Columbia International Affairs Online: Policy Briefs

CIAO DATE: 06/2008

Russia's Security Policy Grows "Muscular": Should the West Be Worried?

Pavel K. Baev

January 2008

Finnish Institute for International Affairs

Abstract

The self-assertive rhetoric of the Russian leadership, in which President Putin’s Munich speech marked a shift towards a more aggressive style, has been translated into such demonstrative actions as the resumption of regular patrols by Long Range Aviation and the unilateral suspension of the CFE Treaty.

Despite new funding and against confident self-assessments, Russia’s strategic arsenal continues to shrink, and many key modernization projects, such as the Bulava missile for strategic submarines, have encountered setbacks.

The need for brandishing the diminishing capabilities is driven by the desire to deter the perceived threat of a ‘coloured revolution’ sponsored by the West, the urge to assert a more solid status than just that of an ‘energy super-power’, and the complicated intrigues surrounding the on-going reconfiguration of the political leadership.

Expanding demonstrations of the dilapidated strategic arsenal increase the risks of technical failures but fall far short of initiating a new confrontation of the Cold War type. The most worrisome point in Russia’s ambivalent power policy is Georgia, which has been the target of choice for multiple propaganda attacks, but which now faces the challenge of an external intervention in its domestic crises since Moscow has built up usable military instruments in the North Caucasus.

Russia’s desire to secure higher international status does not amount to malicious revisionism; so over-reaction to its experiments with muscle-flexing could constitute a greater risk to the Western strategy of engagement than underestimating its ambitions.