Foreign Policy and Russia Essay

Total Length: 1504 words ( 5 double-spaced pages)

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Russia's National Security Strategy

According to Isabelle Falcon, in Russia's view, it was necessary to update its national security strategy following the events that unfolded in Ukraine and the crisis that followed in Moscow. Russia adopted a new military doctrine on 25th Dec 2014, was signed by the president a year later and Russia adopted the new foreign policy concept on 30 of November 2016[footnoteRef:1]. [1: Isabelle Facon, "Russia's national security strategy and military doctrine and their implications for the EU," European Parliament, 2017, doi: 10.2861/635490.]

The updated documents highlight several key issues that reflect the traditional view that Russia holds about the world and its vision. They underscore the country's status as world powerhouse; and that its sovereignty must be respected. They also point out that Russia's foreign policy must be independent of the outside world. The general message that the documents send is that the outside world is full of chaos, dangerous, volatile and marked by stiff competition for resources including competition for Russia's resources control, trade routes and political power over its associates and major world powers. The documents emphasize Russia's need to maintain its political influence in the post-soviet times. The implication here is that Russia must control the political and military set up around its borders, including that of its neighboring countries[footnoteRef:2]. [2: Ibid., 6.]

Keir Giles, points out newer elements observed in the documents updated. The prospect of making Russia stronger comes at a price. There is formidable opposition from other world powers. These powers reject the stance taken by Russia's new foreign policy documents. Part of the security strategy, interestingly, is to educate children in school to become responsible Russian citizens based on traditional, cultural and social values of the state of Russia. Traditional Western powers have lost their grip on the economic front and are now making persistent attempts to reposition themselves and maintain status quo in the new world. Such moves cause instability in international relations, turmoil regionally and on the global front[footnoteRef:3]. [3: Keir Giles, "Russia's National Security Strategy to 2020," ETH Zurich, June 2009, https://www.files.ethz.ch/isn/154909/RusNatSecStrategyto2020.pdf..]

Military Strategy for Russia

National security strategy is the science and art of allocating and applying military force in order to achieve national intentions in times of both peace and war. Ends are pointed out as the reasons for the objectives or the strategies for achieving them. In order to achieve strategic reach, there must be military power, economic sustenance, alliances and diplomacy combined.
Ways denote how the resources of a country are applied. The means are the tangible and intangible available resources. Thus, a combination of Means and Ways give room to device strategic reach[footnoteRef:4]. [4: Richard Yarger, "Towards a Theory of Strategy: Art Lykke and the Army War College Strategy Model," Air University, 2010, http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/army-usawc/stratpap.htm.]

Russia has actively conducted operation in what were the former states of the Soviet Union in order to deter NATO and EU from influencing these countries. The analyses of the conflicts by westerners have highlighted the various forces that Russia and the Russia Federation Armed Forces has used to achieve its ends in these states. It has been reported to exploit cyber forces in such countries as Estonia, conventional military forces in Georgia and its Special Operations Forces in the Crimea region of Ukraine. They also sought to establish how SOF, Airborne and naval divisions worked as rapid response units.

FRAF has shifted its offensive approaches and adopted an operational style so as to achieve its intentions in countries nearby. It has established regions in which it has spread its influence within the countries that were part of the former Soviet Union. They seek to protect Russian interest and that of Russian minorities abroad. Russia, in 2003, drafted and released a white paper that supported the policy. It indicated a shift in the way the military thought and defined a new concept for its operations on the military front. This new concept was powered by the need to integrate operational, strategic and tactical elements of the force. An important aspect of the strategy was the swift disruption, destruction, and control of economics, communications, political and infrastructural elements. These….....

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