Moscow Announces Massive Military Spending Increase to Combat NATO’s ‘Hybrid War’ in Ukraine
by Connor
Freeman | Sep
28, 2023
Moscow announced that it plans to increase military
spending by nearly 70% in 2024 as it fights against what the Kremlin has dubbed
NATO’s “hybrid war.” Russia’s defense budget next year, which is dwarfed by the
Pentagon budget, will still be less than the total amount the US has already
pledged to assist Kiev in its proxy war with Moscow.
Russia’s Finance Ministry published a document on
Thursday explaining that Moscow is set to ramp up defense spending by a
whopping 68% to 10.8 trillion rubles ($111.15 billion) next year.
At the same time, the Pentagon budget is fast
approaching $900 billion, greater than the next ten highest-spending
countries combined, while total yearly spending on the national security
state is almost $1.5 trillion.
The document adds, “the focus of economic policy is
shifting from an anti-crisis agenda to the promotion of national development
goals… [including] strengthening [Russia’s] defense capacity.”
The additional funding is also needed for the process
of “integrating” the four regions of Ukraine which Moscow has annexed since its
invasion began, namely Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia.
Additionally, draft outlines for Russia’s budget for
the next three years show that – due to an adjustment in the budget rule – an
extra 1.7 trillion rubles ($17.72 billion) will be made available in spending from oil and gas revenues.
“It is obvious that such an increase is necessary,
absolutely necessary, because we are in a state of hybrid war, we are
continuing the special military operation,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov
said referring to escalated military spending.
“I’m referring to the hybrid war that has been
unleashed against us,” he added. Russian Foreign Minister Serey Lavrov has
recently railed against Washington, stating “no matter what it says, it [the US] controls
this war, it supplies weapons, [munitions], intelligence information, data from
satellites, it is pursuing a war against us.”
Kiev relies on Western intelligence for its myriad drone strikes in Crimea as well as Moscow and elsewhere on the Russian mainland. The tripwires for direct conflict between the US and Russia
will be tested as the White House is preparing to provide Kiev with a cluster bomb variant of
the Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) which have a range of approximately
200 miles. The US has also attempted to isolate Russia from the rest of the
world by launching an economic war using sanctions designed to be the “economic equivalent of a nuclear
weapon.”
NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg now concedes Russia’s invasion in February 2022 was a
response to the US-led military bloc’s expansion to Russia’s borders and the
alliance’s unwillingness to negotiate security guarantees with Moscow.
Since then, Washington has pledged $113 billion to
back Kiev in its proxy war with the Kremlin. About $100 billion in weapons and
military equipment have been transferred to Ukraine by the US and its allies. Secretary
of Defense Lloyd Austin, along with hawks in the legislature, declared the US policy is intended to “weaken” Moscow and cripple its military.
Despite Washington’s agenda, Gen. Christopher Cavoli,
the commander of US European Command, told the House Armed Services Committee
this year that Russia’s ground forces are “bigger today” than before the invasion. Moreover, Cavoli noted
that losses to the Russian air force and navy were negligible.
Russia’s announcement regarding the boost in military
spending came as Stoltenberg visited Kiev – with the defense ministers of
France and the UK – and promised President Volodymyr Zelensky that “NATO will
stand with Ukraine for as long as it takes.”
One of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s key
demands rejected by NATO in Moscow’s security proposals just
prior to the invasion was Ukrainian neutrality, which Stoltenberg described as
a “a pre-condition for not [invading] Ukraine.” During a speech to the European
Union Parliament earlier this month, NATO’s Secretary General boasted “of
course we didn’t sign that.”
In the months leading up to the invasion, Kiev was
already being treated by Washington as a de facto NATO member. During a press conference in Kiev on Thursday,
Stoltenberg claimed “Ukraine is now closer to NATO than ever before.”
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