Russia puts tanks and missiles back in Red Square parade
AP
Posted: 2008-05-09 13:18:40
MOSCOW (AP) - Russia showcased its military might and youthful
new president to the world Friday, as heavy tanks and missile
launchers rumbled across Red Square in a Victory Day parade for the
first time since the Soviet era.
In a nationally broadcast speech two days after his
inauguration, President Dmitry Medvedev avoided the bellicose
rhetoric of his mentor and predecessor, Vladimir Putin, who drew
parallels between United States and Nazi Germany during last year's
parade.
However, in his speech marking victory over Adolf Hitler's
Germany, the 42-year-old Medvedev said the history of World War II
demonstrated that military conflicts are rooted in "irresponsible
ambitions which prevail over interests of nations and entire
continents."
"We must not allow contempt for the norms of international
law," he said, in what sounded like veiled criticism of the United
States and its Western allies.
The Kremlin has consistently criticized both the U.S.-led war in
Iraq and wide Western recognition of Kosovo's declaration of
independence from Russia-allied Serbia as flagrant violations of
international legal norms.
A stern-faced Putin, who was named prime minister Thursday,
hovered at Medvedev's shoulder on the podium hiding the mausoleum
of Soviet founder Vladimir Lenin. His face was prominently shown in
TV broadcasts - an image that played to the wide belief the former
president will continue calling the shots.
Medvedev, his country's third post-Soviet president, hailed the
rebuilding Russian military, saying it can "give a reliable
protection to the motherland."
"Our army and navy are getting stronger. Just as Russia itself,
they are gaining strength," he said.
More than 100 combat vehicles, including intercontinental
ballistic missile launchers, rolled across the cobblestone Red
Square and strategic bombers and fighter jets roared overhead in
the first such display in 18 years.
Medvedev smiled frequently as he watched the parade, which the
communist rulers of the Soviet Union made into an annual exercise
in saber-rattling directed at the West.
Russia's military spending increased eightfold to an annual $40
billion during Putin's eight-year tenure thanks to the nation's oil
bonanza. Analysts, however, say the military suffers the same
problems that dented its capabilities and prestige since the Soviet
collapse.
Widespread bullying of young conscripts by older soldiers has
made the draft extremely unpopular, and rampant corruption and
mismanagement plague the military. Despite repeated pledges by
Putin to modernize the armed forces, Russia has purchased only a
handful of new combat jets and several dozen tanks.
Most of the combat vehicles shown in Friday's parade were
slightly modernized versions of Soviet weapons designed in the
1980s.
"As the Soviet Union in the past, Russia wants to demonstrate
its might to potential enemies," military analyst Alexander Golts
wrote in the online Yezhednevny Zhurnal. "But the West clearly
understands the true picture behind the talk of 'rising
potential."'
Modern communications and control systems remain scarce, and a
Russian equivalent to the U.S. satellite navigation system has
failed to come on line as scheduled this year amid equipment
shortages. Basics like night goggles, portable radios and satellite
phones are rarities.
Russia's navy is in particularly poor shape. Soviet-built
nuclear submarines frequently need repairs and rarely leave their
bases. The first in a series of new nuclear submarines, the Yuri
Dolgoruky, is to be commissioned this year, but the Bulava
nuclear-armed missile developed to equip it has failed tests and
its deployment prospects are uncertain.
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05/09/08 13:16 EDT