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Inside the Soviet Army


Article # : 17053 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 8 / 1990  2,624 Words
Author : Stanislav Levchenko
Stanislav Levchenko is a J.M. Olin Fellow of Boston University's College of Communications. He is the author of On the Wrong Side and other books and is a member of the Jamestown Foundation, which helps defectors from communist countries resettle in the West.

       During the last several years, developments in the Soviet Union have tracked like an EKG of a patient with grave arrhythmia. One crisis situation follows another. Yet new procedures are going full speed ahead, and some of these are of such a nature that even seasoned Sovietologists would not have dreamt of them just a few years ago.
       
        A multitude of books and articles have been published, or are now being written, about many aspects of the USSR. There is much discussion about the size of the Soviet military, especially the quality of Soviet nuclear strike forces. Even different government bilateral negotiations are being conducted simultaneously.
       
        I am not going to repeat or interpret the basic points of the new Soviet realities: Journalists and academics have already sunk their teeth into those. The purpose of this article is to give a portrait of the inner workings of the 72-year-old Soviet army and its social and moral problems.
       
        Until very recently the Soviet socialist system could be visualized as a structure resting on two huge pillars: The State Security Committee (the KGB) and the Soviet army. Now the architecture of the system is gradually changing. One major pillar - the army - had developed a few massive cracks.
       
        For hundreds of years military officers in Russia have played an important role in the political life of the country and in its decision-making processes. The living standards of officers have always been above average. In the provinces a senior military commander, even under Soviet rule, was one of the four most powerful and ... (1993 of 15875 Characters)
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