscow's policy toward the Kaliningrad region, the Baltic states,
Ukraine, Belarus, Moldovia, and the countries of Eastern Europe.
It would also fuel a build-up of forces in the European part of
Russia. This, in turn, would lead to a worsening of ethnic and
territorial conflicts and clashes over the division of the USSR's
military legacy, including its nuclear forces. Russia's neighbors
in the West would perceive this as a security threat and would
queue up to join NATO.
The Russian military establishment, instead of implementing radical
reforms and reorienting its defense toward the south and east,
would resume its customary task -- planning a large-scale conventional
and nuclear war in the European theater.
This would be bad for everybody, but worst for Russia itself,
with its economic, political, and military problems. No concentration
of military power can diminish the vulnerability of the Russian
heartland, resulting from the new geostrategic situation and the
changed ratio of forces.
Of course, once an escalating series of threats and countermeasures
are in place, it will be easy to blame Russia's hardships on the
other side. But it would be a mistake not to recognize Russia's
responsibility as well: the responsibility for the uncertainty
and fear induced in neighboring states by spasms in the internal
and foreign policies of this enormous nuclear power; the responsibility
for mismanaging its economy, military reforms, and defense conversion;
and the responsibility for failing to pursue a new, realistic
military and political concept for European security. Moscow should
submit such a proposal to the West as an alternative to the eastward
expansion of NATO. That would place the responsibility for Russia's
fate squarely in its own hands.
See also:
Russia's
ABM Initiatives
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