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- <text id=94TT1694>
- <title>
- Dec. 05, 1994: Russia:The Red-Army Blues
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 05, 1994 50 for the Future
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RUSSIA, Page 80
- The Red-Army Blues
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Pavel Grachev, Moscow's embattled Defense Minister, is faring
- as poorly as the army he commands
- </p>
- <p>By Kevin Fedarko--Reported by John Kohan and Sally B. Donnelly/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> When Defense Minister Pavel Grachev appeared before the Russian
- parliament two weeks ago, everyone expected that his visit would
- be the political equivalent of a burning at the stake. His numerous
- critics were eager to toss a branch onto the fire that seemed
- about to consume the career of the 46-year-old paratroop veteran
- of the Afghan War who was promoted to Defense Minister three
- years ago. As the general who oversaw the final withdrawal of
- his country's army from eastern Germany last August--an exercise
- most Russian soldiers still find humiliating--Grachev has
- become the embodiment of every ailment besetting the once-mighty
- military. Communists and nationalists vilify him for the army's
- loss of prestige and morale. Reformers castigate him for its
- inefficiency and widespread corruption. Even Grachev's own troops
- would like to see him go; a recent poll conducted by a German
- public interest group indicated that officers are so embittered
- by poor housing, paltry pay and pathetic prospects for the future
- that only 20% approve of Grachev.
- </p>
- <p> As the Defense Minister stepped to the podium, he nervously
- grabbed the sides for support, anticipating a barrage of criticism.
- But within minutes, Grachev had managed to turn the tables on
- his adversaries. He did so by detailing, in graphic terms, the
- sorry state of a military that only five years ago was one of
- the most formidable armed forces in the world. He ticked off
- the problems like a list of battlefield defeats: pinched budgets,
- poor equipment, low recruitment rates, unpaid salaries and a
- decline in military preparedness so precipitous that not a single
- ground-force training maneuver has been carried out at the divisional
- level since 1992. Implicit in his words was the accusation that
- it is parliament, which controls the purse strings, and not
- the Defense Minister, who merely distributes the resources he
- is given, that bears the blame. "Not a single army in the world
- is in such a catastrophic state," Grachev told the Deputies.
- "I ask you to take this as a warning."
- </p>
- <p> The spirited offensive served to deflect parliament's fire away
- from Grachev himself, and no vote was taken to call for his
- dismissal. But when he dropped out of a government visit to
- the Gulf region last week, the presumption was that he had finally
- fallen from official favor. In fact, Grachev had become ill
- after speaking to the parliament and checked into a hospital
- for medical tests.
- </p>
- <p> The political debate has done nothing to quiet the sensational
- revelations of military wrongdoing that have flooded the press
- during the past two months. In a nation where men in uniform
- were once accorded a respect that borders on reverence, ordinary
- citizens were outraged to read reports that officers from the
- Western Group of Forces in Germany had personally profited from
- the withdrawal of Russian troops. The dimensions of the scandal
- are hard to measure, but by some estimates the state may have
- lost as much as $65 million to illegal financial deals involving
- the sale of military property in Germany during the past four
- years. To defuse mounting public criticism, President Boris
- Yeltsin dismissed General Matvei Burlakov from his post as Deputy
- Defense Minister "to protect the honor of the Russian armed
- forces."
- </p>
- <p> While Grachev claims that he had nothing to do with those abuses,
- the scandal seems to reach higher with each passing week. Last
- week Major General Nikolai Seliverstov, the former first deputy
- commander of the 16th Russian Air Force, based in Germany, went
- before the Military Collegium of the Supreme Court to defend
- himself against similar charges of bribery, fraud and embezzlement.
- Seliverstov argued that the officers in Germany were under orders
- to engage in business to earn profits for the cash-strapped
- military. Any wrong he might have done, he suggested, resulted
- from inexperience in commerce, not from criminal intent.
- </p>
- <p> The long-simmering corruption scandal in Germany came into the
- open with the murder of Dmitri Kholodov, a 27-year-old Moscow
- journalist who was blown up on Oct. 17 by a booby-trapped briefcase.
- Since Kholodov had been investigating military corruption, some
- outraged journalists and democratic reformers jumped to the
- conclusion, as yet to be proved, that Grachev was somehow involved.
- He has also been hurt by stories published in Moskovsky Komsomolets,
- the scandal-mongering paper where Kholodov was employed, reporting
- that the Defense Minister and his aides have bought furniture
- and foreign luxury cars with money earmarked for the construction
- of new housing for troops coming home from Eastern Europe. The
- stories inspired Russia's popular press to dub Grachev "Pasha
- Mercedes."
- </p>
- <p> Although the Defense Minister denies the accusations, the persistent
- charges strike a powerful chord in military ranks, where living
- and working conditions have grown desperate. Housing is so scarce
- that many of the 650,000 troops returning from outposts of the
- old Soviet empire are now living in tents. Krasnaya Zvezda,
- the official daily of the Defense Ministry, regularly publishes
- front-page letters from angry servicemen. In a recent issue,
- headlined WE CAN'T LIVE LIKE THIS, a group of military wives
- near Saratov complained that their husbands were not getting
- paid, noting that "there is nothing to feed the children." The
- resident of one apartment block at an airport near Khabarovsk
- reported that "every single day for the past two years, our
- house has been without water, electricity and heating." In an
- appalling demonstration of the mistreatment of recruits and
- their meager food rations, in March 1993 four sailors on Russky
- Island in the Far East died of malnutrition.
- </p>
- <p> Last summer 380 recruits were given a taste of how bad things
- have become when they took part in a two-week training exercise
- in the Ural Mountain region. After riding 11 hours in a train
- without the use of a toilet, some recruits were outfitted in
- secondhand, unwashed uniforms and issued "socks" fashioned from
- strips of linen cloth. Five days into the course, they did not
- have water to brush their teeth. Yet when the recruits were
- required to sit for exams, each man was expected to buy his
- officer a bottle of vodka in order to pass.
- </p>
- <p> Their training was disastrous. One day they were directed nearly
- five miles off course by a commander who had lost his way. The
- next day they were forced to wait six hours while another commander
- went back for the bullets he had forgotten to bring to target
- practice. One soldier eventually suffered what appeared to have
- been a heart attack; he died when he was beaten after being
- forced to do push-ups while wearing a gas mask. A second recruit
- succumbed when he was beaten so brutally by other soldiers that
- he suffered a brain hemorrhage. A third died of a bleeding ulcer
- after the doctor on base decided he was faking his pain.
- </p>
- <p> Until now, Grachev's trump card has been his loyalty to Yeltsin:
- during the coup attempts of August 1991 and October 1993 it
- was Grachev's support, however reluctant, that inspired the
- military to stand behind the President. Yeltsin has consistently
- repaid Grachev by standing firmly behind his Defense Minister.
- Now there are signs that Yeltsin may be concluding that Grachev's
- liabilities outweigh his assets. The possibility that the Defense
- Minister may be forced to step down has already sparked a fierce
- debate over who might succeed him. Will Grachev be forced to
- make an ignominious exit? No one knows. But as long as he remains,
- the Defense Minister's personal predicaments only highlight
- the troubles of the dispirited institution he leads.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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