The spending plan envisages Russia returning its focus to the navy, equipping its new nuclear submarines with Bulava ballistic missiles that have been under development since the late 1990s, Deputy Defense Minister Vladimir Popovkin was quoted as saying.
“The main task is the modernization of our armed forces. Nineteen trillion rubles ($600 billion) will be allocated for this,” Russian news agencies quoted him as saying.
The procurement drive, which has been repeatedly flagged by the Kremlin, is a key element of landmark military reforms which aims to revamp the armed forces’ Soviet-era structures to cope with the demands of modern warfare.
Eight nuclear submarines, 600 jets and 1,000 helicopters feature in plans to renew Russia’s military by 2020.
One hundred warships are also due to be bought in, including two helicopter carriers, in addition to two already being purchased from France.
The submarines will carry the Bulava missile, despite recent test failures, BBC reported.
Analysts say the ambitious program only makes sense if the military upgrades its training and recruitment.
A painful drive to streamline the armed forces is already under way, with up to 200,000 officers losing their jobs and nine out of every 10 army units disbanded, the Associated Press news agency said.
If the renewal is a success, it will leave Russia less reliant on the nuclear arsenal it inherited from the USSR.
“Russia needs a professional non-commissioned officer corps to train specialists who can really put these arms to effective use,” Pavel Felgenhauer, an independent military analyst, said.
“This spending necessitates a whole new kind of military.”
Last week, Russian Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin announced that spending on defense development would triple from 0.5% of GDP to 1.5% from next year.
“The main task is the modernization of our armed forces,” Popovkin said on Thursday.
Much of the new spending will go on Russia’s long under-funded navy. Apart from the submarines, 35 corvettes and 15 frigates will be ordered.
Russia has already ordered two French-built Mistral helicopter carriers, allowing it to rapidly deploy hundreds of troops and dozens of armored vehicles on foreign soil.
Ten divisions equipped with the new S-500 anti-missile system are set to become the backbone of the country’s missile defenses.
New aircraft will include Su-34 and Su-35 fighters, and Mi-26 transport and Mi-8 gunship helicopters, AP adds.
Repeated failures of the Bulava intercontinental ballistic missile caused embarrassment for Russia, though two successful tests were reportedly conducted last year.
Russia launches $600bn defense spending drive
Publication Date:
Fri, 2011-02-25 00:31
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