Russian Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

Dizasta1

Senior Member
"We've urged Russia to take no steps to destabilize the region," State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf said in response, adding the US had also passed on to Moscow its neighbours' concerns.

Russia's response to U.S State Dept: "You should've thought of that before you decided to deploy ABM-Shield close to the Russian border!!!"
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Russia Reportedly Eyeing Latin America As Part Of Overseas Military Base Expansion
By Bill Vourvoulias
Published March 04, 2014 | Fox News Latino
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At the same time that Russia was denying having blockaded Ukrainian naval facilities in Crimea, little-noticed reports came out of Moscow saying that Vladimir Putin’s government had ongoing conversations with eight foreign countries with the objective of building overseas military facilities, including in Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua.

“We need bases for refueling near the equator and in other places,” Russian Defense Minister, Sergei Shoigu, was quoted as saying by news agency ITAR-Tass.

According to another state-run news agency, RIA Novosti, Shoigu said: “The talks are underway, and we are close to signing the relevant documents.”

The Venezuelan Foreign Minister, Elías Jaua, responded that, "Because of the constitution, we cannot allow a foreign military installation in our country," according to the Caracas newspaper, El Universal.

Attempts to reach spokespeople at the U.S. State and Defense Departments went unanswered Monday due to weather concerns, but analysts were split about how ominously to take the report.

"If the Minister of Defense said it, I would absolutely take it seriously," John Reppert, a retired brigadier general in the U.S. Army who served as military attaché in Moscow for many years, said. "But the critical issue would be the nature and intent of the agreements. If it's essentially just refueling rights, it's probably benign and hard to generate much indignation over."

Reppert did add, "It would indicate that they are planning to expand their naval operations on this side of the Atlantic, which would be very much of interest."

The collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s led to a decade of retrenchment in the Russian military. After 2002, when a naval facility in Vietnam and a radar station in Cuba were shuttered, the Russians retained only one military base in a country that hadn’t been part of the Soviet Union, and that’s a naval base in Tartus, Syria. An installation whose existence now is imperiled by the ongoing civil war in that country.

The U.S. maintains about two dozen military bases and "Forward Operating Locations" in Latin America and the Caribbean, stretching from Puerto Rico to Chile.

“I don’t see [Russia venturing militarily into Latin America] as really likely,” said Adam Isacson, defense and security specialist at the human rights organization Washington Office on Latin America. “It could be a goad to the U.S., or an attempt to show the world Russia is no longer a declining military power. Beyond the symbolic level, it may be an attempt to promote arms sales — Russia has been the top vendor of armaments in Latin America for the last couple of years thanks to huge sales to Venezuela.”

Nevertheless, Russia has been paying more military attention to Latin America in recent years. David Kerans, a correspondent for the U.S. edition of the Voice of Russia – that country’s Voice of America equivalent – told Fox News Latino that while he had no direct knowledge of any government outreach about bases, “It wouldn’t surprise me, and it would make a certain amount of sense strategically.”

Russian ships held joint maneuvers with the Venezuelan Navy in 2008 and have visited Cuban waters a few times since 2009, including last week, when the intelligence-gathering ship Viktor Leonov docked in Havana’s harbor without warning.

Tom O’Donnell, an expert on the international oil trade who teaches at New York University, said, "I have heard about talks, though I didn't know it had gotten so far."

O’Donnell thinks it unlikely that there is a master plan being unveiled. “It gives Putin great pleasure to put his finger in the U.S. eye every now and then,” he told Fox News Latino. But when O’Donnell has spoken to Russian government representatives about Putin’s strategy in Latin America, they have laughed.

“Strategy?” one told him. “He doesn’t have one.”

Indeed, O’Donnell ventured, “The Russian government's too burdened just trying to manage things inside Russia.”


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Cuba would be easy, the Castro Brothers have played host to Russian Navy bases before and would likely jump at having them back. Venezuela is basically already a Russian military base.
 
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Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
Venezuela is basicly already a Russian military base.
Yes...but things there are in the midst of upheavel and change too.

I have a sister-in-law from Venesuela. She and her siblings got out with their parents help, who stayed behind because of their other family, the land, and their heritage.

They tell us that the people are fed up with the impact of Chavez and his ilk over the last years. Many have fought it all along.

but now...it is reaching a tipping point and the Russians may not be too welcome if it continues.

As of now...it is not stable for them.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
A point Jeff which is likely the reason for listing Nicaragua.
Cuba is a good refueling and staging point for the Russian Fleet in the southern Atlantic. Venezuela is a good post for the south Pacific. but failing that, Nicaragua would be accessible by either the Atlantic of Pacific. bases on either or both coasts would act as strong staging posts for Russian interest in the region.
 

Jeff Head

General
Registered Member
A point Jeff which is likely the reason for listing Nicaragua.
Cuba is a good refueling and staging point for the Russian Fleet in the southern Atlantic. Venezuela is a good post for the south Pacific. but failing that, Nicaragua would be accessible by either the Atlantic of Pacific. bases on either or both coasts would act as strong staging posts for Russian interest in the region.
Agreed.

And China is ahead of the curve on that with their HUGE investment in the new, larger canal across Nicaragua.

I am sure that they both (China and Russia) will find ample opportunity to continue investing there and developing it to their needs.
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Its Ironic, that the US government the Key power in the western hemisphere and the most powerful nation in the world, seems to have more investment and influence in the Middle east and Asia then what is arguably our own back yard.
 

delft

Brigadier
Its Ironic, that the US government the Key power in the western hemisphere and the most powerful nation in the world, seems to have more investment and influence in the Middle east and Asia then what is arguably our own back yard.
Before WWI South American states bought Dreadnoughts in UK and the US, several of which were taken over by RN in 1914, but later the military power of the Latin American countries was so slight and US presence in the countries so large that no specific military presence was necessary except for the Panama canal zone and Guantanamo Bay which was hired from a US installed puppet regime for $4000 per year. Oil was produced by friendly oil companies and it naturally flowed North when required. Besides these countries are too far away to be relevant for the containment of an Asian country.
 
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