Draft Russian Military Doctrine
The draft military doctrine
document updates the 1993 doctrine. It outlines the role of the
country's authorities in ensuring defence and, if necessary,
preparing for and waging war, although it stresses that the Russian
military doctrine is strictly defensive. The duties of military and
civilian authorities and the armed forces are described for various
scenarios from peacetime to total war. There are also descriptions
of the environments in which the Russian armed forces might have to
operate, both at home and abroad, ranging from civil disorder to
local and global conflicts and to international peacekeeping. The
draft doctrine lists factors that the Russian Federation perceives
as potential threats, both internal and external. It states support
for a multipolar world, in preference to a unipolar world dominated
by a single superpower that is quick to resort to military force and
bypasses the UN and other international security bodies when it
feels like it. Russia's commitment to its nuclear deterrent is
confirmed, but tempered by a no-first-strike policy and the stated
desire for the eventual global abolition of nuclear weapons. The
commitment to military reform is emphasized, with continued use of
conscription but a gradual shift towards a professional army.
Introduction
The Russian Federation military doctrine (hereinafter "military
doctrine") represents a systemized aggregate of fundamental official
views (guidelines), concentrated in a single document, on preventing
wars and armed conflicts, on the nature and methods of waging them,
and on organizing the activities of the state, society and citizens
to ensure the military security of the Russian Federation and its
allies. The military doctrine is a document of the transition
period, the period of establishment of democratic statehood and of a
multistructured economy, of reorganization of the Russian Federation
military organization, and of a dynamic transformation of the system
of international relations. The provisions of the military doctrine
as a component part of the set of regulatory legal, conceptual and
political programme documents regulating and organizing military
security activities are binding on all bodies of executive authority
and management, enterprises, establishments and organizations to
which Russian Federation legislation has assigned responsibility,
within the scope of their obligations and powers, for organizing and
accomplishing military organizational development and performing
missions of defence and security of the Russian Federation and its
allies.
The military doctrine elaborates on the 1993 "Basic Provisions of
the Russian Federation Military Doctrine" and, as applied to the
military sphere, specifies the guidelines of the Russian Federation
National Security Concept. It is based on a comprehensive assessment
of the status of the military-political situation; on a strategic
forecast of its development; on a scientifically substantiated
determination of current and future missions, objective requirements
and real capabilities for ensuring the Russian Federation's military
security; and on conclusions from a systemic analysis of the content
and nature of modern wars and armed conflicts and of the domestic
and foreign experience of military organizational development and
military art.
The Russian Federation military doctrine is strictly defensive,
which is predetermined by integrally combining in its content a
consistent adherence to peace with firm resolve to defend national
interests and guarantee the military security of the Russian
Federation and it allies. The structure of the military doctrine
includes three interrelated parts: military-political principles,
military-strategic principles and military-economic principles of
the military security of the Russian Federation and its allies.
Military-political principles are determined with respect to the
other parts of military doctrine. The legal basis of the military
doctrine consists of the Russian Federation Constitution, federal
laws and other regulatory legal instruments of the Russian
Federation, as well as the Russian Federation's international
obligations in military security. The military doctrine is
implemented by unified, centralized state and military management
and by coordinated activities, within the scope of their competence,
of all branches and bodies of state authority, public associations
and citizens for accomplishing a set of political-diplomatic,
economic, social, information, legal, military and other measures
aimed at ensuring the military security of the Russian Federation
and its allies.
1. MILITARY-POLITICAL PRINCIPLES
The military-political situation
1.1. The status and prospects for development of the present-day
military-political situation are determined by the opposition of two
trends: on the one hand, a trend toward establishing a unipolar
world based on the domination of one superpower and on the use of
military force to resolve key problems of world policy; and on the
other hand, a trend toward forming a multipolar world based on the
equal rights of peoples and nations, on consideration for and
assurance of a balance of the national interests of states, and on
implementation of fundamental rules of international law. The
Russian Federation proceeds from the assumption that social
progress, stability and international security can be ensured only
within the framework of a multipolar world, and it will assist in
its formation in every way possible.
1.2. Basic features of the military political situation:
diminished threat of initiation of world war, including a nuclear
war;
of machinery for maintaining international peace and security on a
global and regional level;
and strengthening of regional centres of power;
strengthening of national-ethnic and religious extremism;
activation of separatism;
escalation of local wars and armed conflicts;
strengthening of a regional arms race;
of nuclear and other kinds of weapons of mass destruction and their
delivery systems;
of the information war;
in scale and deepening of the transnational nature of organized
crime, terrorism, and the illegal weapons and drugs trade.
1.3. Basic destabilizing factors of the military-political
situation:
of extremist national-ethnic, religious separatist, and terrorist
movements, organizations and structures;
of information and other (including nontraditional) means and
technologies for achieving destructive military-political goals;
diminished effectiveness of existing machinery for ensuring
international security, above all the United Nations and OSCE;
the practice of applying military force in circumvention of
generally recognized principles and rules of international law
without UN Security Council sanction;
violation of the system of international treaties and agreements in
the arms limitation and disarmament area. Basic threats to military
security
1.4. Under present conditions the threat of direct military
aggression against the Russian Federation and its allies in
traditional forms is being averted by following an active foreign-
policy course and by maintaining a sufficient level of Russian
military potential, including the potential of nuclear deterrence.
Meanwhile, a number of potential (including large-scale) external
and internal threats to the military security of the Russian
Federation and its allies remain and are strengthening in a number
of directions.
1.5. Basic external threats:
claims on the Russian Federation;
in Russian Federation internal affairs;
to ignore (or infringe on) Russian Federation interests in resolving
international security problems and to oppose strengthening [of the
Russian Federation] as one of the influential centres of a
multipolar world;
of armed conflicts, above all near borders of the Russian Federation
and its allies;
creation (build-up) of groupings of troops (forces) leading to a
disturbance of the existing balance of forces near borders of the
Russian Federation and of its allies and in seas adjoining their
territory;
of military blocs and alliances to the detriment of military
security of the Russian Federation and its allies;
of foreign troops (without UN Security Council sanction) to the
territory of contiguous states friendly with the Russian Federation;
equipment, support and training of armed units and groups on the
territory of other states with the goal of redeploying them for
operations on the territory of the Russian Federation and its
allies;
attacks (armed provocations) against Russian Federation military
installations located on the territory of foreign states as well as
against installations and structures on the Russian Federation State
Border and on the borders of its allies;
aimed at undermining global and regional stability, including by
hindering the operation of Russian state and military command and
control systems, systems supporting the functioning and combat
stability of strategic nuclear forces, and missile attack warning,
ABM defence, and space surveillance systems; [and hindering the
operation] of nuclear munitions storage facilities, installations of
atomic power engineering and of the atomic and chemical industry,
and other potentially dangerous installations;
(information-technical, information-psychological etc.) operations
hostile toward the Russian Federation and its allies;
discrimination against and suppression of rights, freedoms and
lawful interests of Russian Federation citizens in foreign states;
terrorism.
1.6. Basic internal threats:
at the violent overthrow of the constitutional system;
activities of extremist national-ethnic, religious separatist and
terrorist movements, organizations and structures aimed at
disrupting state unity and territorial integrity and at
destabilizing the internal situation in the Russian Federation;
planning, preparation and accomplishment of actions to disrupt and
disorganize the functioning of bodies of state authority and
management, and of attacks on state, national economic, military,
life support and information infrastructure installations;
equipment, training and functioning of unlawful armed units;
proliferation (circulation) on Russian Federation territory of
weapons, ammunition, explosives and other means which can be used
for carrying out sabotage, terrorist acts, and other unlawful
actions;
crime, terrorism, smuggling and other unlawful activity on a scale
threatening Russian Federation military security. Ensuring military
security
1.7. Ensuring the Russian Federation's military security is a most
important direction of state activity. The main purpose of ensuring
military security is to create favourable external conditions for
the existence and progress of the Russian Federation and to prevent
military aggression by maintaining the state's military might at a
level guaranteeing an adequate response to existing and potential
military threats to the national interests and security of the
Russian Federation and its allies.
The Russian Federation views assurance of its military security
within the context of building a democratic state governed by law;
carrying out socioeconomic reforms; affirming the principles of
equitable partnership, mutual advantage and good-neighbourliness in
international relations; consistently forming a general,
comprehensive system of international security; and preserving and
strengthening universal peace.
The Russian Federation:
from the immutability of the system of generally recognized
principles and rules of international law and steadfastly follows
provisions of the UN Charter, the 1975 and 1992 Helsinki Agreements,
the 1990 Paris Charter, and other international treaties and
agreements to which it is a party;
not be first to begin military operations against a state (or a
group or coalition of states) if it (or its allies) are not
subjected to armed aggression;
retains nuclear power status for deterring (preventing) aggression
against it or its allies;
priority importance to strengthening the collective security system
within the framework of the Commonwealth of Independent States based
on the development and strengthening of the Collective Security
Treaty;
as partners all states whose policy is not detrimental to its
national interests and security and does not contradict the UN
Charter;
preference to political-diplomatic and other nonmilitary means of
preventing, containing and neutralizing military threats within the
framework of systems of general and comprehensive collective
security at regional levels and at a global level;
complies with existing treaties in the arms limitation, reduction
and elimination area and assists in implementing them and ensuring
the regime specified by them;
fulfils its interrelated obligations on strategic offensive arms and
ABM defence and, on a bilateral basis with the United States and on
a multilateral basis with other nuclear states, is prepared for a
further reduction of its nuclear weapons to minimal levels meeting
requirements of strategic stability and preservation of the balance
of strategic arms as a guarantee against a return to a global
confrontation of force and to the arms race, on condition of the
adherence to these goals of other states as well, above all the
United States, and of the preservation and strengthening of the 1972
ABM Treaty;
for making the nonproliferation regime universal, for a halt and
comprehensive ban on tests and, as the ultimate goal in the future,
for the total elimination of nuclear weapons;
in every possible expansion of military confidence-building
measures, including a mutual exchange of military information and
the coordination of military doctrines, military organizational
development plans and measures, and military activities.
1.8. The Russian Federation's military security is ensured by the
sum total of forces, means and resources at its disposal .
1.9. Basic principles for ensuring military security:
combination of firm, centralized leadership of the state's military
organization with civilian control over its activities;
effectiveness of forecasting and timeliness of discovering and
classifying military threats, and adequacy of the response to them;
sufficiency and rational use of forces, means and resources
necessary for ensuring military security;
conformity of the level of readiness, training and support of the
state's military organization to military security needs;
avoidance of detriment to international security and to the national
security of other countries.
1.10. Basic tasks for ensuring military security:
a) in peacetime:
and implementing a unified state policy for military security;
and upgrading a system of defence of the Russian Federation and its
allies;
security and protection of Russian Federation citizens;
creating favourable foreign policy conditions;
maintaining and strengthening friendly, good-neighbour, partner
(allied) relations with neighbouring and other states;
(deterring, including through nuclear deterrence) aggression or the
threat of aggression on any scale against the Russian Federation and
its allies by any state or group of states;
(if necessary) Russian Federation political actions by taking
appropriate military measures and achieving a naval presence;
foreign states' fulfillment of their arms-limitation obligations in
the area of arms limitation, preservation [word as received] and
elimination, and of strengthening confidence-building measures;
supporting and qualitatively improving the Russian Federation Armed
Forces and other components of the state military organization, and
maintaining their readiness for coordinated actions to prevent,
repel and stop external and internal threats;
the economic, technological and defence-industrial base; increasing
the mobilization readiness of the economy; organizing preparation of
bodies of state authority and management, enterprises,
establishments, organizations, and the population of the country to
perform tasks of ensuring military security and conducting
territorial and civil defence;
internal political stability and protecting the constitutional
system and the integrity and inviolability of Russian Federation
territory;
Russian Federation installations and structures in the World Ocean,
in outer space and on the territory of foreign states, and shipping,
fishing and other forms of activity in the contiguous sea zone and
distant areas of the World Ocean;
securing and defending the Russian Federation State Border, within
limits of border territory, airspace and the underwater medium, and
the exclusive economic zone and continental shelf and their natural
resources;
the necessary military infrastructure;
and accomplishing society's active support of measures for ensuring
military security;
readiness for participation and participating in peacekeeping
activities.
b) during a time of threat and at the beginning of war (armed
conflict):
a timely declaration of a state of war; introducing martial law or a
state of emergency in the country or in individual areas; conducting
full or partial strategic deployment of the Russian Federation Armed
Forces, other troops, military units and entities (or a portion of
them); and placing them in readiness to perform missions;
the fulfilment of Russian Federation obligations to comply with
international treaties on arms limitation, reduction and
elimination;
actions of bodies of state authority and management, institutions of
local government, public organizations and citizens to repel and
stop aggression and to achieve the goals of war (or armed conflict);
and conducting armed, political-diplomatic, information, economic
and other kinds of warfare on a coordinated basis;
placing in force regulatory legal instruments of wartime; adopting
and implementing decisions for preparing and conducting military
operations;
placing the economy of the country or of its individual sectors or
organizations, and transportation and lines of communication onto a
war footing;
and accomplishing territorial and civil defence measures;
Russian Federation allies and mobilizing their capacities for
achieving joint goals in war (or armed conflict);
preventing the involvement of other states in the war (or armed
conflict) on the side of the aggressor;
the capabilities of the United Nations and other international
organizations to compel an aggressor to terminate a war (or armed
conflict) at the earliest possible stage and to restore
international stability, security and peace.
1.11. The qualitative improvement in the means, forms and methods of
warfare, the increase in their geographical scope and seriousness of
its consequences, extension into new areas of activity, and the
possibility of achieving military-political goals by indirect,
noncontact actions predetermine the special danger of modern wars to
peoples and states and to international stability in the world, and
make it vital to take exhaustive steps for their prevention and for
peaceful settlement of contradictions at early stages of their
appearance and development. Leadership in Ensuring Military Security
1.12. Activity to ensure the Russian Federation's military security
is headed by the president of the Russian Federation/Supreme
Commander of the Russian Federation Armed Forces.
1.13. The Russian Federation government directs the activity of
subordinate federal executive authorities for ensuring military
security, [it directs] their mobilization training, it organizes the
equipping of the Armed Forces, other troops, military units and
entities of the Russian Federation with arms and with military and
special equipment, [it organizes] the provision of materiel,
resources and services, and it exercises overall direction over
operational preparation of Russian Federation territory in the
interests of defence.
1.14. Other federal bodies of state authority as well as bodies of
state authority of Russian Federation components and institutions of
local government, within the scope of their rights, duties and
powers specified by Russian Federation federal legislation, organize
and bear total responsibility for the fulfilment of missions
assigned to them for ensuring military security. Enterprises,
establishments, organizations, public associations and citizens of
the Russian Federation participate in ensuring military security.
1.15. Command and control of the Armed Forces, other troops,
military units and entities of the Russian Federation is exercised
by the heads of corresponding federal executive authorities.
1.16. The Russian Federation Ministry of Defence coordinates the
activity of federal executive authorities in matters of defence, the
development of concepts of organizational development and evolution
of components of the state military organization, and orders for
arms and military equipment for them; and it develops a federal
state programme of armaments and of the development of military
equipment, as well as proposals for the state defence procurements.
1.17. The Russian Federation Armed Forces General Staff is the basic
entity for operational command and control of the Russian Federation
Armed Forces; it coordinates the development of plans for
organizational development and employment of components of the state
military organization and their operational and mobilization
training; it organizes and accomplishes strategic planning for
employment of the Armed Forces, other troops, military units and
entities, operational preparation of Russian Federation territory in
the interests of defence, and coordination in fulfilling tasks of
ensuring military security.
1.18. Headquarters of military districts (operational-strategic
commands) exercise command and control of cross-service groupings of
general-purpose troops (forces) as well as of other troops, military
units and entities within established boundaries of responsibility
with consideration of a unified system of military-administrative
division of Russian Federation territory.
1.19. Appropriate unified military command and control entities are
established for command and control of coalition groupings of troops
(forces) by a coordinated decision of supreme bodies of state
authority of coalition member countries .
1.20. For centralized leadership in ensuring the Russian
Federation's military security, there is unified strategic and
operational planning of military organizational development and
employment of the Armed Forces, other troops, military units and
entities in the interests of defence, as well as planning which
envisages the development of long-term (10-15 years), medium-term
(4-5 years) and short-term (1-2 years) documents based on a specific
programme approach.
1.21. The procedure for organizing leadership in ensuring the
country's military security in a special period, and the creation
and functioning of wartime bodies of state and military command and
control are regulated by appropriate legislative and other
regulatory legal instruments of the Russian Federation. state
military organization
1.22. The Russian Federation establishes a state military
organization to ensure its military security. The state military
organization includes the Russian Federation Armed Forces, other
troops, military units and entities which, in accordance with the
Russian Federation Constitution, federal laws and other regulatory
legal instruments of the Russian Federation, are intended for
performing missions of ensuring military security by military means
and methods, and it also [includes] entities for command and control
of them.
1.23. The Russian Federation Armed Forces are the nucleus of the
state military organization and the foundation for ensuring military
security.
1.24. The Russian Federation Armed Forces are equipped with nuclear
weapons. The Russian Federation considers nuclear weapons to be an
effective factor of deterrence against aggression, [a factor]
ensuring the military security of the Russian Federation and its
allies, and [a factor] maintaining international stability and
peace. The Russian Federation proceeds from the need to possess a
nuclear deterrent capable of ensuring, on a guaranteed basis,
infliction of intended damage on any aggressor state or coalition of
states under any conditions. The Russian Federation will not employ
nuclear weapons against states parties to the Treaty on the
Nonproliferation of Nuclear Weapons that do not possess nuclear
weapons, except in case of an invasion or any other attack on the
Russian Federation, its territory, its Armed Forces or other troops,
its allies, or on a state with which it has a security obligation,
carried out or supported by such a state that does not possess
nuclear weapons, together with or in the presence of allied
obligations with a state possessing nuclear weapons. The Russian
Federation retains for itself the right to use nuclear weapons in
response to the use of nuclear and other kinds of weapons of mass
destruction against it and its allies, and in response to wide-scale
aggression using conventional weapons in situations critical to the
national security of the Russian Federation and its allies.
Organizational development and training of the state military
organization.
1.25. The main goal of organizational development and training of
the state military organization is to ensure guaranteed defence of
the national interests and military security of the Russian
Federation and its allies.
1.26. Basic principles of organizational development and training of
the state military organization:
consideration of conclusions from analysis of present and forecast
military-political trends;
of command and control;
one-man command on a legal basis;
of the level of combat and mobilization readiness and training of
military command and control entities and of troops (forces), of
their structure, order of battle and numerical strength of the
trained reserve, and of stockpiles of materiel and resources to
missions of ensuring military security;
of training and education;
of general civilian political rights and freedoms and assurance of
servicemen's social status and standard of living.
Organizational development and training of components of the state
military organization - the Armed Forces, other troops, military
units and entities - are accomplished in accordance with legal
instruments governing their activity and under coordinated and
agreed programmes and plans.
1.27. The main programmes of organizational development and training
of the state military organization:
and improvement of a unified system of command and control of the
military organization;
development and improvement of troops (forces) ensuring strategic
deterrence (including nuclear);
equipment, comprehensive support and training of permanent-combat-
readiness formations and units of general-purpose forces for
performing deterrence missions and conducting combat operations in
local wars and armed conflicts.
1.28. The main directions of organizational development and training
of the state military organization:
the scope and content of missions of the state military organization
and [bringing] the structure, composition and numerical strength of
its components into line with real needs for ensuring military
security;
and improving the qualitative level and effectiveness of the system
of state and military command and control;
military-economic support;
upgrading strategic planning;
the effectiveness of systems for personnel training, military
education, operational and combat training, servicemen's education,
all kinds of support, and military science;
upgrading the system of manning (based on a composite contract-draft
principle, with a consistent increase in the proportion of
servicemen performing contract military service as necessary
socioeconomic conditions are created);
the effectiveness of the system for maintaining and repairing arms
and military equipment;
orderliness, law and order, and military discipline;
an active state policy for strengthening the prestige of military
service and preparing citizens for it;
developing international military (military-political) and military-
technical cooperation;
the regulatory legal base of organizational development, evolution
and employment of the military organization and its legal relations
with civilian society and the state.
1.29. Radical changes in the military-political situation, in the
content of missions, and in conditions for ensuring military
security of the Russian Federation determine the basic content of
comprehensive military reform - a component part and a priority
mission of the present stage of military organizational development.
An interrelated, coordinated reform of the Russian Federation Armed
Forces and other components of the state military organization is
carried out within the scope of military reform.
2. MILITARY-STRATEGIC PRINCIPLES
Nature of Wars and Armed Conflicts
2.1. The Russian Federation maintains readiness to wage wars and
armed conflicts exclusively to prevent, repel and stop aggression;
to protect independence, sovereignty, state and territorial
integrity; and to ensure military security of the Russian Federation
and its allies.
2.2. The nature of modern wars is determined by their military-
political goals, the means of achieving these goals, and the scale
of military operations. In accordance with this, a modern war can be
as follows:
terms of military-political goals - just (for the side subjected to
aggression); unjust (for the side which undertook aggression);
terms of the means used - nuclear (with use of nuclear and other
kinds of weapons of mass destruction); conventional (with use only
of conventional weapons);
terms of scale - local; regional; global.
2.3. Basic general features of modern war:
to all spheres of mankind's vital activities and existence;
use of indirect strategic operations (political-diplomatic efforts
to prevent wars and armed conflicts; economic sanctions; means of
information warfare; sea, air and land blockade of communications
routes; show of force etc.);
information preparation (information blockade, expansion,
aggression) and the confusion of public opinion of certain states
and of the world community as a whole;
of the system of state and military command and control;
blocking (disabling) of command and control and fire control
systems;
of noncontact and other forms and methods of operations (including
nontraditional), and of long-range fire and electronic engagement;
use of the newest highly effective systems of arms and military
equipment (including those based on new physical principles);
consequences of damage (destruction) to power engineering
enterprises (above all atomic), of chemical and other dangerous
industries, of the infrastructure, of lines of communication and of
life support facilities;
probability of the involvement of new states, of the escalation of
warfare, and of an expansion in the scale and spectrum of means
being used;
of irregular (including unlawful) armed units along with regular
ones.
2.4. A world war can result from an escalation of an armed conflict
or of a local or regional war, and from the involvement in them of a
considerable number (or the majority) of states from different
regions of the world. A conventional world war will be characterized
by a high probability of escalating into a nuclear war with the
inevitable mass victims and destruction and with disastrous
consequences for civilization and for the foundations of mankind's
vital activities and existence. In a world war, both nuclear as well
as conventional, the sides will set radical military-political
goals. It will require total mobilization of all material and
spiritual resources of the states involved. The Russian Federation
consistently and firmly strives to achieve the creation of an
effective system of political-legal, organizational-technical and
other international safeguards for preventing a new world war in any
of its forms.
2.5. A regional war can be waged with the participation of two or
more states (groups of states) of a region by national or coalition
armed forces using both conventional as well as nuclear weapons. A
regional war can result from an escalation of a local war or armed
conflict or it may be preceded by a period of threat. Military
operations in a conventional regional war can be characterized by:
of the sides' operational-strategic goals;
warfare in all spheres;
operations of groupings of a coalition makeup;
use of variously based precision weapons and of means of electronic
warfare and other modern kinds of warfare;
destruction of troops (forces), rear and economic installations, and
lines of communication throughout the territory of opposing sides;
conduct of an air operation, during which strategic missions will be
executed that are capable of determining the course and outcome of
the war.
A conventional regional war, if nuclear states or their allies
participate in it, will be characterized by the constant threat of
use of nuclear weapons. In a regional war the sides will pursue
important military-political goals. It will require total strategic
deployment of the armed forces and the economy and a high exertion
of spiritual forces of the main states involved.
2.6. The goals of a world (regional) war can be achieved, and their
outcome predetermined, within the scope of the initial period. The
basic content of the initial period of war will be an intensive
armed struggle with the goal of repelling (or stopping) aggression,
and also a struggle to seize the strategic initiative, to preserve
stable state and military command and control, to achieve
superiority in the information sphere, and to win (hold) air
superiority.
2.7. A conventional world (regional) war can be protracted . In this
case its goal will be achieved in subsequent and concluding periods.
2.8. A local war can be waged by a grouping of troops (forces)
deployed in the conflict area, reinforced if necessary by the
redeployment of troops, forces and assets from other axes and by a
partial strategic deployment. In a local war the sides will pursue
limited military-political goals.
2.9. A local war is characterized by:
of the sides' limited forces and assets;
military operations within the boundaries of opposing states;
centre-of-resistance combat operations;
acute information opposition.
2.10. An armed conflict can result from attempts to resolve
national-ethnic, religious and other nonvital contradictions using
means of warfare, as a rule without carrying out a strategic
deployment. An armed conflict can arise in the forms of an armed
incident, armed action, and other armed clashes on a limited scale.
A border conflict is a special form of armed conflict. An armed
conflict can be international (with the participation of two or more
states) or noninternational and internal (with the conduct of armed
opposition within limits of one state's territory). In an armed
conflict the sides pursue local military-political goals.
2.11. An armed conflict is characterized by:
involvement and vulnerability of the local population;
use of irregular units;
wide use of sabotage and terrorist actions;
blockade and disruption of lines of communication;
complexity of morale and the psychological atmosphere among troops;
diversion of considerable forces and assets to ensure security of
movement routes and of disposition areas and locations of troops
(forces);
danger of transformation into a local war (international armed
conflict) or civil war (internal armed conflict).
Provisional unified groupings of troops (forces) (from different
departments) and entities for command and control of them may be
established for performing missions in an internal armed conflict.
Principles of employing the armed forces and other troops
2.12. The Russian Federation considers legitimate the use of the
Armed Forces, other troops, military units and entities (of the
Armed Forces and other troops) and of all components of the state's
military organization, and the use of all forces and assets at its
disposal, including nuclear (with consideration of the nature and
scale of the military threat) to repel and stop aggression against
the Russian Federation and its allies. The Armed Forces and other
troops also can be employed for containing and neutralizing
anticonstitutional actions and unlawful armed violence that threaten
the sovereignty, territorial integrity and state unity of the
Russian Federation, and for performing missions in conducting
peacekeeping operations in accordance with UN Security Council
decisions and international obligations of the Russian Federation.
2.13. The Armed Forces and other troops are employed within the
framework of unified strategic planning.
2.14. The goal of employing the Armed Forces and other troops is as
follows: in a conventional world (regional) in internal armed
conflicts - to defeat and eliminate unlawful armed units and bandit
and terrorist groups and organizations, restore law and order,
ensure public safety and stability, provide necessary assistance to
the population and create conditions for a full-scale settlement
based on the Russian Federation's Constitution and Russian
Federation legislation in force.
2.15. Basic forms of employing the Armed Forces and other troops: a)
strategic operations, operations, and combat operations - in a world
war and regional wars; b) operations and combat operations - in
local wars and armed conflicts; c) peacekeeping operations.
2.16. The Armed Forces and other troops of the Russian Federation
must be ready to repel an attack, inflict damage on the aggressor,
and conduct active operations, both defensive as well as offensive,
with any variation of the initiation and conduct of wars and armed
conflicts and under conditions of massive enemy use of modern and
advanced weapons, including weapons of mass destruction in all their
varieties. The Russian Federation Armed Forces must be capable, with
the peacetime order of battle, of ensuring reliable protection for
the country against aerospace attack, the performance, along with
other troops, of missions to repel aggression in a local war (armed
conflict), and the deployment of a grouping of troops (forces) for
performing missions in a regional war. At the same time, the Russian
Federation Armed Forces must ensure Russian Federation
accomplishment of peacekeeping activities both independently as well
as in the makeup of international organizations. In the interests of
ensuring national security, the Russian Federation may station
limited military contingents (military bases) on a treaty basis in
strategically important regions of the world to ensure readiness to
perform its obligations, assist in forming and maintaining a stable
military-strategic balance of forces, and react adequately to the
appearance of crisis situations in their initial stage.
Missions of the Armed Forces and Other Troops
2.17. Basic missions for ensuring military security:
firm direction of staffs and troops (forces);
discovery of a threatening development of the military-political
situation and of the preparation of armed attack on the Russian
Federation and its allies;
the composition, status, combat and mobilization readiness, and
training of strategic nuclear forces, of forces and assets
supporting their functioning and employment, and of command and
control systems at a level guaranteeing infliction of intended
damage on an aggressor under any situation conditions;
the combat potential, combat and mobilization readiness and training
of peacetime general-purpose groupings of troops (forces) at a level
ensuring repulse of aggression on a local scale;
arms, military (special) equipment and supplies in readiness for
combat use;
of alert duty (combat patrol duty) missions by dedicated (assigned)
troops, forces and assets;
complete, quality fulfillment of plans and programs of operational,
combat and mobilization training and education of troops (forces);
ensure readiness for strategic deployment within the scope of state
measures for transferring the country from a peacetime to wartime
footing;
the State Border;
and maintain conditions for security of economic activities of the
Russian Federation in the territorial sea and exclusive economic
zone as well as in distant areas of the World Ocean;
important state installations;
prevent and stop sabotage and terrorist acts;
prevent emergency situations and mop up in their aftermath;
organize civil and territorial defence;
for route and facility repair, security and defence and the
restoration of lines of communication;
for information security. All missions of ensuring military security
are performed by the Armed Forces and other troops in a coordinated
manner, in close interworking and in accordance with their functions
as regulated by Russian legislation in force.
2.18. Basic missions of repelling (stopping) armed attack
(aggression) on the Russian Federation and its allies:
or total strategic deployment;
operations, operations and combat operations (including joint ones
with allied states) to rout invaders and destroy groupings of
aggressor troops (forces) that have been established (or are being
established) in their basing and concentration areas and on lines of
communication;
readiness for employment and employ the potential of nuclear
deterrence (in instances envisaged by military doctrine and
according to prescribed procedure
and neutralize border armed conflicts;
a regime of martial law (state of emergency);
the population and installations of the economy and infrastructure
against the effect of enemy weapons;
allied obligations.
The performance of missions to repel (stop) an armed attack
(aggression) is organized and accomplished in accordance with the
Plan for Employment of the Russian Federation Armed Forces, the
Russian Federation Armed Forces Mobilization Plan, Russian
Federation presidential edicts, orders and directives of the Supreme
Commander of the Russian Federation Armed Forces, and other
regulatory legal, planning and directive documents.
2.19. Basic missions in peacekeeping operations:
armed groupings of sides in conflict;
conditions for delivery of humanitarian aid to the civilian
population and for its evacuation from the conflict zone;
off the conflict area with the goal of ensuring fulfilment of
sanctions adopted by the international community;
preconditions for a political settlement.
Performance of missions in peacekeeping operations is assigned to
the Russian Federation Armed Forces with the involvement of other
troops, military units and entities if necessary. Specially assigned
formations and units are detailed to prepare for these missions.
Along with training for employment for their immediate purpose, they
train under a special programme. The Russian Federation provides
logistic and technical support, training, preparation, planning and
operational command and control of Russian contingents in accordance
with standards and procedures of the United Nations, OSCE and CIS.
2.20. Basic missions in internal armed conflicts:
and eliminate unlawful armed units, bandit and terrorist groups and
organizations, and their bases, training centres, depots and lines
of communication;
law and order;
ensure public safety and stability;
maintain a legal regime of a state of emergency in the conflict
area;
contain and seal off a conflict area;
stop armed clashes and separate opposing sides;
measures to disarm (confiscate weapons from) the population in a
conflict area;
reinforce the protection of public order and safety in areas
adjoining the conflict area.
Performance of missions to avert, stop, localize, and seal off areas
of internal armed conflicts and destroy unlawful armed units, bands
and terrorist groups is assigned to unified groupings of troops
(forces) (from different departments) and entities for their command
and control established on a provisional basis.
2.21. Forces and assets of the Armed Forces and other troops of the
Russian Federation may be enlisted to assist bodies of state
authority, institutions of local government and the population in
relief operations following accidents, disasters and natural
disasters.
2.22. Groupings of troops (forces) on Russian Federation territory
are established to perform missions assigned to the Armed Forces and
other troops with consideration of the following:
of potential military danger on specific strategic axes;
nature of mutual relations of the Russian Federation with contiguous
states;
of industrial areas, areas of strategic resources and especially
important installations vital to the Russian Federation;
possibility of strategic deployment on threatened axes with a
maximum decrease in volumes of movements, as well as [the
possibility] of an interregional manoeuvre;
possibility of a timely withdrawal of troops (forces) and logistic
and technical support reserves from under probable missile/air
strikes;
conditions for billeting and support to vital activities of troops
and for resolving social and everyday problems;
and status of a base for mobilization deployment;
status of socio-political situation in specific regions.
2.23. The Armed Forces and other troops of the Russian Federation
may be stationed outside its territory as part of joint or Russian
groupings and of separate bases (installations). The conditions for
such stationing are defined by corresponding international-law
documents.
2.24. When composite military units of the Commonwealth of
Independent States are established, they are manned by servicemen of
member states in accordance with their national legislation and
agreements adopted among the states. Servicemen who are Russian
Federation citizens are sent to man such units on a contract basis
as a rule. Russian Federation Armed Forces units located on the
territory of foreign states, regardless of the conditions of
stationing, are part of the Russian Federation Armed Forces and act
in accordance with the procedure established in them, with
consideration of requirements of the UN Charter, UN Security Council
resolutions, and bilateral and multilateral treaties of the Russian
Federation.
2.25. Operational preparation of the territory of the Russian
Federation is accomplished under the direction of the Russian
Federation government and on the basis of the Federal State
Programme for establishing and developing the state's military
infrastructure to support strategic deployment, the conduct of
military operations and the manoeuvre of forces and assets by the
Russian Federation Armed Forces and other troops, and a timely
transfer of the economy from peacetime to wartime in the interests
of defence.
2.26. The stockpiling and maintenance of supplies are organized by
the Russian Federation government under plans approved by the
Russian Federation president for establishing a state reserve and
mobilization reserves. In accordance with federal legislation, in
peacetime the Russian Federation Armed Forces, other troops, as well
as bodies of state management stockpile, echelon, accommodate and
maintain supplies supporting mobilization deployment of troops
(forces) and their combat operations in the initial period of war
(and for a more lengthy period for certain kinds of supplies), and
the formation, preparation, redisposition and use of strategic
reserves. The Russian Federation Ministry of Defence plans the
stockpiling, echelonment and accommodation of operational supplies
and their maintenance for troops of other federal executive
authorities operationally subordinated in a special period to the
Russian Federation Ministry of Defence.
2.27. Planning for training citizens for military service and for
accumulating the necessary number of militarily trained resources in
reserve, and their registration, are accomplished under the overall
direction of the Russian Federation Armed Forces General Staff.
2.28. The population receives purposeful training for territorial
and civil defence both in peacetime as well as wartime, and a set of
measures is carried out to increase the functioning stability of
installations of the economy, transportation and lines of
communication and to ensure readiness to conduct emergency rescue
and other operations in stricken areas and areas of accidents,
disasters and natural disasters.
3. MILITARY-ECONOMIC PRINCIPLES
Military-economic support to military security
3.1. The main goal of military-economic support is financial and
material support to the state's military organization and its
equipment with effective armament systems, military and special
equipment, property, and other materiel resources in quantities
necessary for assurance of the Russian Federation's military
security.
3.2. Basic missions of military-economic support:
objective needs of the state's military organization for financial
and materiel resources;
and develop a logistic and technical support base of combat and
mobilization readiness of the Armed Forces and other troops;
coordinate military-economic activities and meet needs of the
state's military organization for materiel resources;
develop the scientific and technical, technological and production
base of the state's military organization and of the military
infrastructure;
and upgrade the system of armaments and of military and special
equipment and property, equip the state's military organization with
it, and provide for day-to-day maintenance, repair and
modernization;
a scientific and technical, design and production reserve of
achievements for creating a highly effective system of new-
generation arms and for the subsequent scheduled re-equipment of the
military organization;
the level of social support of the state's military organization and
the level of everyday material conditions of servicemen's vital
activities;
ensure the functioning and upgrading of systems for mobilization
readiness and mobilization preparation of the economy and population
of the country;
carry out mutually advantageous international military and military-
technical cooperation;
international obligations in the military-economic sphere .
3.3. Priority missions of military-economic support:
combat and mobilization readiness of the Armed Forces and other
troops;
a quality upgrade of the strategic arms complex;
develop and produce highly effective systems of:
- command and control,
- fire control,
- communications,
- reconnaissance,
- strategic warning,
- electronic warfare,
- precision, mobile non-nuclear weapons,
- their information support;
standardize and reduce the number of types and nomenclature of arms
and military equipment;
the standard of living and implement social guarantees prescribed by
legislation for servicemen and their families.
3.4. Basic principles of military-economic support:
of the level of military-economic support to the needs of military
security;
and technical, technological, information and resource independence
in the development and production of basic kinds of military
products;
concentration of financial, logistic and intellectual resources on
performing key missions of ensuring military security.
3.5. Basic directions of military-economic support:
the system of state management of the defence industrial complex;
and converting the defence industrial complex (without detriment to
the development of new technologies and scientific and technical
capabilities);
guaranteed financial and logistic resources for the work of creating
arms, military and special equipment, and military property, and for
the development of technologies for their development and
production;
introducing a system of economic incentives in state regulation of
price formation in the development and production of military and
dual-purpose products at enterprises of all forms of ownership;
state support of enterprises (industries) and organizations
(establishments) that determine the military-technical and
technological stability of the defence industrial complex, and of
closed administrative-territorial formations and city-forming
enterprises;
and developing a system of national economic installations necessary
for stable functioning of the national economy and for life support
of the population in wartime;
and creating new mobilization capacities and installations and
replenishing state reserves;
and conducting basic, exploratory and applied research and advanced
scientific and technical and technological developments, including
advanced competitive and import-replacing technologies;
developing a scientific and technical and experimental base of
defence sectors of industry and their scientific research and
experimental design establishments and organizations;
contractual and competitive principles in the system of orders and
of the development and production of military products;
international production cooperation and military-technical
cooperation in joint research, development, testing and experimental
work with foreign countries to increase the Russian Federation's
military-economic potential;
the export of science-intensive military and civilian products of
enterprises of the defence industrial complex;
fulfilling international obligations for reducing and limiting armed
forces and arms and for maintaining international security and
peace;
patent and other legal protection for objects of intellectual
property contained in military products and in the technologies of
their development and production;
providing social protection for workers being laid off in connection
with restructuring of the defence industrial complex, and keeping
highly skilled personnel in the defence sector.
3.6. Basic directions of mobilization preparation of the economy:
a system of management of the economy for stable functioning in a
period of transition to operation under conditions of wartime and in
wartime;
upgrading and effective functioning of the system of mobilization
preparation of bodies of state authority and management at all
levels, and of organizations and enterprises having mobilization
assignments;
and developing mobilization capacities and facilities;
stockpiling, preserving and renewing supplies in mobilization and
state reserves;
creating and preserving a contingency fund of design and technical
documentation for wartime;
preparing financial-credit and tax systems and a monetary
circulation system for a special regime of functioning under wartime
conditions;
and upgrading a regulatory legal base of mobilization preparation
and transition of the economy of the Russian Federation, components
of the Russian Federation and municipal formations from peacetime to
wartime. International Military and Military-Technical Cooperation
3.7. The Russian Federation organizes and accomplishes international
military (military-political) and military-technical cooperation
based on its national interests and the need for a balanced
accomplishment of tasks for ensuring military security.
International military and military-technical cooperation is the
prerogative of the state.
3.8. The Russian Federation accomplishes international military
cooperation based on principles of equal rights, mutual advantage
and good-neighbourliness and in the interests of international
stability and national, regional and global security
3.9. The Russian Federation organizes and accomplishes international
military-technical cooperation based on foreign-policy and economic
advisability, strictly taking into account the interests of military
security of the Russian Federation and its allies, on the basis of
strict compliance with laws and other legal norms of the Russian
Federation and with its international obligations.
3.10. The Russian Federation attaches priority importance to the
development of military and military-technical cooperation with
states parties to the CIS Collective Security Treaty, based on the
need to consolidate efforts to establish a unified defence space and
ensure collective military security.
3.11. Basic directions of international military and military-
technical cooperation:
the Russian Federation's military-political positions in various
regions of the world;
currency proceeds for state needs, for development of military
production, for conversion, for eliminating and recycling arms and
military equipment, and for structural reorganization of enterprises
of defence sectors of industry;
the country's export potential in the area of conventional arms and
military equipment at the necessary level.
CONCLUSION
The Russian Federation guarantees the consistent, firm fulfillment
of its military doctrine and compliance with the UN Charter and
generally recognized norms and principles of international law. The
Russian Federation affirms the strictly defensive direction of its
activities for ensuring military security; its fundamental adherence
to goals of preventing wars and armed conflicts and eliminating them
from the life of mankind, of comprehensive disarmament, and of
eliminating military blocs; and its resolve to achieve the creation
of regional systems and a global system of general and comprehensive
security and the formation of a balanced, equitable, multipolar
world.
[END]
British Broadcasting Corporation, BBC Worldwide Monitoring - October 11, 1999
Original source: 'Krasnaya Zvezda', Moscow, in Russian, October 9, 1999, pages 3, 4.