Military
Russia’s
new military doctrine lists NATO, US as major foreign threats
Published time: December 26, 2014 13:02
Edited time: December 26, 2014 14:03
Edited time: December 26, 2014 14:03
AFP
Photo / Natalia Kolesnikova
Russia
has adopted an updated version of its military doctrine, which reflects the
emergence of new threats against its national security. NATO military buildup
and American Prompt Global Strike concept are listed among them.
The new doctrine was approved on Friday by President
Vladimir Putin. Its core remains unchanged from the previous version. The
Russian military remains a defensive tool which the country pledges to use only
as a last resort.
Also unchanged are the principles of the use of
nuclear weapons which Russia adheres to. Their primary goal is to deter
potential enemies from attacking Russia, but it would use them to protect
itself from a military attack – either nuclear or conventional – threatening
its existence.
The new sections of the doctrine outline the threat
Russia sees in NATO’s expansion and military buildup and the fact that the
alliance is taking upon itself “global functions realized with
violation of international law.”
The doctrine lists among major foreign military
threats “the creation and deployment of global strategic antiballistic
missile systems that undermines the established global stability and balance of
power in nuclear missile capabilities, the implementation of the ‘prompt
strike’ concept, intent to deploy weapons in space and deployment of strategic
conventional precision weapons.”
The Yury Dolgoruky nuclear-powered submarine.(RIA
Novosti / Pavel Kononov)
Another
new point in the doctrine is that one of the Russian military’s goals is to
protect national interests in the Arctic region.
The
document also points to the threat of destabilization countries bordering
Russia or its allies and deployment of foreign troops such nations as a threat
to national security.
Domestically, Russia faces threats of “actions
aimed at violent change of the Russian constitutional order, destabilization of
the political and social environment, disorganization of the functioning of
governmental bodies, crucial civilian and military facilities and informational
infrastructure of Russia,”the doctrine says.
Moscow
sees international cooperation with countries sharing its effort to increase
security, particularly members of BRICS, the OSCE, the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization and others as the key to preventing military conflicts, the doctrine
states.
Traditional
threats that Russia must deal with mentioned in the doctrine include extremism
and terrorism, proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and rocket
technology and actions of foreign intelligence services.
The
document notes that modern threats are increasingly drifting from a military
nature to informational, and states that the likelihood of anyone launching a
fully-fledged war against Russia is decreasing.
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