Russia could soon be carrying out military drills alongside North Korea and Cuba according to Valery Gerasimov, the chief of staff of the Russian armed forces.
Speaking at a meeting on Saturday which was also
attended by Russia’s defence minister Sergey Shoygu, along with the
heads of all armed forces branches, Gerasimov announced: “We are
planning an expansion of the communication lines of our military central
command. We are entering preliminary negotiations with the armed forces
of Brazil, Vietnam, Cuba and the Democratic People’s Republic of
Korea.”
“We are going to conduct a series of joint naval
and air force exercises, as well as joint drills of our ground troops
and air assault troops,” the military official added.
According to the former U.S. ambassador to the
Ukraine Steven Pifer, Russia is developing these potential military
partnerships as a response to its current international isolation. Due
to its involvement in the Ukrainian conflict, the U.S. and EU have both
imposed sanctions on the country and certain Russian individuals, and
the country was suspended from the G8 last March.
“The Russian military may be reaching out to other
countries as part of Moscow’s effort to show that it is not isolated,
despite the very negative international reaction to Russian aggression
against Ukraine,” Pifer says.
However Pifer, who also served as special
assistant to president Bill Clinton on Russia and Eurasia, does not
believe Russia’s attempts to embark on new military partnerships will
develop further: “I’d be astonished to see Russian and North Korean
troops training together,” Pifer says.
“As for Cuba, Moscow has a long history there. My
guess is that part of the Russian interest is tit-for-tat: they are
unhappy with U.S/ military cooperation with the Baltic states and other
countries, such as Georgia, that are close to them, so they hope to
tweak the United States by upping their engagement in Cuba.”
However, according to Pifer a Russian partnership
with Cuba may also be unlikely due to the recent thawing of relations
between Havana and the U.S..
Last week Russian president Vladimir Putin told military officials in Moscow that he would like to expand Russia’s role in the arms trade across the Far East and Latin America.
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