Russia's Military Might for More Than Show
Russian soldiers,
tanks and rockets paraded across the cobblestones of Red Square on
Thursday in the Kremlin's annual display of the nation's military might.
The
parade was first held 68 years ago to celebrate the Soviet Union's
victory over Nazi Germany. Today it is a carefully choreographed event
to remind Russians -- and the world -- that the country remains a major
military power.
President Vladimir Putin reviewed the troops and
addressed the nation, declaring: "We will do everything to strengthen
security on the planet."
Russia's economy may now rank 10th largest in the world, but it still aspires to be a military superpower.
To
showcase Russia's military might, authorities spent millions of dollars
to disperse rain clouds in the skies and repair asphalt ground up by
tank treads on the ground. Lavish television coverage included placing
TV cameras in the cockpit of a fighter jet, by the wheels of a battle
tank, and atop the Kremlin's 15th century clock tower.
Foreign
military attaches watched from a VIP reviewing section as
nuclear-capable rockets and S-300 mobile missile batteries rolled by.
The
anti-aircraft missiles were a reminder of news reports earlier
Wednesday that Russia is preparing to sell S-300 missile batteries to
Syria's embattled government.
This advanced system would limit
the ability of the United States and other nations to operate over
Syrian airspace or impose a no-fly zone. On Wednesday, U.S. Secretary of
State John Kerry left Moscow after winning President Putin's support
for a conference to mediate a political solution to Syria's civil war.
For four decades, Moscow has been an ally of and arms supplier to the Assad clan that has run Syria since 1971.
On
Friday, British Prime Minister David Cameron is to meet President Putin
for talks in Sochi, after which he is to fly to Washington for a Monday
meeting with President Obama.
◆ Regional Power
On Red
Square, the columns of tanks and rows of marching soldiers were a
reminder of Russia's determination to be a regional power.
On
Wednesday, President Putin met with Russia's Security Council and
instructed the military to draw up plans to defend Central Asia and
southern Russia in the event of a collapse in Afghanistan after the
withdrawal of American troops next year.
"We will bear it in mind
that the Afghan army and law enforcement bodies are so far unable to
guarantee security in Afghanistan," Security Council Secretary Nikolai
Patrushev told reporters on Wednesday.
It was a reminder that Russia's massive military is maintained for greater goals than marching smartly in parades.
Military
spending fell last year in the United States and across western and
central Europe, but surged in Russia, China, the Middle East and North
Africa, according to new figures released by a research group based in
Sweden.
The changes "may be the beginning of a shift in the
balance of world military spending from the rich Western countries to
emerging nations," Sam Perlo-Freeman of the Stockholm International
Peace Research Institute said in a statement announcing the report
Monday.
Although the U.S. still accounted for 39% of global
military spending --- far more than any other country -- belt tightening
and the drawdown in Afghanistan contributed to a 6% decline in
expenditures from the previous year, Perlo-Freeman said. Military
pending in western and central Europe dropped 1.6%.
Meanwhile, Russia increased its
spending 16%, part of a massive plan to modernize its armaments,
according to the report. Chinese military spending was up an estimated
8%.
The increase in Russian spending, and an even bigger uptick
in Ukraine, helped drive up military spending across Eastern Europe,
which had the biggest jump of any region, 15%, the institute said.
Spending also rose in the Middle East (8%), North Africa (8%), Latin
America (4%) and Asia and Oceania (3%.)
The single biggest
increase was reported in the Persian Gulf country of Oman, which hiked
its military spending by 51%, according to the institute.
Those
increases continue a trend stretching back a decade in some parts of the
world. Vietnam, for instance, has more than doubled its military
spending since 2003, a reaction to increased Chinese assertiveness
regarding disputed territories in the South China Sea, researchers said.
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