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Russia imposes blackout on contested army reform: report

The full details of the reform plan drawn up by Defence Minister Anatoly Serdyukov have yet to be fully made public but are seen as a bid to make the military more responsive to the demands of modern conflict. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) Nov 29, 2008
The Russian military has imposed an information blackout over its controversial army reforms amid increasing discontent within the forces over the changes, the Kommersant daily reported on Saturday.

However the defence ministry dismissed the report, saying that there were already sufficient rules in place regulating public speeches by its generals and officers.

The sweeping reforms, which envisage cuts in numbers and a radical reorganisation to make the army more mobile for the demands of modern warfare, have already met with criticism from military experts.

Without citing its source, Kommersant said armed forces chief of staff Nikolai Markov has signed a directive on the "inadmissibility of divulging information on the reform of the Russian armed forces".

Using the terms used by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev to describe his programme of reform and openness in the USSR, Kommersant headlined: "The army's perestroika will go ahead without glasnost."

But defence ministry spokesman Alexander Drobyshevsky told the RIA Novosti news agency: "There are already sufficient documents regulating the speeches of officers and generals of the ministry of defence."

Mikhail Babich, the deputy head of the lower house of parliament's defence committee told Kommersant that the reported directive was part of a bid by the army to keep controversy over the reform under control.

"Irritation is growing in the army and in society. Hence the necessity to clamp down on information," Babich said.

The full details of the reform plan drawn up by Defence Minister Anatoly Serdyukov have yet to be fully made public but are seen as a bid to make the military more responsive to the demands of modern conflict.

Under the reforms, the number of military units is to be slashed to 172 from the current 1,890 by 2012 and the main structural emphasis put on brigades rather than regiments, Kommersant said.

The number of officers is to be cut to 150,000 from 315,000 although the number of lieutenants will increase. The overall numbers in the armed forces are to be cut to 1 million from the current 1.13 million.

Military unease over the reforms has been compounded by the fact Serdyukov comes from a civilian background which saw him work in the furniture sector in Saint Petersburg before rising to head the federal tax service.

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