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Russia in the 21st Century [Superthread]

S.M.A. said:
How can long can they sustain this with the current economic sanctions and the effects of the sinking price of oil?

International Business Times


In my view they cannot even start it, much less sustain it ...

It's all bluff, to fool the rabidly anti-American lunatic fringe in Europe and to fool the Russian people, too.

The Russians are nostalgic for the "dream time" when they were a global superpower ~ a Potemkin village sort of superpower but one to be reckoned with, all the same.

Russia is a socio-cultural, political and economic shambles.
 
Evidence is already apparent; look at the Russian Military thread: http://army.ca/forums/threads/20333/post-1359599.html#msg1359599

The PAK-FA "5th Gen" fighter order has been reduced to 12; one squadrons(?) worth...
 
E.R. Campbell said:
In my view they cannot even start it, much less sustain it ...

It's all bluff, to fool the rabidly anti-American lunatic fringe in Europe and to fool the Russian people, too.

The Russians are nostalgic for the "dream time" when they were a global superpower ~ a Potemkin village sort of superpower but one to be reckoned with, all the same.

Russia is a socio-cultural, political and economic shambles.

Its just not the economy that Putin has to worry about, but also the population. A low birth rate(1) combined with both a high death rate(2) and low life expectancy(3) equals trouble!

(1) 11.87 per 1,000 people. Slightly ahead of Canada, but behind the U.S.
(2) 13.83 deaths per 1,000 people. Tenth highest in the world.
(3) 70.16 years (avg); female 76/male 64. Canada's avg is 81.


Source: CIA World Factbook.
 
Retired AF Guy said:
Its just not the economy that Putin has to worry about, but also the population. A low birth rate(1) combined with both a high death rate(2) and low life expectancy(3) equals trouble!

(1) 11.87 per 1,000 people. Slightly ahead of Canada, but behind the U.S.
(2) 13.83 deaths per 1,000 people. Tenth highest in the world.
(3) 70.16 years (avg); female 76/male 64. Canada's avg is 81.


Source: CIA World Factbook.
The low birth rate is recovering from the low in the post USSR era. Compare it to the US (2000 to 2012):

USRusCBR.png


The sad part about a population that doesn't age, that means you don't have to pay to take care of the elderly for as long.  Economically, retired people contribute nothing to society and only take.

And according to the Moscow Times, 2014 saw the natural population of Russia increase for the first time since the collapse of the USSR.  The difference?  24,013.  They aren't out of the woods yet, but they are doing something we are not: increasing by natural means.  And their life expectancy is actually on the rise. 

So, yes, the raw data shows them worse off than us: but they are getting better, and we are getting worse.

Edit to add link to Moscow Times article:

http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/russia-reverses-birth-decline-but-for-how-long/502325.html


 
Technoviking said:
Economically, retired people contribute nothing to society and only take.

Ah, I see you subscribe to the "old people's money spent on goods and services don't contibute to the economy, only young people's do" school of economics.  While retirees no longer pay into social support directly with CPP and OAS deductions, their spending their disposable income does contribute to the economy as does the amount of income tax they may pay, income depending, on their retirement income.

Nice "cherry picking" charts.  Are you saying that "natural" growth is a more important factor than considering the overall national population increase considering all factors, including immigration.  Why don't immigrants increasing the overall population of the U.S. count?

Regards
G2G
 
Another question that might be asked is: how many of those Russians are Russians and how many are Tatars, Chechens, Kazakhs and other indigenous peoples?

 
Technoviking said:
The low birth rate is recovering from the low in the post USSR era. Compare it to the US (2000 to 2012):

And according to the Moscow Times, 2014 saw the natural population of Russia increase for the first time since the collapse of the USSR.  The difference?  24,013.  They aren't out of the woods yet, but they are doing something we are not: increasing by natural means.  And their life expectancy is actually on the rise. 

Not according to the CIA Factbook; the Russian population is actually declining at a rate of -0.03%. Canada's rate is +0.76.
 
Kirkhill said:
Another question that might be asked is: how many of those Russians are Russians and how many are Tatars, Chechens, Kazakhs and other indigenous peoples? 

Ethnic groups:

Russian 77.7%, Tatar 3.7%, Ukrainian 1.4%, Bashkir 1.1%, Chuvash 1%, Chechen 1%, other 10.2%, unspecified 3.9%. note: more than 190 ethnic groups are represents in Russia's 2010 census (2010 est.)

CIA Factbook.
 
Russian bases proliferating outside of Russia proper. Interesting to look at where all these things are on the map:

http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htiw/articles/20150326.aspx

Information Warfare: The Russian Exception

March 26, 2015:  Russian media, using government data, recently understated the number of military bases that Russia operates outside its borders; apparently forgetting about the several bases Russia has in the Caucasus and elsewhere. This came about when the Russian president, at the high-profile annual press conference was asked about the possibility of a "new Cold War" and Russia's aggressive moves around its Western borders. The reply insisted that it was in fact the West who was being aggressive. This was emphasized by pointing out that there are a lot more American military bases abroad than Russian ones, and certainly a lot more American military personnel deployed close to Russia's borders than the other way around. But this response neglected to mention several other bases Russia has abroad:

-- In Armenia, Russia's 102nd Military Base in Gyumri hosts about 5,000 Russian soldiers, both land and air forces. In 2010 Armenia and Russia signed an agreement extending the base's lease until 2044. In recent years Russia has made moves to upgrade its presence at the base and it may host the Caucasus portion of the nascent Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) air forces.

-- In Abkhazia, Russia's 7th Military Base hosts at the Bombora Air Field in Gudauta about 3,500 soldiers and a small number of aircraft. Russia has reportedly spent $465 million since recognizing Abkhazia as an independent country in 2008 to upgrade its military facilities there. In 2011, Russia and Abkhazia signed an agreement permitting the base to stay until 2060.

-- In South Ossetia, the 4th Military Base hosts about 3,800 soldiers in Tskhinvali, Java, and Kanchaveti. There is also a military airport in Kurta. That base also has the right to stay until 2060.

-- In Transnistria, Russia keeps about 1,500 troops in the Moldovan breakaway republic, based in the de facto capitol Tiraspol as well as in the Bender Fortress.

And that doesn't include the naval base at Tartus, Syria (although that one is temporarily evacuated due to the Syrian Civil War) or the air base planned in Babruysk, Belarus for 2016. And in February 2016, Russia was planning to establish several new military bases abroad, including "Vietnam, Cuba, Venezuela, Nicaragua, the Seychelles, Singapore and several other countries," though no details of those plans have emerged.

It might be beneficial for American and European leaders to think about an actual reengagement approach with Russia and look at the rationale for the actions of their adversary. As every nation state operates in within their own self-interests, Russia is no exception to this. The security concerns stated by Russia due to possible NATO expansion into the former Soviet Union are legitimate to Russia. But the U.S. and Europe don’t accept this as this is done at the invitation of Russian neighbors that fear a return of the traditional Russian aggression against its neighbors. If this is ultimately responsible for the creation of a new Cold War it is merely a recycling of what caused the first Cold War. Russia does not accept the fact that their aggression is never acceptable to anyone. – Ryan Schinault
 
Thucydides said:
Russian bases proliferating outside of Russia proper. Interesting to look at where all these things are on the map:

http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htiw/articles/20150326.aspx
That's bunk.  Yes, those are "outside of Russia proper", but pale in comparison to US military bases and presence around the globe:

Link to PDF


(As for Belarus, that's simply "White Russia" as it used to be called.  It's practically part of Russia proper)
 
Hardly "bunk"; despite their very strained economic circumstances, these are new facilities, or ones being reactivated since the dissolution of the USSR. The point is not the number of bases, but the fact the Russians are expanding their military footprint abroad.

And of course they are also revitalizing their military footprint in Russia, including bases in the far north, across from us...
 
Russian ships have a foothold in the former Norwegian Naval Base of Olavsvern.The government sold the base to a private company for $5m.

http://news.yahoo.com/russian-ships-old-arctic-nato-set-alarms-bells-050008186.html

 
Santa's got some Russian company (original in Russian - Google English) ....
Blue berets 76th Air Assault Division from Pskov finish preparation for priledneniyu on drifting ice of the North Pole, where, according to the scenario, they will have to save the polar scientific station. Together with the Russian paratroopers will perform their task Belarusian colleagues. During kilometer forced march Russian military train them to use snowmobiles and dog sleds to transport victims. Parachute blue berets will be of military transport IL-76. Have been trained and air troop complex.

As observers at the exercises will be representatives of the armies of other countries of the CSTO.

Exercises will be held as part of a rapid response unit.

During the exercises paratroopers dressed in a special form, designed to meet the requirements of Russian polar explorers - layered and wicking, comfortable and warm - especially for action under abnormal temperatures.
2.jpg

At the North Pole unfurled flags of 85 subjects of the Russian Federation. Flags were neatly stacked on the polar snow over an area of ​​1.5 thousand sq. Meters.  This event was held in honor of the 70th anniversary of the victory in World War II. The ceremony was TV presenter Nikolai Drozdov.
 
Good2Golf said:
Is not the West engaging in a type of hybrid warfare with Russia on the economic front?  The country sliding towards a full-on recession may significantly impact Russia's ability to continue imposing its will on the region.  Did I misread my von Clausewitz?

Regards
G2G

I think the answer isn't that black and white. I am not too sure I would resort to Clausewitz, as I believe looking at the conflict / confrontation from such a lens would be anachronistic. The United States (read US HUMNIT agencies) understood (or thought they had) that if they play the economic warfare game on Putin's entourage, then they may be able to destabilize him. That wasn't really a bad idea, but I think it just wasn't properly thought through.

It is a very well known fact that Russia's political sphere is a number of different power-clusters. The one common denominator to most of the people who constitute these clusters is that they're either rich, very rich, and/or former KGB / GRU / FSB people. They mostly have a very comprehensive security/intelligence background, they are rather informed, paranoid, and influential (You can see the problem here: a lot of powerful influential people will often head in opposite directions, preventing the formation of any real movement).

In this context, I think the Sanctions and/or Economic warfare strategy failed. In war and/or security studies there is a notion of Market Deterrence which affirms that if a State acts very aggressively and is very belligerent, the global market will naturally act negatively toward that country's economy. On the other hand, Artificial Market Deterrence is a man-made version of this, which comprises economic and industrial sanctions, as well as the full spectrum of economic warfare. The issue with Artificial Market Deterrence is that it is not a natural process and therefore. Because of this, it is hard to sustain over a long period of time, and it often or leads to unexpected consequences. In the case of Russia, Artificial Market Deterrence generated three major counter effects:
1) The oligarchs we wanted to target to destabilize Putin, have now lost most of what they had to lose abroad (frozen assets, seized yachts, real estates, aircraft, bank accounts, funds, etc). This has rendered them either bitter against Western Sanctions, or powerless against Russia's powerful elite. (I would add that a lot of people were indirectly impacted by the overall sanctions)
2) With many of the oligarchs politically neutralized, Putin, Patrushev (who I think is Russia's most-powerful at the moment) and their entourage have more leverage in Russia.
3) The sanctions have forced Russia to open her economy and it is giving her the opportunity to finally complete the economic reform which no-one could complete since Andropov died (many believe that Andropov's death is what prevented Gorbatchov from successful reforms because he understood the Soviet economy like very no one else.)

I unfortunately believe that our mistake is that we're effectively giving Russia an opportunity to reform her economy. This may be good for global stability and for democracy in the long-run, but in a time of conflict it is offering Putin's government the opportunity to achieve something the previous oligarchs had failed to do under Yeltsin. It's a golden opportunity for Russia to increase the role of services, R&D, Weaponry and Techs industries in her domestic economy. It is important to note that China is also a military technology / energy partner (a partner more than an ally though). Along with China are many upcoming regional powers such as Algeria (who is now leading Africa in defence spending) , Indonesia, India, Vietnam, Brazil, and many other significant economic and geopolitical powers. A lesser mistake is that we've underestimated the good old Russian recipe for popular support: create an enemy, create a war, solidify the leader, and blame America (and, or, the West) for the economic situation and add a bit of "the westerners are decadent gay people who fudge children" to reach out to the most hardcore faithfuls in Russia. I have personally seen very smart, young Russians, who left Russia, who hate Putin, but who are now supporting him because in their mind (and hearts? how cute) Russia is their country, and the bad Putin is not bad enough for them to "betray" their motherland.

It does seem like our economic warfare model is failing, the only thing with have left is a military or diplomacy based approach. We must acknowledge that Putin already adopted a neorealist approach. He mobilized his forces, he increased their state of readiness, he increased domestic troop movements (I added a link), he increased logistical flows toward the front and started cutting off energy supplies from time to time. The Russians are also sending aircraft and vessels everywhere, not to test our defences, but to force leaders to react publicly (P.R. Warfare). For now he has succesfully forced the Europeans to rethink their Common Security and Defence Policy (which went dormant for years), he forced the Swedish to reconsider joining NATO, he forced the Norwegians to go back to a Cold-War approach and he is forcing us to rethink our defence capabilities in the Arctic.

My recommendation would be: either we take comprehensive defensive and military actions to show Russia that if they're willing to cross the line, we will cross it with them and without hesitation (which I do not think is their intention) or we engage in open and clear diplomacy to find out what the hell do they want, because the longer we keep the "conflict" alive, the more we increase the odds of other countries attempting to challenge the global order for territorial or influence gain.

This is a purely personal analysis, not based on any non open-source information.

A very interesting game-theory text on Russia and the West in Ukraine: http://www.economist.com/blogs/democracyinamerica/2014/03/game-theory-ukraine
On troop movements (not sure how reliable): http://cdn.theeventchronicle.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/troop-movements.jpg

[I edited the text for grammar / spelling / clarity]
 
I'm intrigued as to your assessment element 1), above.  Who then are the "elite" you speak of if they are, or were not Putin's oligarchic comrades?  So you assess that the oligarchs no longer retain ultimate influential/powerf/control of their assets inside of Russia as well -- that international sanctions have rendered them helpless to control any of their domestic assets?  How have these other elite Russians of whom you speak taken control of the country's assets?
 
Good2Golf said:
I'm intrigued as to your assessment element 1), above.  Who then are the "elite" you speak of if they are, or were not Putin's oligarchic comrades?  So you assess that the oligarchs no longer retain ultimate influential/powerf/control of their assets inside of Russia as well -- that international sanctions have rendered them helpless to control any of their domestic assets?  How have these other elite Russians of whom you speak taken control of the country's assets?

I think there has been a three phase evolution of Russia's elite since 1992. The first phase first appeared under the rule of Yeltsin's Elite, nicknammed "the family" (It included Tatyana Yumasheva - Eltsin's daughter - Boris Berezovsky, Anatoly Chubais Yevgeny Shaposhnikov, and many more, including the late Nemtsov.) This first-phase elite benefited from the "privatization of the economy" which Chubais was overseeing at the time. They became an hybrid of media tycoon, business owners and political actors. What Putin probably noticed very early on is that all these individuals surrounding Yeltsin had a lot of influence over him, if anything they were virtually ruling Russia. Berezovsky had managed to have FSB/GRU agents to represent about 20% of Aeroflot's workforce. Aeroflot at the time was basically funding a big chunk of Russia's foreign operations. This very powerful group fought hard to get Putin elected thinking he would be grateful and offer them laissez-passer or, at least, allow them to remain in that sphere of influence. They basically wanted to make Putin a new kind-of Yeltsin, a leader in appearance, who would not really have any impact domestically. It seems like Putin did not fall for that, he either ordered the expulsion or the neutralization of those he deemed to be too powerful. The only one to whom he was loyal was Yeltsin, he honoured his promise to shield him and his real-family from legal troubles.

That constituted the beginning of the second phase. Putin attempted to create the Phase II elite. An elite based on your closeness to Putin. If you were his ally, and he trusted you, you would remain around. A new system of power emerged with people attempting to show Putin how loyal they were. One example could be the theory that Anna Politkovskaya was probably killed by people attempting to make him a gift (it was his birthday) in order to gain his trust. This phase of power saw anybody who constituted a real threat to Putin (unlike Politkovskaya, which is why I don't think he actually ordered her killed) being eliminated. Alexander Litvinenko was a good example. On the other hand, anyone who truly wanted to gain his support, would make consequential acts to prove their loyalty. Abramovich did so by sinking Berezovsky and his allies in a corruption / fraud affair that forced Berezovsky out of the country.

I think right now, we are in a third-phase. A lot of people who were relegated out of the sphere of influence during the second-phase, are slowly trying to come back. But with the War in Ukraine and the military tensions, no one wants to truly challenge Putin publicly, it would be too easy to label them as under "foreign influence" and "antipatriotic". Unlike what we hear, I think public image is kind of essential in the "russian-style" democracy. I also believe that the fact that most of them have seen their assets seized or frozen has greatly limited their ability to operate domestically, effectively solidifying Putin's power. This is for the elites.

As for how they took control of the country's assets? False trials (Khudorkosvky), Corruption Affairs, Elimination, Seizures and Nationalization seem to be a recurring feature of Putin's modus operandi. I would not say that the oligarchs no longer retain ultimate influence / power / control over Russia. I think they still have a big margin of manoeuver but that they are too fragmented to act, as long as the war persists, it will be difficult to act against Putin. Eventually, in a year or two, there may be an opportunity (over 200,000 Muscovites and Peterburzhec will protest during the next campaign if Putin seeks reelection, I would bet a lot on that). That may give those wealthy isolated oligarchs the opportunity to shake the existing establishment. A lot of oligarchs still have money, individually, and could be a very strong power collectively, but Putin's strategy seem to have successfully prevented them from unifying in any way, that would be my guess.

It's just an opinion, obviously. I do base myself on facts, published stories, books, articles, and my studies and research on Russia. Most facts can probably be tracked back to a source, but the logic is a personal one, I am open to criticism.
 
Long article on the situation in Russia. Lots of interesting details on how Russia is building relations with other nations to evade sanctions (and often the other nation is one like Iran which is also seeking to evade international sanctions, or questionalble deals with lots of strings attached).

How this plays out in the long run is hard to predict, but Russia's options are becoming more limited, and much of the damage is self inflicted:

http://www.strategypage.com/qnd/russia/articles/20150402.aspx

Russia: Counting The Losses
   
April 2, 2015: Russian economists see GDP shrinking another four percent this year and less than one percent in 2016 followed by growth. What the Russian economists will not openly discuss is that this forecast implies that something will be done about the corruption and lawlessness that makes it difficult for businesses to be created and grow. The government has some very good economic advisors but so far there has been little action on dealing with the corruption, which the economists (and most Russians) agree is the major obstacle to growth and prosperity.

The growing Russian use of armed (and diplomatic) aggression against its neighbors is hurting the Russian economy in unexpected ways. For example long time customers for Russian military equipment (weapons, spare parts and services) are becoming more reluctant to buy Russian. The reason is simple, Russia is now seen as unpredictable and unreliable when it comes to supplying support and spare parts for their weapons and equipment. This became obvious when Russia was hit with economic sanctions in 2014 for its aggression against Ukraine. Russia then threatened to halt shipments and support for weapons to any country that supported the sanctions. Soon Russia got the message and tried to back down, but it was too late. The message was sent and the damage was done.

Meanwhile the government continues to succeed at shifting the blame for the poor economy to the West and especially NATO. Most Russians believe that this is all part of a NATO plot against Russia and that their own government is merely responding to this aggression. President Putin still has approval ratings of over 80 percent. The sanctions are directed at the key people supporting Putin and the aggression in Ukraine but most of these targets are very rich and the only discomfort they endure is a fall in the value of their assets. For most Russians the deprivations are more tangible with rising prices, shortages and unemployment. For thousands of parents there is the son getting killed or wounded in the Ukraine where, officially, there are no Russian soldiers.

Ukraine has asked NATO for electronic warfare support and there has been no publicity about the response. That could mean that some NATO nations came through, quietly, mainly for the opportunity to get a better understanding of the latest Russian electronic warfare gear when used under combat conditions. That is important because Russia exports a lot of this equipment. The Russians don’t mind making their electronic warfare tech more vulnerable to theft because Russian manufacturers need the money to stay in business. NATO would simply like to know more about the latest Russian gear, just in case.

A Russian motorized infantry brigade in Western Siberia recently received fifteen modernized T-72B3 tanks. This is a modernized version of T-72 with an improved fire control system and next-generation communications equipment. The delivery was of the Russian effort to modernize its armed forces. Russia has over 5,000 T-72 tanks in use (2,000 in active service and 3,000 in reserve) and most of them are Cold War (pre-1991) vintage and seriously out-of-date compared to American, European and Chinese tanks. Modernizing these Cold War era tanks has been underway for a decade but is proceeding very slowly because of money shortages.

As much as Russia tries to hide the presence of Russian troops in the eastern Ukraine (Donbas) those troops have become more and more visible to the general public. The rebel controlled areas of Donbas are not heavily policed and many of the civilians there don’t want to be ruled by Russia but keep their mouths shut and their cell phone cameras active. With the addition of commercial satellite photos and military grade satellite photos released by the United States it has been possible to identify the extent of the Russian effort. Increasingly Russian soldiers are going public on the Internet and even in some Russian media about the presence and importance (for rebel success in Donbas) of Russian troops in Ukraine. From all this it appears that Russia has brought in over 40,000 combat and support troops from over a hundred different units. These troops are usually brought in for a few months, or as many as six months, then sent back to their home base and replaced by another unit. This is causing problems in Russia because many of the troops involved are conscripts and when these are killed the official story is that they died from something other than combat. The bodies are shipped home in sealed caskets which are often, in violation of government instructions, unsealed. When that happens the parents discover that their son died in combat and that gets around via the Internet and some of the more daring mass media. Most Russian mass media is government controlled, but the Internet dilutes the news monopoly that control of mass media used to confer. The situation has gotten worse as Russia has begun using special units of Interior Ministry Police to work behind units in combat and arrest any troops, usually conscripts, who try to run away. This harkens back to the World War II practice of having groups of KGB men behind the front line with orders to shoot on sight any troops they saw moving away from the fighting.

Since Russia began invading and trying to annex parts of Ukraine in 2014 there has been a substantial shift in population. Since early 2014 nearly two million people have left Russia. More than half these were Westerners (including many from East European countries) working in Russia, providing skills that Russia did not have. The rest were Russians, most of them highly educated and with similar skills to the departing Westerners. What all these migrants had in common was a desire to get away from an increasingly authoritarian, intolerant and economically disastrous Russian government. About half the departing Westerners and skilled Russians were replaced by more (less educated and skilled) migrants from the east (Central Asia, North Korea, China and the Caucasus). There would be more migrants from the east but the lower oil prices has caused an economic crises and fewer jobs, especially fewer jobs for the less educated. Since the current Russian government seems determined to continue its aggressive and anti-Western policies, the exodus of skilled Russians will continue. During the Soviet period such migration was forbidden and a growing number of Russians fear those Soviet era travel restrictions will return, because without such restrictions Russia will lose a critical number of skilled personnel needed to operate a modern economy. The current government seems unconcerned about this and has an attitude of “good riddance”. Some members of the government do realize the implications of these migration patterns but know better than to go public with their misgivings. If this trend is not reversed, Russia will continue to have a smaller, and less Russian and less educated population. If the current Russian leadership have their way the size of Russia and population will grow via conquest. As in the past, many of the neighbors are willing to resist.

One of the less publicized casualties of the current Russian aggression is the nuclear disarmament efforts that have been underway since the 1980s. Russia is no longer interested in nuclear disarmament but rather in further developing nuclear weapons. Russia sees its nukes as its most reliable and intimidating weapon.

Ukraine is also coping with economic problems caused by Russia. The major one is natural gas supplies. In the last year Ukraine has increased natural gas imports from the west by 138 percent and cut Russian imports by 44 percent. Even with that and reduced use of natural gas, Russia still accounts for over 70 percent of natural gas used in Ukraine.

April 1, 2015: In Yemen the Russian consulate was looted by Shia rebels who have entered some parts of the port city of Aden. Arab bombing attacks on the Shia rebels in Aden blew out most of the windows in the Russian consulate. Meanwhile a Russian transport sent to the capital (Sanaa) to evacuate embassy staff was turned away because of the Arab air attacks. The Russian transport landed in Egypt and plans to try again in a day or so.

March 31, 2015:  Russia and Turkey are negotiating terms of Turkey joining a barter arrangement with Russia. To get around the banking sanctions Russia has, in effect established a barter system with China, North Korea and Iran. China has become a major trading partner of Russia. As a result Chinese businesses with Russian dealings have been advised by their government to use the rubles they are paid for goods to buy Russian assets, which are finding far fewer other foreign buyers because of the Russian economic crises. This Chinese aid comes with strings, mainly in terms of Russia agreeing to sell more military tech (design and manufacturing methods) to China. Turkey is also looking for some payback although it is unclear so far what that is.
March 30, 2015: A Russian newspaper published an interview with Syrian president Assad thanking Russia for continuing to deliver weapons. Assad said these were orders from before the 2011 revolution and after (when a UN arms embargo went into effect). Russia did not respond to international media queries but inside the country it’s a different story. Since 2011 the Russian government openly boasted (at least inside Russia) of how it was backing the Syrian government against a popular uprising and how this had been successful. Russian arms shipments (via air and sea) increased after 2011 and has included armored vehicles and UAVs. Syria accounted for seven percent of Russian arms exports in 2011, and Russia wants to show that they always deliver. Russia was also building a naval base at the Syrian port of Tartus in 2011 but the several hundred Russians who there working on the project were soon withdrawn from Syria and the Tartus project suspended until the war is over. 

March 29, 2015: Russia agreed to let Chinese banks with questionable finances (even by Chinese standards) to operate in Russia. This is because Russia needs access to investment capital as the sanctions have deprived Russia of this. Russian economists caution against this sort of involvement with China but are ignored because the struggle with the West is considered a higher priority than the future health of the Russian economy.

March 25, 2015: The U.S. delivered the first ten of 230 armored hummers. The Americans are also providing UAVs, radars and other electronics.

March 23, 2015: The Russian Finance Ministry has gone public with its warning about how much the government is depending on the $85 billion Reserve Fund to cover budget deficits. In 2015 the government is spending $50 billion of the reserve fund to cover deficit spending. When the Reserve Fund is gone the government risks ruinous hyper-inflation by simply printing more money. At this point the government is betting it will win its war of wills with the West by 2016. Meanwhile a fifth of the 800 Russian banks are in financial trouble because of the sanctions and the plunging price of oil. Most economists believe Russia needs oil selling at $100 a barrel to avoid an extended economic recession. Currently oil it at less than $50 a barrel and the Arab Gulf oil states are not inclined to help Russia out by cutting production and forcing oil prices back up. This is because Russia is increasingly very open in its alliance with Iran, which the oil price war is mainly aimed at. Meanwhile the Finance Ministry worries that the sanctions are doing permanent (or at least long term) damage to the Russian economy. Europeans no longer want to buy Russian natural gas, or much else Russian because now West Europe sees Russia more of a threat than a reliable and profitable trading partner.

March 21, 2015: in the south (Dagestan) police clashed with Islamic terrorists and killed seven of them.

Russia threatened Denmark with nuclear attack if Denmark decides to participate in the construction of an American anti-missile system to protect Europe from such attacks out of Iran and, apparently, now Russia as well.

March 20, 2015: Ukrainian troops near Mariupol clashed with pro-Russian rebels and killed three and wounded six. The rebels appear to be bringing in more troops and weapons forward in preparation for another effort to take Mariupol. This is in violation of the truce and is nothing new as far as the Russians and rebels are concerned.

March 19, 2015: EU (European Union) leaders agreed that their sanctions on Russia would remain in force until Russia made peace with Ukraine.

The U.S. has agreed to send 290 American paratroopers from a brigade based in Italy, to Ukraine and being training 750 Ukrainian troops in April.

March 16, 2015: Russia began nationwide military training exercises involving 38,000 troops, 3,360 vehicles, 41 surface warships, 15 submarines and 110 warplanes.  This is expensive but the government is willing to pay what it costs to increase the combat capabilities of its troops.

The U.S. made clear that the economic sanctions against Russia will go on as long as Russia continues meddling in Ukrainian affairs. The EU nations have already said the same thing.

March 15, 2015: Ukrainian leaders are going public with their misgivings about the current ceasefire with Russian and Ukrainian rebel forces in the east (Donbas). The rebels continue to fire on Ukrainian troops and sometimes even try to advance, often retreating only after taking casualties. The rebels also block European ceasefire monitors. Russia denies any problems exist except those caused by Ukrainians and NATO agents.

March 14, 2015: Iraqi media has been playing up the aid Iran is providing to defeat ISIL. This makes Iraqis more eager to do business with Iran. That is important for Iran because of a new agreement between Iran and Russia signed today. The two countries worked out details and agreed to form a joint supervisory board for a joint bank which would enable Iran to evade sanctions, at least with Russia, by gaining access to the Russian banking system. While this subterfuge could expose Russia to more international banking sanctions, Russia apparently sees that coming anyway and is seeking to build a separate international banking system for outcast nations. Iraq has become an unofficial member of this new banking system with a growing number of Iranian firms establishing themselves in Iraq. Afghanistan is also a growing trade partner but because Afghanistan relies so much on Western aid to stay solvent, Iran cannot get as involved in manipulating the Afghan economy to help Iran beat the sanctions. If China can be persuaded to join this arrangement it will be a formidable competitor for the existing international banking system.

March 10, 2015: The U.S. accuses Russia of continuing to send weapons to Donbas rebels in violation of the recent ceasefire.
 
A former chess grand champion and Russian political opposition activist weighs in; Kasparov should not be dismissed simply because he spent most of his life playing chess.  Take note that Kasparov was close to recently assassinated opposition politician Boris Nemtsov:

CBC

Kasparov: Vladimir Putin's Russia a virus that must be contained
CBC – 15 hours ago

Chess champion Garry Kasparov outplayed nearly everyone in the world for 22 years. Today the Russian grandmaster is taking on his most formidable opponent, President Vladimir Putin.

"Putin's Russia is a virus. You don't engage the virus, you have to contain it," he told me.

Kasparov is one of four debaters Friday night in Toronto questioning the West's response to Russia: 'engage or isolate?'

He's been  fiercely critical of the west's "failure" to effectively take on Putin. He likens the Russian leader's political tactics and power to Adolf Hitler's in the years leading up to the Second World War.

(...SNIPPED)
 
Very valid point for Kasparov, but I think he and Navalny are not ready yet. They lack grit, experience, popular support and funds.
I think by jailed Navalny's brother, Putin may actually be reinforcing him, but Kasparov, whom I respect, has been very vocal, that's for sure. He's made very interesting points, but I don't recall him being able to successfully rally people behind him, he's often be a "supporting actor" to other "big shots" such as Nemtsov or Navalny.
 
A long article in the National Interest. This could equally go in Grand Strategy for a Divided America, and it gives a very good overview of how things are interlinked in ways that are not immediately apparent. It also points out the very different perceptions that various players like Russia, China and the United States have on the same issues:

http://nationalinterest.org/print/feature/russia-america-stumbling-war-12662

Part 1
Russia and America: Stumbling to War
Graham Allison Dimitri K. Simes
May-June 2015 [5]

AFTER THE Soviet Union collapsed, Richard Nixon observed that the United States had won the Cold War, but had not yet won the peace. Since then, three American presidents—representing both political parties—have not yet accomplished that task. On the contrary, peace seems increasingly out of reach as threats to U.S. security and prosperity multiply both at the systemic level, where dissatisfied major powers are increasingly challenging the international order, and at the state and substate level, where dissatisfied ethnic, tribal, religious and other groups are destabilizing key countries and even entire regions.

Most dangerous are disagreements over the international system and the prerogatives of major powers in their immediate neighborhoods—disputes of the sort that have historically produced the greatest conflicts. And these are at the core of U.S. and Western tensions with Russia and, even more ominously, with China. At present, the most urgent challenge is the ongoing crisis in Ukraine. There, one can hear eerie echoes of the events a century ago that produced the catastrophe known as World War I. For the moment, the ambiguous, narrow and inconsistently interpreted Minsk II agreement is holding, and we can hope that it will lead to further agreements that prevent the return of a hot war. But the war that has already occurred and may continue reflected deep contradictions that America cannot resolve if it does not address them honestly and directly.

In the United States and Europe, many believe that the best way to prevent Russia’s resumption of its historic imperial mission is to assure the independence of Ukraine. They insist that the West must do whatever is required to stop the Kremlin from establishing direct or indirect control over that country. Otherwise, they foresee Russia reassembling the former Soviet empire and threatening all of Europe. Conversely, in Russia, many claim that while Russia is willing to recognize Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity (with the exception of Crimea), Moscow will demand no less than any other great power would on its border. Security on its western frontier requires a special relationship with Ukraine and a degree of deference expected in major powers’ spheres of influence. More specifically, Russia’s establishment sentiment holds that the country can never be secure if Ukraine joins NATO or becomes a part of a hostile Euro-Atlantic community. From their perspective, this makes Ukraine’s nonadversarial status a nonnegotiable demand for any Russia powerful enough to defend its national-security interests.

When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, Russia was on its knees, dependent on Western assistance and consumed by its own internal affairs. In that context, it was not surprising that Western leaders became accustomed to ignoring Russian perspectives. But since Vladimir Putin took over in 1999, he has led a recovery of Russia’s sense of itself as a great power. Fueled by rising oil production and prices that brought a doubling of Russia’s GDP during his fifteen-year reign, Russians increasingly bridled at such treatment.

Americans would do well to recall the sequence of events that led to Japan’s attack on the United States at Pearl Harbor and America’s entry into the Second World War. In 1941, the United States imposed a near-total embargo on oil shipments to Japan to punish its aggression on the Asian mainland. Unfortunately, Washington drastically underestimated how Japan would respond. As one of the post–World War II “wise men,” Secretary of State Dean Acheson, observed afterward, the American government’s


misreading was not of what the Japanese government proposed to do in Asia, not of the hostility our embargo would excite, but of the incredibly high risks General Tojo would assume to accomplish his ends. No one in Washington realized that he and his regime regarded the conquest of Asia not as the accomplishment of an ambition but as the survival of a regime. It was a life-and-death matter to them.

Just days before Pearl Harbor, Japanese special envoy Saburo Kurusu told Washington that “the Japanese people believe that economic measures are a much more effective weapon of war than military measures; that . . . they are being placed under severe pressure by the United States to yield to the American position; and that it is preferable to fight rather than to yield to pressure.” Despite this warning, the Japanese response to U.S. economic warfare caught the United States off guard, killing nearly 2,500 people and sinking much of the U.S. Pacific Fleet.

Reviewing the recent record of American administrations’ forecasts about the consequences of major foreign-policy choices should serve as a bright warning light. The Clinton administration misread an extended and bloody civil war in Yugoslavia before imposing its own shaky partition and angering Russia and China in the process. When George W. Bush decided to invade Iraq and replace Saddam Hussein’s regime with a democratically elected one, he believed that this would, as he said, “serve as a powerful example of liberty and freedom in a part of the world that is desperate for liberty and freedom.” He and his team held firmly to this conviction, despite numerous warnings that war would fragment the country along tribal and religious lines, that any elected government in Baghdad would be Shia-dominated and that Iran would be the principal beneficiary from a weakened Iraq. Next, the Obama administration joined Britain and France in a major air campaign in Libya to remove Muammar el-Qaddafi. The consequent chaos contributed to the killings of a U.S. ambassador and other American diplomats and to the creation of a haven for Islamic extremists more threatening than Qaddafi’s Libya to its neighbors and to America. In Syria, at the outset of the civil war, the Obama administration demanded the ouster of President Bashar al-Assad, even though he never posed a direct threat to America. Neither the Obama administration nor members of Congress took seriously predictions that Islamic extremists would dominate the Syrian opposition rather than more moderate forces—and that Assad would not be easy to displace.

COULD A U.S. response to Russia’s actions in Ukraine provoke a confrontation that leads to a U.S.-Russian war? Such a possibility seems almost inconceivable. But when judging something to be “inconceivable,” we should always remind ourselves that this is a statement not about what is possible in the world, but about what we can imagine. As Iraq, Libya and Syria demonstrate, political leaders often have difficulties envisioning events they find uncomfortable, disturbing or inconvenient.

Prevailing views of the current confrontation with Russia over Ukraine fit this pattern. Since removing Slobodan Milosevic, Saddam Hussein and Muammar el-Qaddafi from power had limited direct impact on most Americans, it is perhaps not surprising that most Washington policy makers and analysts assume that challenging Russia over Ukraine and seeking to isolate Moscow internationally and cripple it economically will not come at a significant cost, much less pose real dangers to America. After all, the most common refrain in Washington when the topic of Russia comes up is that “Russia doesn’t matter anymore.” No one in the capital enjoys attempting to humiliate Putin more than President Barack Obama, who repeatedly includes Russia in his list of current scourges alongside the Islamic State and Ebola. And there can be no question that as a petrostate, Russia is vulnerable economically and has very few, if any, genuine allies. Moreover, many among its business and intellectual elites are as enthusiastic as the Washington Post editorial page to see Putin leave office. Ukrainians with the same view of former Ukrainian president Viktor F. Yanukovych successfully ousted him with limited Western help, so, it is argued, perhaps Putin is vulnerable, too.

Nevertheless, Russia is very different from the other countries where the United States has supported regime change. First and most important, it has a nuclear arsenal capable of literally erasing the United States from the map. While many Americans have persuaded themselves that nuclear weapons are no longer relevant in international politics, officials and generals in Moscow feel differently. Second, regardless of how Americans view their country, Russians see it as a great power. Great powers are rarely content to serve simply as objects of other states’ policies. Where they have the power to do so, they take their destiny into their own hands, for good or ill.



WHILE MOST policy makers and commentators dismiss the possibility of a U.S.-Russian war, we are more concerned about the drift of events than at any point since the end of the Cold War. We say this having followed Soviet and Russian affairs throughout the Cold War and in the years since the Soviet Union’s implosion in 1991. And we say it after one of us recently spent a week in Moscow talking candidly with individuals in and around the Putin government, including with many influential Russian officials, and the other in China listening to views from Beijing. We base our assessment on these conversations as well as other public and private sources.

There are three key factors in considering how today’s conflict might escalate to war: Russia’s decision making, Russia’s politics and U.S.-Russian dynamics.

With respect to Russia’s decision making, Putin is recognized both inside and outside the country as the unilateral decider. All available evidence suggests that he relies on a very narrow circle of advisers, none of whom is prepared to challenge his assumptions. This process is unlikely to help Putin make informed decisions that fully take account of the real costs and benefits.

Moreover, Russia’s political environment, at both the elite and public levels, encourages Putin to escalate demands rather than make concessions. At the elite level, Russia’s establishment falls into two camps: a pragmatic camp, which is currently dominant thanks principally to Putin’s support, and a hard-line camp. The Russian public largely supports the hard-line camp, whom one Putin adviser called the “hotheads.” Given Russian politics today, Putin is personally responsible for the fact that Russia’s revanchist policies are not more aggressive. Put bluntly, Putin is not the hardest of the hard-liners in Russia.

While none of the “hotheads” criticize Putin, even in private conversations, a growing number of military and national-security officials favor a considerably tougher approach to the United States and Europe in the Ukraine crisis. This is apparent in their attacks on such relatively moderate cabinet officers as Vice Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov. From their perspective, the moderates fail to comprehend the gravity of the U.S.-European challenge to Russia and hold futile hopes that things can change for the better without Russia surrendering to an unacceptable and degrading foreign diktat. They recommend shifting the game to areas of Russian strength—by using military force to advance Russian interests as Putin did in Crimea and to pressure the West into accepting Moscow on its own terms.

An increasingly nationalistic Russian public also supports this “challenge the main enemy” approach, which draws its language and inspiration from former Soviet leader Yuri Andropov. Putin has clearly contributed to growing nationalist sentiments through his patriotic rhetoric and his harsh indictment of Western behavior. But he was pushing on an open door due to widespread disillusionment with Western treatment of Russia as a Cold War loser rather than an ally in building a new world order. What’s more, ordinary Russians may have gone further in their truculent views than Putin himself. Not long ago, Russia’s media widely reported a warning from the recently dismissed rebel commander Igor Strelkov, who said that by being too indecisive, Putin would satisfy no one and would suffer the same fate as Slobodan Milosevic—rejection by liberals and nationalists alike. More recently, Strelkov has reportedly placed Putin’s portrait prominently in his office, explaining that in his view the Russian president “understood that all compromise with the West is fruitless” and that he is “reestablishing Russian sovereignty.” Strelkov often exaggerates, but his views reflect the frustrations of Russia’s influential nationalist coalition.

Added support for a more muscular assertiveness comes from an expanding group of military officers and civilians who believe that Russia can brandish its nuclear weapons to good effect. According to this group, Russia’s nuclear arsenal is not just its ultimate security blanket but also a sword it can wield to coerce others who have no nuclear weapons, as well as those who are unwilling to think the unthinkable of actually exploding a nuclear bomb. Putin appeared to endorse this view in his controversial Sochi speech last September when he said:


Nikita Khrushchev hammered the desk with his shoe at the UN. And the whole world, primarily the United States and NATO, thought, “This Nikita is best left alone, he might just go and fire a missile. We better show some respect for them.” Now the Soviet Union is gone and there is no need to take into account Russia’s views. It has gone through transformation during the collapse of the Soviet Union, and we can do whatever we like, disregarding all rules and regulations.

The director of the television network Rossiya Segodnya, Dmitry Kiselyov, has been more explicit, repeatedly warning, “Russia is the only country in the world that is realistically capable of turning the United States into radioactive ash.” Russia’s 2014 Military Doctrine emphasizes that Russia will use nuclear weapons not only in response to nuclear attacks but also “in the case of aggression against the Russian Federation with the use of conventional weapons.” And, as a recent report of the European Leadership Network notes, there have been almost forty incidents in the past year in which Russian forces engaged in a pattern of provocations that, if continued, “could prove catastrophic.”
 
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