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Moscow's New Military Doctrine: A Tamer Bear?


Article # : 14885 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 10 / 1988  3,041 Words
Author : Andrew C. Goldberg
Andrew C. Goldberg is vice president of crisis communications at Burson-Marsteller, a public relations firm in New York City. He is also senior associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C.

       For two generations the glue binding the Western alliance together was the prospect of Soviet invasion. The level of superpower confrontation has eased since the gloomiest days of the Cold War, but massive armies of the two alliances still face off against each other across the East-West fault line in Central Europe. In the minds of many Western civilian and military leaders there remains a strong belief, supported by considerable evidence, that Soviet forces are still configured for a surprise onslaught against NATO defenders.
       
        Changes in Soviet policy, including dramatic new arms reduction proposals, are nevertheless calling into question the traditional conception of an offensively oriented Warsaw Pact. Should this image change, it may take with it NATO's reason for being. The prominent Soviet America-watcher and political flack, Georgii Arbatov, summed up the new Soviet strategy recently: "We are going to do something terrible to you--we are going to deprive you of an enemy."
       
        In May 1987, the Warsaw Pact members announced their "new" military doctrine. Its essence, they claim, is defensive; it eschews a preemptive attack on the west. Furthermore, Soviet Communist Party leader Mikhail Gorbachev and others now assert that they are willing to trade away military advantages that create the appearance of an offensive threat. The term strategic sufficiency is now being used by Soviets to describe their deployment of force levels only sufficient to defend themselves adequately, not to attack others. During the past few months, Soviet spokesmen have floated new proposals for deep cuts in conventional forces in Europe, actually acknowledging Soviet superiority in ground forces and offering to trade it away. Indeed, Gorbachev ... (1997 of 19235 Characters)
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