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Russian Nuclear Weapons: Past, Present, and Future - Strategic ...

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increased purchases of weapons <strong>and</strong> hardware. 20 But<br />

this did not appease the armed forces. Even within<br />

those constraints, we see rising defense spending as a<br />

percentage of the state budget <strong>and</strong> possibly the overall<br />

economy, i.e., signs of structural militarization. Moreover,<br />

we can also see rising pressure by the military on<br />

the budget. However, the government has gone even<br />

further down this road.<br />

Earlier failures in the defense sector are now generating<br />

the tendencies toward militarization (albeit at a<br />

much lower level than in Soviet times) to compensate<br />

for these failures in Putin’s Russia <strong>and</strong> the continuing<br />

crisis of the economy <strong>and</strong> defense sector. As a recent<br />

<strong>Russian</strong> article observed, from 2000-10 defense spending<br />

has gone from 141 billion rubles to 2,025 trillion<br />

rubles, without leading to an equivalent growth in deliveries<br />

as these figures were consumed by rising costs<br />

for modernizing old models <strong>and</strong> for new models as<br />

well as losses due to corruption. 21 Richard Weitz has<br />

summarized the trajectory of defense spending since<br />

2007.<br />

In 2007 the <strong>Russian</strong> government approved a $240<br />

billion rearmament program that will run through<br />

2015. In February 2008 Russia’s Ministry of Defense<br />

announced that it would further increase the military<br />

budget by about 20 percent, allocating approximately<br />

one trillion rubles (about $40 billion) to military spending<br />

in 2008. Following the August 2008 war in Georgia,<br />

the <strong>Russian</strong> government announced it would increase<br />

the defense budget yet again in order to replace the<br />

warplanes <strong>and</strong> other equipment lost in the conflict as<br />

well as to accelerate the acquisition of new weapons<br />

designed since the Soviet Union’s dissolution. This<br />

year [2008] the <strong>Russian</strong> military will spend over $40<br />

billion. The figure for 2009 should exceed $50 billion. 22<br />

300

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