U.S. reshaping budget to account for
Russian military threat
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[December 05, 2016]
By Andrea Shalal
SIMI VALLEY, Calif. (Reuters) - Russia's
increasing military activities around the world have unsettled top U.S.
military officials, who say they are reshaping their budget plans to
better address what they now consider to be the most pressing threat to
U.S. security.
"Russia is the No. 1 threat to the United States. We have a number of
threats that we're dealing with, but Russia could be, because of the
nuclear aspect, an existential threat to the United States," Air Force
Secretary Deborah James told Reuters in an interview at the annual
Reagan National Defense Forum.
James, Chief of Naval Operations Admiral John Richardson and Pentagon
chief arms buyer Frank Kendall, all voiced growing concern about
Russia's increasingly aggressive behavior in interviews late on
Saturday.
Their comments come as the Pentagon finalizes a classified security
assessment for President-elect Donald Trump, who has promised to both
pump up U.S. defense spending and build closer ties to Russian President
Vladimir Putin.
European diplomats fear Moscow could use the time before Trump's
inauguration to launch more offensives in Ukraine and Syria, betting
that President Barack Obama will be loathe to response forcefully so
soon before he hands off power on Jan. 20.
Kendall said U.S. policy had been centered on threats in the
Asia-Pacific region and Middle East, but was now focused more on Russia.
"Their behavior has caused us ... to rethink the balance of capabilities
that we're going to need," he said.
None of the officials gave details about how the concerns would affect
the fiscal 2018 budget request, but defense officials have pointed to
the need to focus on areas such as cyber security, space, nuclear
capabilities and missile defense, where Russia has developed new
capabilities in recent years.
Pentagon officials have nearly completed work on a fiscal 2018 budget
request, but it is likely to be reworked substantially once Trump takes
office. Officials expect that budget to be submitted in April at the
earliest, and possibly later. Typically, budgets are submitted in early
February.
Marine Corps General Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs, told
the conference that Russia's goal was to counter NATO, undermine its
credibility and limit the ability of the U.S. military to project power
around the world.
"They are operating with a frequency and in places that we haven't seen
for decades," he said, adding that the buildup should be viewed in the
context of its actions in Ukraine, Crimea and Syria, where they have
already stepped up air attacks on eastern Aleppo.
Richardson said the Navy was seeing increased Russian naval activities
around the globe, including its unprecedented deployment of a carrier
strike group to the Mediterranean, the firing of missiles from ships in
the Caspian Sea, increased submarine activities in the north Atlantic,
and a growing naval presence in the Pacific.
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Secretary of the Air Force Deborah Lee James talks to members of the
341st Missile Wing during a visit to Malmstrom Air Force Base in
Montana January 22, 2014. REUTERS/John Turner/U.S. Air Force/Handout
via Reuters
He said there were continuing incidents involving Russian aircraft
buzzing U.S. vessels, with some coming as close as 30 feet, and
other cases where ships were behaving "erratically."
"It's all for public consumption," Richardson said, noting that
Russian ships often filmed such encounters and edited them to make
it appear as if U.S. ships were at fault.
Russia and the United States have an agreement to limit and discuss
incidents at sea, but the accord appeared to be having little impact
on curbing such incidents, he said.
Dialogue between U.S. and Russian navy officers has ceased since
Russia's annexation of the Crimea region of Ukraine in 2014, in
contrast to the days of the Cold War, when U.S. and Russian
officials were in more regular contact, he said.
"More communication with Russia would be a valuable thing,"
Richardson said, noting that he had regular contact with his
counterpart in China, but not with those in Russia or Iran.
James echoed his concerns, citing what she called "very worrying"
incidents of "very dangerous airmanship" and cyber attacks by
Russian hackers on U.S. institutions.
Richardson also said he was concerned about a report by Norwegian
Defense Minister Ine Eriksen Soereide that Russia now had the
ability to cut off resupply routes to Europe through its activities
in the Arctic region.
Army Secretary Eric Fannning told a panel at the conference that
Russia was clearly acting "in a destabilizing way," and said the
United States was learning from how the Russian military was
behaving in Ukraine.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Alan Crosby)
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