Order Code IB92089
CRS Issue Brief for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Russia
Updated May 24, 2005
Stuart D. Goldman
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

CONTENTS
SUMMARY
MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
Post-Soviet Russia and Its Significance for the United States
Political Developments
Chechnya
Economic Developments
Economic Reform
Foreign Policy
Defense Policy
Fundamental Shakeup of the Military
Control of Nuclear Weapons
U.S. Policy
U.S.-Russian Relations
U.S. Assistance


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Russia
SUMMARY
Vladimir Putin won reelection as Russian
wealth of Independent States (CIS) as an
President in March 2004, in an exercise in
institution is failing. Washington and Mos-
“managed democracy” in which he took 71%
cow continue to disagree over Russian nuclear
of the vote and faced no serious competition.
reactor sales to Iran, among other issues.
The pro-Putin Unified Russia party similarly
After the September 11, 2001 attacks, how-
swept the parliamentary election in December
ever, Russia adopted a generally more cooper-
2003 and controls more than two-thirds of the
ative attitude on many issues.
seats in the Duma. Also in March, Putin
replaced long-serving Premier Kasyanov with
The military is in turmoil after years of
a little-known bureaucrat, Mikhail Fradkov,
severe force reductions and budget cuts. The
indicating Putin’s intent to take the reins of
armed forces now number about one million,
government even more completely into his
down from 4.3 million Soviet troops in 1986.
own hands. Putin’s twin priorities remain to
Weapons procurement is down sharply.
revive the economy and strengthen the state.
Readiness, training, morale, and discipline
He has brought TV and radio under tight state
have suffered. Putin’s government has in-
control and virtually eliminated effective
creased defense spending sharply but there is
political opposition. Federal forces have
conflict between the military and the
suppressed large-scale military resistance in
government and within the military over
Chechnya but face the prospect of prolonged
resource allocation, restructuring, and reform.
guerilla warfare and terrorist style attacks.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union,
The economic upturn that began in 1999
the United States sought a cooperative rela-
is continuing. The GDP and domestic invest-
tionship with Moscow and supplied over $4
ment are growing impressively after a long
billion in grant aid to encourage democracy,
decline, inflation is contained, the budget is
market reform, and WMD threat reduction in
balanced, and the ruble is stable. Major prob-
Russia. Early hopes for a close partnership
lems remain: 18% of the population live
waned however, due to mutual disillusion-
below the poverty line, foreign investment is
ment. Direct U.S. foreign aid to Russia, under
low, and crime, corruption, capital flight, and
congressional pressure, fell over the past
unemployment remain high. Putin apparently
decade. Indirect U.S. assistance, however,
seeks simultaneously to tighten political
through institutions such as the IMF, was
control and accelerate economic reform.
substantial. The United States has imposed
economic sanctions on Russian organizations
Russian foreign policy has grown more
for exporting military technology and equip-
assertive, fueled in part by frustration over the
ment to Iran and Syria. There are more re-
gap between Russia’s self-image as a world
strictions on aid to Russia in the FY2005
power and its greatly diminished capabilities.
foreign aid bill. In the spirit of cooperation
Russia’s drive to reassert dominance in and
after September 11, however, the two sides
integration of the former Soviet states is most
agreed on a strategic nuclear force reduction
successful with Belarus and Armenia but
treaty and a strategic framework for bilateral
arouses opposition in Georgia, Ukraine,
relations, signed at the Bush-Putin summit in
Azerbaijan, and Moldova. The Common-
May 2002.
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

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MOST RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
On May 3, 2005, Swiss authorities arrested Yevgeny Adamov, Russian Minister of
Atomic Energy from 1997-2001, on U.S. charges of having stolen millions of dollars of U.S.
aid intended to safeguard Russian nuclear material. Adamov and the Russian government
are resisting his extradition to the United States.
On May 8-9, 2005, Presidents Bush and Putin met in Moscow in connection with the
60th anniversary of the defeat of Nazi Germany. No major agreements were announced.
On May 19, 2005, President Putin signed into law his proposed restructuring of the
Duma, establishing a pure proportional-representation system, banning electoral blocs, and
raising the threshold for party-list representation in the Duma from 5% to 7% of the vote.
BACKGROUND AND ANALYSIS
Post-Soviet Russia and
Its Significance for the United States
Russia was by far the largest of the former Soviet republics. Its population of 144
million (down from 149 million in 1991) is about half the old Soviet total. Its 6.6 million
square miles comprised 76.2% of the territory of the U.S.S.R. and it is nearly twice the size
of the United States, stretching across Eurasia to the Pacific, across 11 time zones. Russia
also has the lion’s share of the natural resources, industrial base, and military assets of the
former Soviet Union.
Russia is a multinational, multi-ethnic state with over 100 nationalities and a complex
federal structure inherited from the Soviet period. Within the Russian Federation are 21
republics (including Chechnya) and many other ethnic enclaves. Ethnic Russians,
comprising 80% of the population, are a dominant majority. The next largest nationality
groups are Tatars (3.8%), Ukrainians (3%), and Chuvash (1.2%). Furthermore, in most of
the republics and autonomous regions of the Russian Federation that are the national
homelands of ethnic minorities, the titular nationality constitutes a minority of the
population. Russians are a majority in many of these enclaves. During Yeltsin’s presidency,
many of the republics and regions won greater autonomy. Only the Chechen Republic,
however, tried to assert complete independence. One of President Putin’s priorities has been
to reverse this trend and rebuild the strength of the central government vis-a-vis the regions.
The Russian Constitution combines elements of the U.S., French, and German systems,
but with an even stronger presidency. Among its more distinctive features are the ease with
which the president can dissolve the parliament and call for new elections and the obstacles
preventing parliament from dismissing the government in a vote of no confidence. The
Constitution provides a four-year term for the president and no more than two consecutive
terms. The president, with parliament’s approval, appoints a premier who heads the
government. The president and premier appoint government ministers and other officials.
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The premier and government are accountable to the president rather than the legislature.
President Putin was reelected to a second term in March 2004.
The bicameral legislature is called the Federal Assembly. The Duma, the lower (and
more powerful) chamber, has 450 seats. Until 2005, half the seats were chosen from
single-member constituencies and half from national party lists, with proportional
representation and a minimum 5% threshold for party representation. In September 2004,
President Putin proposed that all 450 Duma seats be filled by party list election, with a 7%
threshold for party representation. This was signed into law in May 2005. The upper
chamber, the Federation Council, has 178 seats, two from each of the 89 regions and
republics of the Russian Federation. Deputies are appointed by the regional chief executive
and the regional legislature. (See p. 3-4, below.) Parliamentary elections were held on
December 7, 2003. (See p. 5, below, for results.)
The judiciary is the least developed of the three branches. Some of the Soviet-era
structure and personnel are still in place. Criminal code reform was completed in 2001 and
trial by jury is being introduced, although it is not yet the norm. Federal judges, who serve
lifetime terms, are appointed by the President and must be approved by the Federation
Council. The courts are widely perceived to be subject to political manipulation and control.
The Constitutional Court rules on the legality and constitutionality of governmental acts and
on disputes between branches of government or federative entities. The Supreme Court is
the highest appellate body.
Russia is not as central to U.S. interests as was the Soviet Union. With the dissolution
of the U.S.S.R. and a diminished Russia taking uncertain steps toward democratization,
market reform and cooperation with the West, much of the Soviet military threat has
disappeared. Yet developments in Russia are still important to the United States. Russia
remains a nuclear superpower. It will play a major role in determining the national security
environment in Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. Russia has an important role in the future
of arms control, nonproliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and the fight against
terrorism. Such issues as the war on terrorism, the future of NATO, and the U.S. role in the
world will all be affected by developments in Russia. Also, although Russia’s economy is
distressed, it is recovering and is potentially an important trading partner. Russia is the only
country in the world with more natural resources than the United States, including vast oil
and gas reserves. It has a large, well-educated labor force and a huge scientific
establishment. Also, many of Russia’s needs — food and food processing, oil and gas
extraction technology, computers, communications, transportation, and investment capital
— are in areas in which the United States is highly competitive.
Political Developments
The ongoing political struggle in Russia has many aspects, including contests over
political ideology, the character of government, and the pace and character of economic
reform; institutional clashes between the central government and the regions; and rivalries
among competing political-economic cliques. Some argue that what has appeared on the
surface to be “normal” competition among politicians and parties of varying ideological hues
masked a deeper underlying contest — an ongoing venal competition among elites to seize
ownership of vast, previously state-owned assets.
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Former President Boris Yeltsin’s surprise resignation (December 31, 1999) propelled
Vladimir Putin (whom Yeltsin had plucked from obscurity in August 1999 to be his fifth
Premier in three years) into the Kremlin as Acting President. Putin’s meteoric rise in
popularity was due to a number of factors: his tough policy toward Chechnya; his image as
a youthful, vigorous, sober, and plain-talking leader; and massive support from state-owned
TV and other mass media. In March 2000, Putin was elected president in his own right with
52.5% of the vote. His closest rival, Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov, got just
under 30%. All other candidates were in single digits.
Putin, who was a Soviet KGB foreign intelligence officer for 16 years and later headed
Russia’s Federal Security Service (domestic component of the former KGB), is an intelligent,
disciplined statist. His priorities appear to be strengthening the central government, reviving
the economy, and restoring Russia’s status as a great power.
On the domestic political scene, Putin early on won major victories over regional
leaders, reclaiming authority for the central government that Yeltsin had allowed to slip
away. First, Putin created seven super-regional districts overseen by presidential appointees.
Then he pushed legislation to change the composition of the Federation Council, the upper
chamber of parliament (a body that was comprised of the heads of the regional governments
and regional legislatures), giving those leaders exclusive control of that chamber and also
parliamentary immunity from criminal prosecution. With Putin’s changes, Federation
Council Deputies are appointed by the regional leaders and legislatures, but once appointed,
they are somewhat independent. A related bill gives the president the right to remove
popularly elected regional leaders who violate federal law.
The Putin regime has been steadily working to gain control of the broadcast media. A
key target was the media empire of Vladimir Gusinsky, which included Russia’s only
independent television network, NTV, which had been critical of Putin. Gusinsky, one of
the so-called oligarches who rose to economic and political prominence under Yeltsin, was
arrested in June 2000 on corruption charges and was later released and allowed to leave the
country. Many viewed this as an act of political repression by the Putin regime. In April
2001, the state-controlled gas monopoly Gazprom took over NTV and appointed Kremlin
loyalists to run it. A few days later, Gusinsky’s flagship newspaper, Segodnya, was shut
down and the editorial staff of his respected newsweekly, Itogi, was fired. The government
then forced the prominent oligarch Boris Berezovsky to give up ownership of his controlling
share of the ORT TV network. In January 2002, TV-6, the last significant independent
Moscow TV station, was shut down, the victim, many believe, of government pressure. The
government has also moved against the independent radio network, Echo Moskvuy and other
electronic media.
A law on political parties, introduced by the government and explicitly aimed at
reducing the number of parties, gives the government the authority to register, or deny
registration to, political parties. In April 2001, Putin proposed that the Duma be stripped of
its power to debate or vote on specific components of the budget and instead either approve
or reject the government’s proposed budget as a whole. In April 2002, the pro-Putin bloc in
the Duma staged a political coup against the Communist Party faction, depriving it of most
of its committee chairmanships and other leadership posts. Putin’s September 2004 political
changes will further reduce the number of parties in the Duma by raising the threshold for
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representation from 5% to 7% of the total vote and banning parliamentary blocs (coalitions
of several parties).
In the summer of 2003, the Russian government launched a campaign against Mikhail
Khodorkovski, CEO of Yukos, the world’s fourth largest oil company. After numerous
searches and seizures of Yukos records and the arrest of several senior Yukos officials,
Federal Security Service police arrested Khodorkovski on October 25. Five days later
prosecutors froze Yukos stock worth some $12 billion. Khodorkovski, the wealthiest man
in Russia, became a multi-billionaire in the 1990s in the course of the often corrupt
privatization of state-owned assets under former president Yeltsin. Khodorkovski, however,
subsequently won respect in the West by adopting open and “transparent” business practices
while transforming Yukos into a major global energy company. Khodorkovski criticized
some of President Putin’s actions, financed anti-Putin political parties, and hinted that he
might enter politics in the future. Khodorkovski’s arrest is seen by many as politically
motivated, aimed at eliminating a political enemy and making an example of him to other
Russian oligarches. Many observers also see this episode as the denouement of a long power
struggle between two Kremlin factions: a business-oriented group of former Yeltsin loyalists
and a rising group of Putin loyalists drawn mainly from the security services and Putin’s
home town of St. Petersburg. A few days after Khodorkovski’s arrest, Presidential Chief of
Staff Aleksandr Voloshin, reputed head of the Yeltsin-era group, resigned, as did several of
his close associates, leaving the Kremlin in the hands of the “policemen.” Khodorkovski
went on trial in June 2004 on multiple criminal charges of tax evasion and fraud. The trial
is coming to an end in May 2005, with a guilty verdict virtually a foregone conclusion.
Yukos is being broken up and its principal assets sold off to satisfy tax debts alleged
totalling $28 billion. On December 19, 2004, Yuganskneftegaz, the main oil production
subsidiary of Yukos, was sold at a state-run auction, ostensibly to satisfy tax debts. The
wining, and sole, bidder, Baikalfinansgrup, paid $9.7 billion, about half of its market value,
according to western industry specialists. It was subsequently revealed that the previously
unheard-of Baikalfinansgrup is a group of Kremlin insiders headed by Igor Sechin, Deputy
Head of the Presidential Administration and a close associate of President Putin. On
December 22, Baikalfinansgrup was purchased by Rosneft, a wholly state-owned Russian
oil company. Sechin has been Chairman of Rosneft’s Board of Directors since July 2004.
The de-facto nationalization of Yuganskneftegaz was denounced by Andrei Illarionov, a
senior Putin economic advisor, as “the scam of the year.”
In parliamentary elections on December 7, 2003, the big winners were the Unified
Russia Party, identified with President Putin, and the newly created pro-Kremlin
populist/nationalist party, Motherland. When the new Duma convened on December 29,
Unified Russia had 300 of the 450 seats. With its two-thirds majority and the added support
of the Motherland Party and Vladimir Zhirinovsky’s right-wing Liberal Democratic Party,
the Kremlin’s control of the Duma is absolute, sufficient to pass any legislation and to amend
the Constitution. The big losers were the Communist Party, which lost half its seats, and the
two liberal, pro-western parties, Yabloko and Union of Rightist, which failed to reach the 5%
threshold and were virtually eliminated from the Duma. The Communist Party now holds
52 seats; Motherland and the Zhirinovsky’s LDP hold 36 seats each. These are the only four
parties with meaningful representation in the Duma.
The pro-Kremlin sweep in the Duma election foretold the results of the presidential
election three months later. Demonstrating what some of Putin’s own advisors call
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“managed democracy,” the Kremlin team used levers of power and influence to affect the
electoral process, including determining the opposition candidates. So-called “administrative
resources” (financial, bureaucratic, and judicial) were mobilized at the federal, regional, and
local level in support of Putin’s campaign. The state-controlled national broadcast media
lionized Putin and generally ignored and/or denigrated his opponents. On March 14, 2004,
Putin, as expected, won reelection to a second term with a reported 71% of the vote, and no
serious opposition. Communist Party leader Zyuganov declined to run, as did Zhirinovsky,
both of whom designated surrogates to put up a show of contesting the election. In the event,
the Kremlin’s biggest campaign challenge turned out to be maintaining the appearance of a
politically meaningful contest. Most objective observers, Russian and international,
concluded that in this the Putin team failed.
Putin declined to participate in several televised debates with the other five presidential
candidates, nor did he present a campaign platform. Two weeks before the election,
however, he surprised observers by announcing a major government shake up. There were
two notable personnel changes: Mikhail Kasyanov, who had served as Putin’s Premier for
four years but also had ties with the Yeltsin “family,” was replaced by Mikhail Fradkov, a
little-known bureaucrat who was Moscow’s representative to the EU and before that briefly
headed the Federal Tax Police. Igor Ivanov, who had been Foreign Minister since 1998, was
replaced by career diplomat Sergei Lavrov, who had served for a decade as Moscow’s U.N.
Representative.
On September 13, 2004, in the aftermath of the bloody Beslan school hostage crisis (see
below), President Putin proposed a number of changes to the political system that would
further concentrate power in his hands, necessitated, he said, by Russia’s intensified war
against international terrorism. He proposed, inter alia, that regional governors no longer
be popularly elected, but instead that regional legislatures confirm the president’s appointees
as governors and that all Duma Deputies be elected on the basis of national party lists, based
on the proportion of votes each party gets nationwide. The first proposal would make
regional governors wholly dependent on, and subservient to, the president, undermining
much of what remains of Russia’s nominally federal system. The second proposal would
eliminate independent deputies and further strengthen the pro-presidential parties that already
control an absolute majority in the Duma. Putin and his supporters argue that these measures
will help reduce corruption in the regions and “unify” the country, the better to fight against
terrorism. Critics see the proposals as further, major encroachments on the fragile
democratic reforms of the 1980s and 1990s that have already suffered serious setbacks under
Putin. They warn of Putin’s growing authoritarianism. President Bush, Secretary of State
Powell, and many members of Congress voiced concern that Putin’s September 13 proposals
threaten Russian democracy.
In January 2005, the Russian government monetized many previously in-kind social
benefits for retirees, military personnel, and state employees. The cash payments, however,
only partly compensated for the lost benefits. At the same time, another government
“reform” substantially raised housing and public utility costs. This led to massive, prolonged
anti-government demonstrations bringing hundreds of thousands of protesters into the streets
in what many have called the most serious challenge to Putin’s five-year rule. These
widespread protests, following the September 2004 Beslan school hostage disaster and
Putin’s public humiliation in the Ukrainian presidential election in December, brought
Putin’s public approval rating down to 41% in March 2005, from the high 70s a year earlier.
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Chechnya. In 1999, Islamic radicals based in Russia’s break-away republic of
Chechnya launched armed incursions into neighboring Dagestan, vowing to drive the
Russians out and create an Islamic state. A series of bombing attacks against apartment
buildings in Moscow and other Russian cities killed some 300 people. The new government
of then-Premier Putin blamed Chechen terrorists and responded with a large-scale military
campaign. Russian security forces may have seen this as an opportunity to reverse their
humiliating 1996 defeat in Chechnya. With Moscow keeping its (reported) military
casualties low and Russian media reporting little about Chechen civilian casualties, the
conflict enjoyed strong Russian public support, despite international criticism. After a
grinding siege, Russian forces took the Chechen capital in February 2000 and in the
following months took the major rebel strongholds in the mountains to the south. Russian
forces have killed tens of thousands of civilians and driven hundreds of thousands of
Chechen refugees from their homes.
In March 2003, Russian authorities conducted a referendum in Chechnya on a new
Chechen constitution that gives the region limited autonomy within the Russian Federation.
Moscow claims it was approved by a wide margin. In October 2003, the Moscow-appointed
head of the Chechen Administration, Akhmad Kadyrov, was elected President of the
republic. Russian hopes that these steps would increase political stability and reduce
bloodshed were disappointed, as guerilla fighting in Chechnya and suicide bomb attacks in
the region and throughout Russia continued. On May 9, 2004, Kadyrov was assassinated by
a bomb blast in Grozny, further destabilizing Chechnya. On August 29, Alu Alkhanov,
Moscow’s preferred candidate, was elected President of Chechnya, replacing Kadyrov.
Many foreign governments and the U.N. and Organization for Security and Cooperation
in Europe (OSCE), while acknowledging Russia’s right to combat separatist and terrorist
threats on its territory, criticized Moscow’s use of “disproportionate” and “indiscriminate”
military force and the human cost to innocent civilians and urge Moscow to pursue a political
solution. Although Moscow has suppressed large-scale Chechen military resistance, it faces
the prospect of prolonged guerilla warfare. Russia reportedly has lost some 12-15,000 troops
in Chechnya (1999-2004), comparable to total Soviet losses in Afghanistan (1979-1989).
Russian authorities deny there is a “humanitarian catastrophe” in the North Caucasus and
strongly reject foreign “interference” in Chechnya. The bloodshed continues on both sides.
Russian forces regularly conduct sweeps and “cleansing operations” that reportedly result in
civilian deaths, injuries, and abductions. Chechen fighters stage large and small attacks
against Russian forces and pro-Moscow Chechens in Chechnya and neighboring regions and
terrorist attacks against civilian targets throughout Russia. On September 1, 2004, a group
of heavily armed fighters stormed a school in the town of Beslan, taking some 1,150
children, teachers, and parents hostage and demanding the withdrawal of Russian forces from
Chechnya. Two days later, in a chaotic and violent battle, over 350 hostages and nearly all
the pro-Chechen fighters were killed by explosives set by the hostage-takers and by gunfire
from all sides. Radical Chechen field commander Shamil Basaev later reportedly claimed
responsibility for the Beslan school assault. However, Aslan Maskhadov, the nominal
political leader of Chechnya’s separatist movement, denounced the school attack and suicide
bombings against civilian targets as unjustifiable acts of terrorism. Maskhadov, who was
elected President of Chechnya in 1997, was seen by some as a relatively moderate leader and
virtually the only possible interlocutor if Moscow sought a political resolution to the conflict.
Putin’s government labeled Maskhadov, like all Chechen rebels, as a terrorist and refused
to negotiate with him. On March 8, 2005, Russian authorities announced that they had killed
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Maskhadov in a shoot-out in Chechnya, apparently extinguishing what little hope remained
for a political settlement. Chechen rebel “field commanders” named Abdul-Khalim
Saidulaev temporary President and vowed to continue their struggle for independence.
Economic Developments
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russia experienced widespread economic
dislocation and a drop of close to 50% in GDP. Conditions worse than the Great Depression
of the 1930s in the United States impoverished much of the population, some 15% of which
is still living below the government’s official (very low) poverty level. Russia is also
plagued by environmental degradation and ecological catastrophes of staggering proportions;
the near-collapse of the health system; sharp declines in life expectancy and the birth rate;
and widespread organized crime and corruption. The population has fallen by over 5 million
in the past decade, despite net in-migration of 5 million from other former Soviet republics.
In 1999, the economy began to recover, due partly to the sharp increase in the price of
imports and increased price competitiveness of Russian exports caused by the 74% ruble
devaluation in 1998. The surge in the world price of oil and gas also buoyed the Russian
economy. The economic upturn accelerated in 2000, led by a 7.6% increase in GDP, 20%
inflation, and a budget surplus. Economic performance has remained relatively strong since
then. Economists disagree as to whether this is a turning point marking fundamental
economic recovery, or a cyclical improvement that will not be sustainable without further,
politically painful, systemic reform. The following table highlights Russian economic
performance since the dissolution of the Soviet Union in December 1991.
Table 1. Russian Economic Performance since 1992
Annual percentage change
1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
GDP Growth -14.5 -8.7 -12.6 -4.1 -4.9 0.8 -5.0
3.2
9
5.5
4
7.3
7.1
Rates
Inflation
2,525
847
223
131
48
11
84
36
20.2
15
12
13.6
11.7
Rates
Sources: PlanEcon, Inc. and Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Economic Reform. In January 1992, Yeltsin launched a sweeping economic reform
program developed by Acting Premier Yegor Gaidar. The Yeltsin-Gaidar program wrought
fundamental changes in the economy. Although the reforms suffered many setbacks and
disappointments, most observers believe they carried Russia beyond the point of no return
as far as restoring the old Soviet economic system is concerned. The Russian government
removed controls on the vast majority of producer and consumer prices in 1992. Many
prices have reached world market levels. The government also launched a major program
of privatization of state property. By 1994, more than 70% of industry, representing 50% of
the workforce and over 62% of production, had been privatized, although workers and
managers owned 75% of these enterprises, most of which have not still been restructured to
compete in market conditions. Critics charged that enterprises were sold far below their true
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value to “insiders” with political connections. The Putin government favors marketization
and land reform. Putin declared reviving the economy his top priority. His liberal economic
reform team formulated policies that won G-7 (now G-8, with Russia as a full member) and
IMF approval in his first term. Some notable accomplishments include a flat 13% personal
income tax and lower corporate taxes which helped boost government revenue and passage
of historic land privatization laws. In May 2004, Russia reached agreement with the EU on
Russian accession to the WTO. EU leaders reportedly made numerous economic
concessions to Moscow. Russia agreed to sign the Kyoto Protocol and roughly double the
price of natural gas domestically by 2010. Meanwhile, massive oil profits and related
government revenues have made it easier for the government to put off politically difficult
decisions on structural economic reform. Reform was further undermined by the Kremlin’s
de facto privatization of oil giant Yukos, which has darkened the investment climate.
Foreign Policy
In the early 1990s, Yeltsin’s Russia gave the West more than would have seemed
possible. Moscow cut off military aid to the Communist regime in Afghanistan; ordered its
combat troops out of Cuba; committed Russia to a reform program and won IMF
membership; signed the START II Treaty that would have eliminated all MIRVed ICBMs
(the core of the Soviet Strategic Rocket Forces); and radically reduced Russian force levels
in many other categories. The national security policies of Yeltsin and Foreign Minister
Andrei Kozyrev came to be strongly criticized at home, not only by hardline communists and
ultra nationalists but also by many centrists and prominent democrats, who came to agree
that the Yeltsin/Kozyrev foreign policy lacked a sense of national interest and was too
accommodating to the West — at Russia’s expense. This criticism contributed to the erosion
of Yeltsin’s support in the legislature. Russian foreign policy became more assertive and
nationalistic in many areas, while maintaining cooperation with the West in others.
In 1995, Yeltsin replaced Kozyrev as Foreign Minister with Yevgeny Primakov, who
was decidedly less pro-Western. Primakov opposed NATO enlargement, promoted
integrating former Soviet republics under Russian leadership, and favored cooperation with
China, India, and other states opposed to U.S. “global hegemony.” When Primakov became
Premier in September 1998, he chose Igor Ivanov to succeed him as Foreign Minister.
Ivanov kept that position until March 2004, when he was replaced by career diplomat Sergei
Lavrov, formerly Russia’s U.N. Ambassador.
During Putin’s first year as president he continued Primakov’s policies, but by 2001,
even before September 11, he appears to have made a strategic decision to reorient Russian
national security policy toward cooperation with the West and the United States. Putin saw
Russia’s economic revitalization proceeding from its integration into the global economic
system dominated by the advanced industrial democracies — something that could not be
accomplished in an atmosphere of political/military confrontation or antagonism with the
United States. After the September 11 attacks, the Bush Administration welcomed Russia’s
cooperation against Al Qaeda and the Taliban regime in Afghanistan, which paved the way
for broader bilateral cooperation.
Moscow remained unhappy about NATO enlargement in Central and Eastern Europe,
but reconciled itself to that, including former Soviet Baltic republics. In May 2002, NATO
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and Russian leaders meeting in Rome signed the “NATO at 20” agreement, in which Russia
and NATO members participate as equals on certain issues. This replaces the NATO-Russia
Permanent Joint Council, a consultative body that operated on the principle of “19 plus 1,”
i.e., NATO plus (and often versus) Russia, which all sides found unsatisfactory. Russia
reacted relatively calmly to NATO’s admission of seven new members (May 2004),
including the former Soviet Republics of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, a consensus emerged in Moscow on
reestablishing Russian dominance in this region as a very high priority. There has been little
progress toward overall CIS integration. Russia and other CIS states impose tariffs on each
others’ goods in order to protect domestic suppliers and raise revenue, in contravention of
an economic integration treaty. Recent CIS summit meetings have ended in failure, with
many of the presidents sharply criticizing lack of progress on common concerns and Russian
attempts at domination. The CIS as an institution appears to be foundering.
On October 11, 2000, however, the presidents of Russia, Belarus, Armenia, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan upgraded their 1992 Collective Security Treaty, giving it more
operational substance and de jure Russian military dominance. In February 2003, the
presidents of Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, and Kazakhstan agreed in principle to create a “joint
economic space” among the four countries. They signed a treaty to that effect in September
2003 but failed to agree on fundamental principles and terms of implementation. The
December 2004 election of western-oriented Viktor Yushchenko as President of Ukraine has
in effect killed the “joint economic space” agreement.
Russia and Belarus have taken steps toward integration. Belarusian President Aleksandr
Lukashenko may have hoped for a leading role in a unified state during Yeltsin’s decline.
Lukashenko unconstitutionally removed the parliamentary opposition in 1996 and strongly
opposes market reform in Belarus, making economic integration difficult and potentially very
costly for Russia. In April 1997, Yeltsin and Lukashenko signed documents calling for a
“union” between states that were to remain “independent and sovereign.” On May 23, 1997,
they signed a Union Charter. Lukashenko minimized his and his country’s political
subordination to Moscow. Yeltsin avoided onerous economic commitments to Belarus. In
December 1998, Yeltsin and Lukashenko signed an agreement to “unify” the two countries.
After protracted negotiations, the two presidents signed a treaty on December 8, 1999,
committing Russia and Belarus to form a confederal state. Moscow and Minsk continue to
differ over the scope and terms of union, and Putin repeatedly has sharply criticized
Lukashenko’s schemes for a union in which the two entities would have equal power. The
prospects for union seem to be growing more distant.
Russian forces remain in Moldova against the wishes of the Moldovan government (and
the signature of a troop withdrawal treaty in 1994), in effect bolstering a neo- Communist,
pro-Russian separatist regime in the Transnistria region of eastern Moldova. Russian-
Moldova relations warmed, however, after the election of a communist pro-Russian
government in Moldova in 2001, but even that government became frustrated with Moscow’s
manipulation of the Transnistrian separatists. The United states and the EU call upon Russia
to withdraw from Moldova. Russian leaders have sought to condition the withdrawal of their
troops on the resolution of Transnistria’s status, which is still manipulated by Moscow.
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Russian forces intervened in Georgia’s multi-faceted civil strife, finally backing the
Shevardnadze government in November 1993 — but only after it agreed to join the CIS and
allow Russia military bases in Georgia. Russia tacitly supports Abkhaz and South Ossetian
separatism in Georgia and has delayed implementation of a 1999 OSCE-brokered agreement
to withdraw from military bases in Georgia. In 2002, tension arose over Russian claims that
Chechen rebels were staging cross-border operations from Georgia’s Pankisi Gorge, near the
border with Chechnya. In March 2002, the Bush Administration announced that a small
contingent of U.S. military personnel would be deployed in Georgia to help train and equip
Georgian security forces to combat Chechen, Arab, Afghani, al-Qaeda, and other terrorists
who had infiltrated into Georgia. Russia appeared to play a moderating role in the so-called
“rose revolution” that brought the U.S.-educated reformer Mikheil Saakashvili to power in
Georgia in place of the discredited President Eduard Shevardnadze in November 2003.
Russia further improved relations with the new Georgian regime by seemingly helping to
broker a peaceful end to the separatist movement in Adjara. Russian support for Abkhaz and
South Ossetian separatism, and Russia’s continued occupation of military bases in Georgia,
however, remain outstanding issues. At the OSCE summit in Istanbul, November 1999,
Russia agreed to accelerate the withdrawal of its forces from Moldova and Georgia, but has
reneged on those commitments. (See CRS Issue Brief IB95024, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and
Georgia: Political Developments and Implications for U.S. Interests,
updated regularly.)
Moscow has used the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh to
pressure both sides and win Armenia as an ally. Citing instability and the threatened spread
of Islamic extremism on its southern flank as a threat to its security, Moscow intervened in
Tajikistan’s civil war in 1992-93 against Tajik rebels based across the border in Afghanistan.
A major focus of Russian policy in Central Asia and the Caucasus has been to gain
more control of natural resources, especially oil and gas, in these areas. Russia seeks a stake
for its firms in key oil and gas projects in the region and puts pressure on its neighbors to use
pipelines running through Russia. This became a contentious issue as U.S. and other western
oil firms entered the Caspian and Central Asian markets and sought alternative pipeline
routes. Russia’s policy of trying to exclude U.S. influence from the region as much as
possible, however, was dramatically reversed by President Putin after the September 11
attacks. Russian cooperation with the deployment of U.S. military forces in Uzbekistan,
Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan would have seemed unthinkable before September 11. More
recently, however, Russian officials voiced suspicions about U.S. motives for prolonged
military presence in Central Asia. (For more on Russian policy in these regions, see CRS
Issue Brief IB93108, Central Asia: Regional Developments and Implications for U.S.
Interests
, and CRS Issue Brief IB95024, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia: Political
Developments and Implications for U.S. Interests
.)
Of all the Soviet successor states, Ukraine is the most important for Russia. Early on,
the Crimean Peninsula was especially contentious. Many Russians view it as historically part
of Russia, and say it was illegally “given” to Ukraine by Khrushchev in 1954. Crimea’s
population is 67% Russian and 26% Ukrainian. In April 1992, the Russian legislature
declared the 1954 transfer of Crimea illegal. Later that year Russia and Ukraine agreed that
Crimea was “an integral part of Ukraine” but would have economic autonomy and the right
to enter into social, economic, and cultural relations with other states. There was tension
over Kiev’s refusal to cede exclusive use of the Sevastopol naval base in Crimea to Russia.
Moscow stalled on the division of the Black Sea Fleet. In response, Ukraine pointedly
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increased its cooperation with NATO. Finally, in May 1997, Yeltsin and Ukrainian President
Leonid Kuchma signed a Treaty resolving the long dispute over Sevastopol and the Black
Sea Fleet and declaring that Russian-Ukrainian borders cannot be called into question. This
agreement, widely viewed as a major victory for Ukrainian diplomacy, was ratified in April
1999. Bilateral relations remain very important for both countries.
Ukraine’s October 31, 2004, presidential election pitted the openly pro-Moscow Prime
Minister, Viktor Yanukovych, against an independence and reform-minded candidate, Viktor
Yushchenko. Putin strongly and openly backed Yanukovych and lent much material support
to his campaign. Nevertheless, Yushchenko narrowly out-polled Moscow’s man in the first
round. In the disputed run-off election on November 21, Yanukovych initially claimed
victory and was publicly congratulated by Putin. Evidence of widespread election fraud,
however, sparked massive Ukrainian street demonstrations and strong U.S. and EU criticism,
pitting Russia against the West in a way reminiscent of the Cold War. After Ukraine’s
parliament and Supreme Court threw out the results of the November 21 election, the re-run
on December 26 was won by Yushchenko with 52% vs. 44% for Yanukovych. Many
observers in Russia, Ukraine, and the West, see this outcome as a powerful, and possibly
decisive, blow to perceived Russian hopes of reasserting dominance over Ukraine.
Defense Policy
Fundamental Shakeup of the Military
The Russian armed forces and defense industries have been in turmoil since 1992.
Their previously privileged position in the allocation of resources has been broken, as has
their almost sacrosanct status in official ideology and propaganda. Hundreds of thousands
of troops were withdrawn from Eastern Europe, the former Soviet Union, and the Third
World. Massive budget cuts and troop reductions forced hundreds of thousands of officers
out of the ranks into a depressed economy. Present troop strength is about 1.2 million men.
(The Soviet military in 1986 numbered 4.3 million.) Weapons procurement is at historic
lows. Readiness and morale are low, and draft evasion and desertion are widespread.
Yeltsin and later Putin declared military reform a top priority, but fundamental reform of the
armed forces and the defense industries is a very difficult, controversial, and costly
undertaking. The Chechen conflict has delayed military reform.
Putin has pledged to strengthen and modernize the armed forces, and appears
determined to do so. At the same time, he appears to be quite aware of Russia’s financial
limitations. The decisions announced in August and September 2000 to greatly reduce
Russia’s strategic nuclear forces (from 6,000 to 1,500 deployed warheads), to shift resources
from strategic to conventional forces, and to shift from a conscript to a volunteer force
suggest serious intent to effect military reform.
Putin has made some changes in the military leadership that may lead to major policy
changes. Sergei Ivanov, a former KGB general very close to Putin, was named Defense
Minister. Ivanov had resigned his nominal intelligence service/military rank and headed
Putin’s Security Council as a civilian. Putin explained that the man who had supervised the
planning for military reform (Ivanov) should be the man to implement reform as Defense
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Minister. In May 2004, the General Staff was taken out of the direct chain of command and
given a more advisory role, a move that appears to strengthen civilian control.
The improvement of Russia’s economy since 1999, fueled in large part by the cash
inflow from sharply rising oil and gas prices, has enabled Putin to begin to reverse the
budgetary starvation the military endured during the 1990s. Defense spending has increased
substantially in each of the past few years. The government’s 2005 budget calls for
increasing military spending by 29% over 2004. At the official exchange rate, that puts the
defense budget at $18 billion out of a total federal budget of $114 billion. Factoring in
purchasing power parity of the ruble would increase those numbers to $50 billion and $316
billion respectively. Russian defense spending, however, lags far behind current U.S. or
former Soviet levels.
Despite its difficulties, the Russian military remains formidable in some respects and
is by far the largest in the region. Because of the deterioration of its conventional forces,
however, Russia relies increasingly on nuclear forces to maintain its status as a major power.
In November 2004, Putin announced that Russia was developing a new strategic nuclear
missile superior to any in the world, although no details were provided as to its ostensibly
unique features. There is sharp debate within the armed forces about priorities between
conventional vs. strategic forces and among operations, readiness, and procurement. Russia
is trying to increase security cooperation with the other CIS countries. Russia has military
bases on the territory of all the CIS states except Azerbaijan and is seeking to take over or
share in responsibility for protecting the “outer borders” of the CIS. In the proposed Russia-
Belarus union, President Lukashenko pointedly emphasizes the military dimension. On the
other hand, Georgia, Ukraine, Moldova, and Azerbaijan are shifting their security policies
toward a more western, pro-NATO orientation.
Control of Nuclear Weapons
When the U.S.S.R. collapsed in 1991, over 80% of its strategic nuclear weapons were
in Russia. The remainder were deployed in Ukraine, Belarus, and Kazakhstan. Those three
states completed transfer of all nuclear weapons to Russia and ratified the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty as non-nuclear-weapon states by 1995-1996. All Soviet tactical
nuclear weapons, which had been more widely dispersed, reportedly were moved to Russia
by 1992. The command and control system for strategic nuclear weapons is believed to be
tightly and centrally controlled, with the Russian president and defense minister responsible
for authorizing their use. The system of accounting and control of nuclear (including
weapons grade) material, however, is much more problematic, raising widespread concerns
about the danger of nuclear proliferation. There are growing concerns about threats to
Russian command and control of its strategic nuclear weapons resulting from the degradation
of its system of early warning radars and satellites. At the June 2000 Clinton-Putin summit,
the two sides agreed to set up a permanent center in Moscow to share near real-time
information on missile launches, but this has yet to be implemented. (See CRS Report
RL32202, Nuclear Weapons in Russia: Safety, Security, and Control Issues.)
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U.S. Policy
U.S.-Russian Relations
The spirit of U.S.-Russian “strategic partnership” of the early 1990s was replaced by
increasing tension and mutual recrimination in succeeding years. In the aftermath of the
September 11, 2001 attacks, the two nations reshaped their relationship on the basis of
cooperation against terrorism and Putin’s goal of integrating Russia economically with the
West. (For the change in Russian policy toward integration with the West and cooperation
with the United States, see CRS Report RL31543, Russia’s National Security Policy After
September 11
, August 20, 2002.) In the past year or two, however, tensions have reemerged
on a number of issues that again strain relations. While cooperation continues in some areas,
and Presidents Bush and Putin strive to maintain at least the appearance of cordial personal
relations (their brief Moscow summit, May 8-9, 2005, was their 15th meeting since 2001),
there now appears to be more discord than harmony in U.S.-Russian relations.
Russia’s construction of nuclear reactors in Iran and its role in missile technology
transfers to Iran are critical sources of tension with the United States. Despite repeated
representations from the White House and Congress, which argue that Iran will use the
civilian reactor program as a cover for a covert nuclear weapons program, Russia refused to
cancel the project, which was completed in 2004. Revelations of previously covert Iranian
nuclear developments have revived this issue, and some Russian political leaders criticized
the policy of nuclear cooperation with Iran, giving rise to policy debate on this issue in
Moscow. Moscow’s position is that it intends to continue its civilian nuclear power projects
in Iran, while urging Tehran to accept more intrusive international safeguard inspections.
Moscow withheld delivery of nuclear fuel for the Bushehr reactor, pending agreement with
Teheran about return of spent fuel to Russia for reprocessing. On February 25, 2005, one day
after the Bush-Putin summit in Slovakia, Moscow announced that agreement had been
reached and that it would provide Iran with 100 tons of uranium fuel.
Since the mid-1990s, U.S. and Russian interests have clashed over Iraq. Russia strongly
opposed military action against Iraq in connection with the U.N. inspection regime. After
September 11, Moscow moved away from blanket support of Iraq. Some Russian officials
suggested that under certain circumstances, U.S. military action against Iraq might not
seriously strain U.S.-Russian relations — provided it was not unilateral and Russia’s
economic interests in Iraq were protected. As the United States moved toward military
action against Iraq, Putin tried to balance three competing interests: protecting Russian
economic interests in Iraq; restraining U.S. “unilateralism” and global dominance; and
maintaining friendly relations with the United States. In February-March 2003, Putin aligned
Russia with France and Germany in opposition to U.S. military action and threatened to veto
a U.S.-backed UNSC resolution authorizing military force against Iraq. The U.S.-led war
in Iraq further strained U.S.-Russian relations, but the senior leadership in both countries said
that this would not be allowed to jeopardize their overall cooperation. On May 22, Russia
voted with other members of the U.N. Security Council to approve a U.S.-backed resolution
giving the United States broad authority in administering post-war Iraq. Moscow’s main
interests in Iraq came to focus on debt repayment, having the post-Saddam regime honor pre-
war multi-billion dollar contracts with Russian oil firms, and preventing a glut of Iraqi oil
from sharply depressing the price of oil. In December 2003, Moscow initially reacted angrily
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to the Pentagon decision to bar Russia (and other states that did not support the U.S.-led
coalition in Iraq) from bidding as prime contractors on $18 billion of U.S.-funded Iraqi
reconstruction projects. Russians said they would not write off their portion of Iraq’s debt,
as Washington was requesting. Two weeks later however, after visits from U.S. Presidential
Envoy James Baker and from a delegation of Iraq’s Governing Council, this issue was
resolved. Putin said that Russia would write off 65% of Iraq’s debt ($5.2 billion). The Iraqis
said Russian firms would get multi-billion dollar oil field development contracts.
A sharp U.S.-Russian clash of interests over missile defense, the ABM Treaty, and
strategic arms reductions flared in the first year of the Bush Administration. These problems
were substantially reduced, but not entirely resolved, at the Bush-Putin summit in May 2002.
The Bush Administration declared its disinterest in START II and the ABM Treaty and its
determination to pursue robust missile defense. This approach was met with resistance from
Moscow, but the Administration stuck to its policies and, despite skepticism from some
Members of Congress and many European allies, gradually won Russian acquiescence on
most elements of its program.
Moscow reacted negatively to early Bush Administration assertions of its determination
to press ahead vigorously with a more robust missile defense program, although the
atmospherics, at least, improved after the Bush-Putin summit in Slovenia on June 16, 2001.
In the run up to the November 2001 Bush-Putin summit, U.S. and Russian officials hinted
that a breakthrough agreement was near that would, inter alia, relax ABM Treaty restrictions
on missile defense testing while preserving the ABM Treaty and also sharply reduce strategic
nuclear forces on both sides. The November 13-16 summit in Washington and Texas,
however, did not result in the expected package deal. Discussions at the foreign minister
level in December 2001 narrowed the differences on strategic force reductions. On
December 13, the Bush Administration gave Moscow official notification of its intention to
renounce the ABM Treaty within six months. According to Bush Administration sources,
Russian leaders were privately informed of the U.S. decision some days earlier. Russia’s
official response was cool but restrained, calling the U.S. decision a mistake, but saying that
it would not cause a major disruption in relations. Similarly, in January 2002, Moscow
reacted negatively to the Bush Administration’s proposed plans to put in storage many of the
nuclear warheads it planned to withdraw from deployment, rather than destroy them. Again,
however, Russian criticism was relatively restrained, while the two sides continued intensive
negotiations.
The negotiations bore fruit in mid-May, when final agreement was announced. Moscow
won U.S. agreement to make the accord a treaty requiring legislative approval. The terms
of the treaty, however, achieve all the Administration’s key goals: deployed strategic nuclear
warheads are to be reduced to 1,700-2,200 by 2012, with no interim timetable, no limits on
the mix or types of weapons, and no requirement for destroying rather than storing warheads.
The so-called Treaty of Moscow was signed by the two presidents on May 24, 2002. On
June 13, the United States became free of all restraints of the ABM Treaty. On the same day,
Moscow announced that it would no longer consider itself bound by the provisions of the
(unratified) START II Treaty, which has become a dead letter. On June 24, the commander
of Russia’s Strategic Rocket Forces announced that in response to the U.S. withdrawal from
the ABM Treaty, Russia had decided to prolong the life of its MIRVed ICBM force, which,
he said, could be extended another 10-15 years. On June 1, 2003, Presidents Bush and Putin
exchanged instruments of ratification allowing the Treaty of Moscow to enter into force.
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They also agreed to cooperate in missile defense. Later that month, the two sides agreed to
conduct joint missile-defense exercises.
Moscow and Washington are cooperating on some issues of nuclear weapons reduction
and security. Since 1992, the United States has spent over $3 billion in Cooperative Threat
Reduction program (CTR or “Nunn-Lugar”) funds to help Russia dismantle nuclear weapons
and ensure the security of its nuclear weapons, weapons grade nuclear material, and other
weapons of mass destruction. During the September 1998 summit, both countries agreed to
share information when either detects a ballistic missile launch anywhere in the world, and
to reduce each country’s stockpile of weapons-grade plutonium by fifty metric tons. In June
1999, U.S. and Russian officials extended the CTR program for another seven years. The
two sides also agreed to each dispose of an additional 34 tons of weapons-grade plutonium,
with the U.S. to seek international funding to help finance the $1.7 billion Russian effort.
The planned U.S.-Russian joint missile early warning information center in Moscow,
however, has yet to be established. In April 2002, the Bush Administration decided not to
certify that Russia was fully cooperating with U.S. efforts to verify its compliance with
agreements to eliminate chemical and biological weapons. This could have blocked U.S.
funding for some U.S.-Russian comprehensive threat reduction programs, but President Bush
granted Russia a waiver.
Despite continued tension between Washington and Moscow over Iran and the sharp
disagreement over Iraq in early 2003, both governments seems determined to preserve the
cooperative relationship they built following the September 11 attacks. In March 2003,
Senator Lugar introduced legislation to exempt Russia from the Jackson-Vanik amendment
to the Trade Bill of 1974, action which would grant Russia permanent normal trade relations
(PNTR) status and facilitate Russian accession to the WTO, but it received no further action.
U.S. Assistance
From FY1992 through FY1997, the U.S. government obligated $4.5 billion in grant
assistance to Russia, including $2.1 billion in Freedom Support Act aid for democratization
and market reform and $857 million for Cooperative Threat Reduction (Nunn-Lugar
assistance). But Russia’s share of the (shrinking) NIS foreign aid account fell from about
60% in FY1993-FY1994 to 17% in FY1998 and has been between 15%-22% since then.
Roughly $158 million was allocated to Russia in FY2000 appropriations. The
Administration requested $148 million for Russian programs in FY2003, a 6% cut from the
previous year. The FY2004 Russian appropriation fell to $93.4 million and for FY2005 is
$90 million (H.R. 4818), $10.5 million more than requested by the Administration.
Both the FREEDOM Support Act and annual foreign operations appropriations bills
contain conditions that Russia is expected to meet in order to receive assistance. A
restriction on aid to Russia was approved in the FY1998 appropriations and each year
thereafter, prohibiting any aid to the government of the Russian Federation (i.e., central
government; it does not affect local and regional governments) unless the President certifies
that Russia has not implemented a law discriminating against religious minorities. The
President has made such determinations each year.
In addition to the conditions related to Russian nuclear reactor and missile technology
transfers to Iran, discussed above, Members of Congress introduced a number of other
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conditions on aid to Russia. The FY2001 foreign aid bill prohibited 60% of aid to the central
government of Russia if it was not cooperating with international investigations of war crime
allegations in Chechnya or providing access to NGOs doing humanitarian work in Chechnya.
The FY2002 bill withholds 60% of aid to the central government only if it does not provide
access to NGOs. Possibly as a result of Russian cooperation with the United States in its war
on terrorism, the war crime provision was dropped. The FY2003, FY2004, and FY2005 bills
continued this omission of the war crimes provision.
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