Russia to Boost Troops in West, Expanding Army to 1.5 Million People
Story by Bloomberg News • Tuesday
(Bloomberg) -- Russia will create new commands near
Europe as it expands its military to 1.5 million people amid deepening tensions
with the US and its allies over the Kremlin’s invasion of Ukraine.
New structures in the regions around Moscow, St.
Petersburg and Karelia on the border with Finland will be created under the
program, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu told commanders Tuesday, saying the
major changes will start this year and continue through 2026. In addition, he
said, “self-sufficient” units will be set up on the Ukrainian territories that
Russia has illegally annexed.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the military
expansion came in response to the “proxy war” he claimed the US and its allies
are waging against Russia in Ukraine, Interfax reported. Kyiv and its allies
are fighting to fend off Russia’s invasion of its neighbor.
Russian President Vladimir Putin last month approved
Shoigu’s plan to boost the size of his military from the current target level
of 1.15 million but the Kremlin hasn’t said how fast that will take
place.
Shoigu said the expansion will be spread across all
branches of Russia’s military and will be coordinated with the delivery of new
weapons to equip them, the Defense Ministry said in a statement, according to
Interfax.
Russia will create three new motorized-infantry
divisions and two airborne divisions, combining a number of brigades, Shoigu
said in comments posted on the ministry’s Telegram channel. He also called for
special attention to the recruitment of contract soldiers to fill out the ranks
of the expanded military.
Since ordering the invasion nearly a year ago, Putin
has laid plans to reverse years of reductions in the ranks of Russia’s
military. The Kremlin hasn’t said how it will recruit all the new troops but
has proposed raising the draft age, which may increase the number of men eligible
for conscription.
Russia has repeatedly said it plans to boost
deployments in the northwest in response to a pending expansion of NATO, where
Finland and Sweden are in the process of joining, with their applications
ratified by 28 of 30 alliance members. The Nordic countries’ entry into the
military bloc would double its land border with Russia.
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