August8, 2008:
A week of fighting in Georgia (on Russians southern border
in the Caucasus) was apparently a Georgian attempt to finally defeat
ethnic separatists in the breakaway area of South Ossetia (population
50,000). Georgia announced that it had liberated the separatist area.
Russia has not yet announced if it will go to war to support the,
apparently, defeated South Ossetian separatists.
There
is a second such area; Abkhazia (population 200,000). Georgia has a
population of 4.6 million, and a hostile relationship (going back
centuries) with Russia. In response to this bad attitude, Russia has
backed the rebels of Abkhazia and South Ossetia (which are on the
Russian border) since the early 1990s. Georgia was part of the
Soviet Union (and Russia) for over two centuries. Georgians tolerated
this for a long time as the only way to keep the Moslem Turks out of
Christian Georgia. But with the end of the Cold War, this was no
longer an issue and the Georgians wanted the Russians gone. The
Russians considered the Georgians ungrateful and unreliable (for
allowing Chechen rebels to hide out in neighboring Georgian
mountains.)
The
fighting in South Ossetia and Abkhazia had stopped over a decade
ago, because Georgia could not muster sufficient military force to
regain control of the two breakaway border areas. Then a UN brokered
peace deal brought in several thousand Russian peacekeepers. About
ten days ago, there were were reports of gunfire and mortar shells
exploding in South Ossetia. In the last few days, Georgian Su-25
ground attack aircraft were seen hitting targets in South Ossetia.
Artillery shells were reported to have hit a Russian peace keeper
barracks. Russia announced that it was sending more peacekeeping
troops to South Ossetia. Russian aircraft were reported to have
bombed targets just inside Georgia. Russia was unable to get the UN
to pass a resolution demanding that Georgia cease efforts to get back
control of its territory.
August
7, 2008: The government has been making a lot of noise about
rebuilding the navy, with plans to build 5-6 aircraft carriers, and
new classes of nuclear submarines. But this is, for the moment,
mainly a PR exercise, as the announced plans don't start building
anything for another five years. There's a practical reason for that,
as many of the smaller suppliers of ship and weapons components did
not survive the post Cold War collapse of the 1990s. New suppliers,
either foreign or domestic, must be found or developed. A new
generation of specialists and technicians has to be recruited, for
the Cold War era people are now largely gone (either retired, or
moved on to more lucrative work.) Moreover, the current Russian
economic boom is driven largely by oil and gas exports (which account
for 60 percent of all exports, and 20 percent of GDP.) By comparison,
the more varied economy of neighboring Poland, with about a quarter
of Russia's population, has 15 percent higher per-capita GDP. Russia
still living off its past, especially when it comes to military
affairs. A generation of military research and development was lost,
along with the research facilities, suppliers and skilled people. The
government is having a hard time convincing the new consumer-goods
oriented economy to get behind military work. So new state owned
weapons corporations are being formed, and these will likely be as
inefficient as their Soviet predecessors. Right now, Russian arms
exports are seen as a generation behind the West, but cheap and
generally reliable. If your neighbors don't have Western stuff, the
Russian weapons will do.
August
3, 2008: Russia is quietly preparing to deliver and install S-300
(similar to the U.S. Patriot) missile systems to Iran. For the past
year, Iranian operators and technicians have been training in Russia,
and some components of the missile systems have already been
delivered. Russia has opposed greater economic sanctions on Iran (for
its nuclear weapons program, which it says it doesn't have). The only
other threat to the Iranian nuclear program (for which Russia is a
major supplier) is an air raid by Israel. The S-300s are supposed to
help prevent that. By the end of the year, or early next year, the
S-300s will be in place.
August
1, 2008: It's been a scary Summer in the Caucasus. Small groups of
Islamic terrorists appear to be following through on their threat to
terrorize the police into submission. This is done by killing
policemen. Sometimes it's an ambush on a rural road, but a recent
attack had a lone gunman walk into a village cafe, shoot three
policeman, and leave. Special counter-terror police are tracking down
these groups, who are usually more into crime than religious
extremism, although that is necessary just to keep the group going.
There's been a reaction to this in many large Russian cities. Young
nationalist thugs are attacking anyone who is not an ethnic (Slav)
Russian. This is especially true of those from the Caucasus, Middle
East, East Asia or Africa. In Moscow alone, there have been 10-20
such assaults (one or two of them murders) a month.
July
31, 2008: Russia pulled about 400 of 2,500 peacekeeping troops out
of the breakaway Georgian region of Abkhazia. Georgia resents this
"peacekeeping" mission as it is see as supporting the rebels, and
another Russian effort to punish independent minded Georgia.
July
23, 2008: Negotiations are underway with India to jointly develop a
new tank, to replace the T-90 that India is building (under license)
to become their main battle tank. India will eventually have 1,600
T-90s, with most of them built in India. At the moment, India has
more T-90s than Russia, and unless the Russian army places some large
orders, India will continue to be the largest user of the T-90 (which
is an upgrade of the thirty year old T-72 design.) The new design is
expected to be a major departure from the T-72 design, employing lots
of new technology.
July
21, 2008: Russia and China have finally settled decades old disputes
along their 4,300 kilometers of border. Some of these disagreements
go back nearly a century, and the two countries fought several border
skirmishes in the 1970s. A treaty was worked out with North Korea
over less serious border issues, along a much shorter border.