|
JULY
1998 • NUMBER 28 • ISSN 1353-0402
NATO Resists
Pressures
to
Militarise Central Europe
By Jorgen Dragsdahl
BASIC has worked on
the issue of potential weapons transfers to Central and Eastern
Europe since 1994. This paper provides a perspective from within the
region. NATO's Force Goals for the new members indicate that the
Alliance has been responsive to the widespread debate on an
unnecessary military buildup in the region.
Introduction
A prevalent myth in tying NATO enlargement to a boom in weapons
purchases by new members was debunked when NATO defence ministers
endorsed Target Force Goals for Poland, Hungary and the Czech
Republic at a Defence Planning Committee session on 11 June 1998.
Despite numerous claims to the contrary, it has become clear that a
massive and lucrative arms market for US and western European
defence equipment is not opening in Central and Eastern
Europe.
In fact, NATO has
deliberately discouraged early investments in big ticket items.
Early on, sales representatives from the arms industry persuaded
many aspiring members to believe that procurement was a requirement
for membership. But during the defence planning process, the
Alliance has emphasised the human factor and interoperability with
NATO forces. The real priority has not been getting battalions and
brigades up to the same level of weaponry as NATO. Rather, it has,
as Chris Donnelly, Special Advisor to NATO’s Secretary General
described it, been "changing the way the armed forces
thinks".1
"As news filters
out on the results of this process, we expect some anxiety among
other aspiring members to dry up a bit, so they will think in a more
sober way about their requirements", said a NATO official close
to the defence planning process in Central and Eastern Europe.2
A case in point is Romania’s plan to acquire 96 US helicopters at
an estimated cost of between $1.4 and $3 billion.3
Several news articles and statements by Romanian politicians have
linked the deal to Romanian aspirations for NATO membership.4
However, the NATO official claims that Alliance experts have advised
Bucharest to buy Russian helicopters, on the basis that they would
be a more fitting addition to Romania’s existing forces.
The same NATO official
estimates that major arms procurement in the entire region,
excluding only Russia, will total less than $2 billion per year for
the next decade. For political and financial reasons, most orders
will go to the domestic arms industry. Besides limited exports,
western contractors will only benefit indirectly through joint
ventures and license arrangements.5 If several countries
buy multipurpose fighters, that figure may rise, but the scale and
timing of such air force modernisation remains undecided.
This NATO estimate is in
sharp contrast to often quoted figures — most often of uncertain
origin and vague content — putting the expected market for western
exports at a total value of $35 billion for the next decade.6
It also represents only a small fraction of global arms sales,
presently at a level of over $30 billion annually.7
Speculative Future
Trends
Whether the present trend will change is somewhat beyond the
scope of this report, as it involves many speculative factors. Some
argue that costs were kept down in order to ease ratification of
membership. But any "surprise" announcement of a need for
costly new projects would also have political repercussions, and
could block ratification of further enlargement.
NATO clearly favours
power projection capability for new members, and after some of
today’s most urgent modernisation needs have been satisfied,
investments in such forces can be expected. The economy in Poland,
and to a lesser degree in Hungary and the Czech Republic, is growing
rapidly. Increased prosperity will provide the means for shouldering
larger defence investments. Whether continued prosperity in the
region as a whole will produce similar increases in weapons
purchases is debatable. It will take decades with high growth before
any of the three countries reach a per capita gross domestic product
(GDP) comparable to those countries after which they wish to model
themselves. In competition for resources, both military
establishments and domestic arms industries will have a voice, but
they will also be up against far larger industrial interests and
populations striving to survive in the stiffly competitive
environment of the European Union.
The nature of Russia’s
future role in Europe is also a significant factor in developing
future defence plans. According to informed sources, during a
classified threat analysis for NATO commanders in late April 1998,
General Klaus Naumann, head of NATO’s Military Committee, placed
the risk of resurgent Russian military power below other challenges,
such as regional instability, rogue states and calamities associated
with a lack of natural resources. His position was that Russia had
neither the intention nor the capability to launch attacks. The
estimated time-frame for preparing Russian forces to fight, if so
ordered by a new political leadership, was put at three months for a
regional war or 18 months for a general war. With so much warning
time, there could be no anxiety about an eventuality with such
little chance of success. Speculations on a future Russian threat
might flourish in some circles, but the fact is that during the
development of a new strategic concept, most NATO countries are
stressing non-Article V contingencies. Even a hostile Russia would
not constitute a threat comparable to the Soviet Union, and the
enlarged NATO would not need to maintain a Cold War posture.
Seen from an arms
control perspective, NATO enlargement accomplishes three goals.
First, lower ceilings in arms control agreements can be accepted,
because it is no longer necessary to defend one’s territory solely
with national forces. Secondly, replacing obsolete hardware through
acquisition of new major weapons systems is less of a priority.
Thirdly, a de facto nuclear weapon-free zone has been
established in Central Europe. This last point is no small
accomplishment, because in the early 1990s Polish leaders spoke
favourably about nuclear weapons and later sought NATO deployment of
such weapons to ensure an allied defence of Poland. This framework
is likely to constrain future defence planning.
Acquisition of
Fighter Aircraft
Nothing illustrates the discrepancies between industry-fed media
speculation about a "huge" market and the actual realities
better than the long-awaited procurement of new multipurpose
fighters by Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic. Since 1995, a
steady stream of news reports have focused on the allegedly imminent
orders for hundreds of fighters with an estimated price tag of about
$10 billion. Yet many of the expected dates for the announcements
have passed. Linking the postponements to the increasingly certain
prospects for NATO membership, a former Polish official noted that,
"If we ever had received a no, new fighters would have been
ordered the day after".8 This explanation has been
echoed by other sources in new member nations. As a key Hungarian
official put it, "As membership came closer, the pressure for
acquiring fighters lessened".
While the rapidly
growing obsolescence of existing fighter forces created pressure for
modernisation among the domestic military and arms industry, NATO
officials and foreign military contacts discouraged any rapid
decisions. "American arms industry representatives said: ‘If
you don’t buy now, we can’t guarantee a Senate yes to
enlargement’", the Hungarian official noted. "But US
generals always said: ‘Wait, think twice before you buy’".9
NATO’s decision not to prepare for deployment of nuclear weapons
in new member countries may also have lessened the need for dual
capable aircraft.10 However, both a NATO source and a key
Hungarian official denied that the Alliance ever considered a
nuclear role for aircraft.
According to classified
NATO documents, in fall 1997 Poland informed the Alliance of its
plans to procure between 130 and 160 moderns fighter aircraft with
"delivery expected [to] begin 2001".11 In a
classified Polish 15-year plan for modernisation of the armed forces
dated September 1997, the same project is described as procurement
of 80 fighters during the next ten years and an additional 70 by
2012.12 On 15 May 1998, Jerzy Kropiwnicki of the
Government Centre for Strategic Studies in Poland and member of the
Polish cabinet stated that, "The currents goal is 120 fighter
aircraft within the next 10 to 15 years".13 These
figures are far below earlier reports on Polish plans to procure 250
fighters.14 In June 1998, financing and others details of
the deal were still unresolved, partly because the Polish 15-year
plan expected funding for aircraft from outside the defence budget.
Fighter modernisation
was considered carefully during NATO’s development of Target Force
Goals for Poland. During a press conference for foreign journalists
in March 1998, the Polish Defence Minister said that NATO had made
it clear that it did not want Poland to bankrupt itself paying for
hefty arms programs in the next few years. Faced with overhauls of
its education, health pension and local government systems, it was
an open question if and when Poland could afford the fighters.
"Therefore, for now, we have put the multipurpose aircraft on
the back burner", he said.
Several sources in the
Polish Ministry of Defence have stated that the Task Force Goals
only require Poland to have a concrete program ready in 2001-02.
NATO sources expect procurement to start in the "early years of
the next decade", and a more concrete plan for acquisition to
be presented during the next round of Force Goal planning, starting
later this year. According to one source, "All options are
open", with regard to both the type of fighters and how
acquisition will begin. Acquisition options include leasing used
fighters, pursuing co-production or finding other kinds of
compensation.
The Czech Republic has
informed NATO of its plans to procure 36 fighters, and Hungary is
aiming for 30, but neither has taken any concrete steps. On 5 May,
Hungarian Defence Minister Gyorgy Keleti said that a tender for the
aircraft purchase would be made "in 2000 at the earliest".15
A Hungarian official cast further doubts on when and whether
procurement will take place, arguing that, "It will be 2005 or
later". He stressed that fighters are not the priority; rather,
procurement of radar, anti-air missiles and full participation in
the integrated NATO air defence with command and control facilities
are the main concerns. Procurement of helicopters might also be
given higher priority, as a result of NATO’s emphasis on increased
mobility of land forces.
Pressure for
Modernisation
In all three countries, the air force inventory of fighters are
far below the ceilings agreed in the Conventional Armed Forces in
Europe (CFE) Treaty in 1990. In addition, in their present holdings,
only a small number of Soviet made MiG-29s can be considered modern.
Due to maintenance problems, only a handful of MiG-29s are even
capable of flying on any given day. Accident rates are also high.
With a CFE limit of 460 combat aircraft, Poland has less than 360,
22 of which are MiG-29s. Naval aviation also has 27 MiG-21s;
according to NATO data, they will be phased out beginning in 2008.
In three years, 260 of the oldest and most worn-out aircraft, such
as the 160 MiG-21s leaving active service in 1998, will be phased
out. "If we fail to commission new machines to fill this gap,
there will be nothing to restructure in the Polish Air Forces",
its commander, General Kazimirz Dziok, said in February.16
According to official
figures, Hungarian and Czech fighters are equally antiquated. With a
CFE limit of 180 combat aircraft, last year Hungary had 52 MiG-21s
and 28 MiG-29s; most of the MiG-21s are now kept in hangars. With a
CFE limit of 230 combat aircraft, in 1997 the Czech Republic had
129, all outdated Soviet models. Last year, a secret Czech Ministry
of Defence report stated that, "At present the basic equipment
of the tactical Air Force consists of supersonic MiG-21, MiG-23, and
Su-22 aircraft and subsonic Su-25 aircraft. For reasons of limited
availability of resources, over 50 percent of this technology is
currently incapable of flying".17 Last year, the
Czech Air Force also signed a contract with a reported price tag of
$708 million for 72 subsonic light multi-role L-159s, produced by
the domestic Aero Vodochody, with delivery beginning in 1999.18
Maintenance problems,
fuel costs and concerns over wear and tear on aircraft have also led
to extremely low levels of readiness, measured by the number of
hours pilots are airborne. According to NATO data supplied by Poland
in 1997, pilots flying MiG-29s and MiG-21s were expected to get 40
hours, pilots in MiG-23s and Su-22s would get 60 hours. For all
combat pilots, this would be raised to 60 hours in 1998 and 80 hours
by 2002.19 Hungary and the Czech Republic provided
similar figures.20 Such low readiness was the subject of
considerable criticism during the NATO defence planning process,
because under the Allied Central Europe (ACE) command, suggested
training standards are between 160 and 180 hours. During a visit to
Poland in March 1998, NATO Supreme Commander in Europe General
Wesley Clark allegedly made that point painfully clear, saying,
"I have no need for modern fighters with pilots having only 40
hours of flying time". However, a solution was not readily
apparent, since an increase in air hours would lead to a fall in
aircraft availability as a result of maintenance problems. Even new
aircraft might not solve the problem, as budgetary constraints would
still keep flying hours low.
False Expectations
For historical reasons, having been occupied often and betrayed
by allies, unilateral disarmament is not a feasible option in
Central Europe. Due to the obvious modernisation needs in the
region, arms industry representatives in Western Europe and North
America saw great potential. In a typical outburst, Joel Johnson,
vice-president of the US Aerospace Industries Association (AIA) and
one of the more outspoken supporters of new acquisitions, argued
that, "For 50 years, [Central Europe] has been the only region
of the world that has been denied Western military products, and so
you are starting at ground zero".21 Neither have the
local officials restrained themselves. During the Global Air and
Space ’97 conference in Arlington, Virginia, then-Deputy Minister
of Defence of Poland Andrzej Karkoszka said, "For you big
sharks in this industry you have to understand that there is
capability [in Poland and the region]". He emphasised
Poland’s interest in across-the-board modernisation and pointed
out that, "Five to ten billion dollars for just one
country...[is] quite a substantial market".22
Initially, US embassy
officials in Warsaw expected to work out a quiet leasing arrangement
for used F-16s as a stop gap measure until Poland could afford new
fighters. Danish officials promised Poland practical assistance,
seeing co-operation as mutually beneficial since Denmark already had
extensive experience with the F-16 and co-operation could bring
savings in maintenance and upgrading costs. But further official
advice from US representatives was blocked when a zealous US naval
attaché got McDonnell Douglas and its F/A-18 involved, despite
rules forbidding US officials from taking sides in competitions
between US manufacturers.23 Also entering the fray were
the French company Dassault with its Mirage 2000 and Sweden’s Saab
and British Aerospace with the JAS-39 Gripen. On the sideline,
Russia’s MiGMAPO was offering the MiG-29.
However, as some
industry representatives soon realised, there was far more talk than
action. In a remarkable retrospective article, voicing views he
expressed privately much earlier, Bruce Jackson, Director of Global
Development for Lockheed Martin (who also gained notoriety as the
co-founder of the US Committee to Expand NATO), called the idea that
"nations aspiring to NATO membership are a large market for
military equipment" a "false" impression.24
To some, this had been
quite apparent for some time. In early 1996, several military attachés
in member countries saw the market in Poland, Hungary and the Czech
Republic to be, at best, 200 western aircraft over the next decade
with a combined price tag of no more than $6 billion. Current
estimates for this time frame are now down to between 110 and 130
aircraft, hardly enough to constitute a "huge" market.
According to one study, the global demand for new military aircraft
is expected to grow over the next decade. During that period, a
total of 3,369 fighters, attack planes and trainers valued at about
$100.8 billion are expected to be produced. This study predicts that
the market is not in Central and Eastern Europe, but elsewhere,
arguing that, "The primary market motivator... is a major
re-equipment cycle beginning to shape up in the United States and
western Europe".25
Russian analysts appear
to have been equally realistic. As Ruslan Pukhov, director of the
Russian Centre for Analysis, Strategy and Technology observed last
year, "The widespread view that the enlargement of NATO will
entail a loss of a large market for military hardware in Central and
Eastern Europe for Russia does not fit the facts". He concluded
this simply by looking at the small procurement budgets in the three
candidate countries and their protection of their own producers.26
The idea that the market
in the region is in fact quite small was also reinforced by the
highly respected Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).
Launching its 1997 yearbook, SIPRI stated that, "A survey of
the potential arms procurement programmes of Central and East
European countries suggest that there is little evidence that this
sub-region will emerge as an important market for major conventional
weapons even if some of the countries become members of NATO".27
Aside from low procurement budgets and protectionism, SIPRI’s
analysis emphasised NATO’s requirements, which will likely stress
interoperability rather than new large weapons systems.
Short-lived Romance
But then why the uproar? Interestingly, none of the articles
examining the vast market potential in the region have cited SIPRI.
Neither have they quoted any NATO officials. Apart from poor
journalism and unchecked anti-enlargement emotions, some
misunderstandings have developed around the interactions between
local governments and sales representatives from US defence
companies. As Lockheed Martin’s Bruce Jackson, a frequent visitor
to candidate countries, explained, "Most of the misconceptions
about the motivations of American corporations have their origin in
the initial promotional phase, which is similar to the initial
phases of a romance in that both parties tend to vastly overstate
the depth and sincerity of their passion and affections".28
Marketing divisions and political leaders "discovered a mutual
interest in exaggerating their enthusiasm for each other". As
he pointed out, it is not the job of marketing people to ask
customers if they have amply examined their own reasons for buying a
product.
Jackson also argues that
the defence manufacturers did not expect Central European
governments to "exaggerate both the size of their pocketbook
and the immediacy of their need for advanced military
equipment". Speculating on the possible motivations for such
exaggeration, he said, "I suspect that in the minds of freedom
fighters and democratic revolutionaries elected after 1989, there
was still a nagging doubt that maybe the West in its heart of hearts
really cared more about its financial interests than shared
values".
This analysis is
supported by both Polish and Hungarian officials who also absolve
Jackson of any blame in their scathing description of industry
behaviour. According to one Hungarian official, "He was never
primarily a sales man but more of a strategic thinker". Jackson
himself explained that the attention Lockheed Martin paid Poland was
interest "in a prestige client in much the same way that Rolex
would like Pete Sampras to wear its watch".
Industry Competition
According to Jackson, the big financial interests "lay in
the burgeoning commercial marketplace". In fact, according to
several sources, in 1996 Jackson was rebuffed by Polish officials
when he offered investments in Poland’s civilian sector as
compensation for costs associated with the sale or leasing of F-16s.
Only co-production with the local defence industry, who has seen its
once lucrative market disappear since 1989, would be welcomed.
Openly scornful, Jackson
explains why Lockheed Martin wants to invest in non-defence areas
with exceptional growth prospects, noting that, "All of Europe,
not just Central Europe, is still suffering from over-capacity in
twilight industries. In America, we have just completed a painful
10-year restructuring and down-sizing, and we have no intention of
suffering through these painful dislocations again".
However, for Central
European governments, tens of thousands of jobs in their defence
industries are at stake. Their only hope for a future market lies in
joint ventures with NATO-based defence companies. As a result, they
have stressed both the need for membership and their own prospective
market potential. Jerzy Kropiwnicki of the Government Centre for
Strategic Studies in Poland and member of the Polish cabinet still
claims that, "the Central European countries must be assessed
as a highly promising market for arms exporters". The catch is
that needs should be met through co-production and that imports
should be balanced through the opening of Western markets to the
Polish arms industry.29
For precisely this
reason, some Polish sources praise offers from European companies
because they promise more of a future than those with US
corporations. They claim that Polish industry can better find a
permanent role in a European industry preparing for restructuring
while US offers are generally limited to concrete compensation in
procurement deals. "Americans are guests in Europe, but we have
to live here", one Polish industry representative said.30
This message has also been conveyed to prospective NATO member
countries by EU industry and government representatives. Last year,
the German Ministry of Defence tried to persuade candidates that the
Swedish JAS-39 Gripen would be the best buy in order to strengthen
the position of European manufacturers relative to US producers.31
The transatlantic competition explains in part why the US defence
industry has placed extraordinary emphasis on getting a foothold in
such a small market. After all, even one Rolex watch can be a weapon
in a global struggle for prestige and pre-eminence.
Conflicting Pressures
Defence planners in Central Europe and NATO have clearly had to
deal with complicated and contradictory pressures and needs. Armed
with militant unions eager to march the streets of Warsaw calling
for more orders, Poland’s domestic weapons industry constitutes a
serious problem. To a lesser extent, these industry pressures are
also being felt in Hungary and the Czech Republic. Opposing pressure
comes from the public which, according to opinion polls, will not
support increased defence expenditures if health, education and
social welfare budgets suffer as a result.
Arms industry
expectations have also been fed by several US studies providing cost
estimates on modernisation and NATO integration which range from $27
to $125 billion dollars over the next 10 to 15 years. These studies
have also inspired a counter-reaction in some allied countries,
where cost-conscious politicians object to picking up the tab.
The region’s defence
traditions fuel another set of pressures. Dissolution of the Warsaw
Pact gave the officer corps their first chance ever to plan
independently for self-defence of their own territory. Being
patriots, many took on the task with enthusiasm and often voiced
criticism of "much too low" CFE ceilings limiting forces
sufficient for national defence. However, within NATO, there is
increasing emphasis on integration and tasks other than territorial
defence. Thus the officer corps in new member countries are being
asked to change their thinking once again: even lower CFE ceilings
could be imposed and they must place their faith in reinforcements
and plan for world-wide deployment.
Differences in
perspective also arose because all three countries came to the
defence planning process with long-term plans for their armed forces
already in hand. Poland’s was the most detailed. While NATO’s
advice had been sought in developing these plans, NATO staff could
only provide very limited advice before enlargement was approved at
the Madrid summit in July 1997.
According to NATO, the
defence planning process should be based on Alliance strategy and
ministerial guidance. However, the candidate countries only received
details of current NATO military strategy — outlined in MC 400/1
and other relevant papers — in spring 1998, when the process was
almost complete. Through its Partnership for Peace (PfP) programme,
NATO supplied guidelines for interoperability years ago but they
were generally limited to peace support activities. All candidates
got some help through bilateral contacts with various members, but
this assistance was uneven and sometimes contradictory.
Starved Forces
Defence planners have accepted the need for some degree of modernisation,
but the objectives have remained uncertain. Compared to Warsaw Pact
days, for a number of years, the armed forces of Poland, Hungary and
the Czech Republic have been put on a starvation diet. Defence
budgets in Poland and Hungary have been reduced by more than half in
real terms. According to official figures, since 1989, Poland’s
military personnel has been cut from 412,000 to 233,279. According
to data supplied to NATO by Poland, the real manpower is even lower,
due in part to recruitment problems. In 1996, the Army, Navy and Air
Force had only 176,628 in service.32 In the case of
Hungary, before 1989 there were more than 100,000 men in service;
according to unofficial data, by end of 1997 only 52,000 were left.33
Exact comparisons for the Czech Republic are difficult since
Czechoslovakia was divided on 31 December 1992, but the situation is
similar: Czech forces went from more than 106,000 in January 1993 to
less than 61,000 by 1997.
NATO documents assessing
the extremely detailed Defence Planning Questionnaires submitted
last fall are replete with words like "old" and
"approaching obsolescence" in describing equipment in the
three countries.34 Over the years, numerous news articles
have painted an even bleaker picture. During the 1990s, Poland has
bought very few weapons from the domestic arms industry and
procurement of spare parts has been minimal. Hungary acquired some
newer equipment of Warsaw Pact origin, including MiG-29s and BTR-80
armoured vehicles through debt repayment deals with Russia. They
also received cheap tanks from Belarus and 20 Mi-24 helicopters and
spare parts from former East German stocks.35
The state of equipment
in the Czech Republic is the worst. To illustrate the "scale of
the problem", a NATO source estimated that bringing Czech war
supplies up to Alliance standards would cost two years of that
country’s total defence budget. As one Prague newspaper noted,
"Today’s Czech Army can be considered completely
toothless".36
On the face of it, this
state of affairs lent some credence to the US studies predicting
much higher expenditures. However, NATO sources indicate that the
studies are seriously flawed, relying on outdated assumptions and
incorrect data. According to one common criticism, they are
"Cold War assumptions, not even taking into consideration the
Strategic Concept from 1991". One key official dismissed the
studies by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) and the Rand
Corporation as "pure fantasy". A US source at NATO even
accused Pentagon officials of committing "mental
masturbation" in their efforts to develop an estimate last
spring, because no input was sought from either NATO or candidate
governments. Citing an erroneous figure in the Pentagon study of
$2.5-2.9 billion for hardened aircraft shelters to be paid out of an
assessed total NATO infrastructure investment of $9-11 billion, one
official exclaimed that "For many years, NATO has not built
hardened shelters and will not, because we don’t need to. Europe
is littered with them".
Budgetary Constraints
NATO reached agreement on a budget limit of $1.5 billion for the
commonly funded expenditures associated with enlargement. Both NATO
staff and experts from national delegations are generally satisfied
with the projects included in the programme. However, several
experts also call the cost level a political dictate. Similarly,
when dealing with candidates, no real challenges were made to the
budgetary goals outlined in their plans. All such figures are
political, subject to change and manipulation. However, until such
changes occur, the existing figures are followed by bureaucrats as
sacrosanct guidelines. As a Polish official commented on the
budgetary debate, "You can say anything about figures, but we
all only have one honest answer: Costs will be the exact sum we
finally decide".
An often repeated claim
is that NATO membership reduces defence expenditures. Former Polish
Deputy Minister of Defence Andrzej Karkoszka said that it should,
"be stressed that the three national armed forces had to be
modernised and reorganised anyhow, [regardless] of their future
international bonds. The goal of integration with NATO is only a
paradigm, through which all the modernisation processes are looked
at. It is a quite different and much more expensive task to create
an independent, entirely national, individual all-around defence
than an alliance-oriented, burden-, risk-, and task-sharing defence
in which the individual national potential is only one of many
elements of a wider system".37 However, no one
interviewed could name any concrete studies analysing expected costs
outside the Alliance, although some estimates have been published.
Some experts doubt that NATO membership would reduce defence
expenditures but argue that Alliance scrutiny produces greater
rationality in defence budgets and provides "more security for
the same money".
A classified study by
NATO’s economic affairs department directed by Daniel George
concludes that the costs associated with membership and planned
modernisation in the three new member countries will be
"affordable and manageable".38 Substantial
growth is planned in defence budgets for the 1997-2002 planning
period. Using 1990 prices, NATO calculated the extra sums available
in contrast to keeping the 1997 level steady during this period. The
total volume increase will be 18 percent in Poland, 40 percent in
Hungary and 35 percent in the Czech Republic. Because of strong GDP
growth forecasts, using NATO definitions, the share of defence
expenditures in Poland is likely to decrease from the present 2.24
percent of GDP. Warsaw’s own analysis shows a steady drop to 1.75
percent in 2012.39 Last year, GDP growth reached 6.9
percent, and future growth is expected to stay close to this level.
In its official defence budgets, Poland has committed itself to a
real growth increase of 3 percent above inflation for each of the
next six years. Using NATO definitions, this translates into an
average real growth expenditure of 2.7 percent. However, these
figures do not include acquisition of multipurpose fighters to be
financed outside the defence budget framework. Yet if acquisition is
delayed as expected until the early years of the next decade, even a
price tag of $5 billion for 160 planes will not have a dramatic
impact on the defence share of Poland’s GDP.
Hungary and the Czech
Republic have phrased their commitments differently, pledging to
increase their defence budgets by 0.1 percent of GDP every year. For
1998, the Czech Republic budgeted $1.05 billion for defence, while
Hungary allocated $630 million.40 In 2000, the Czech
defence budget should reach its target of 2.0 percent. With a 1.3
percent share of GDP in 1997, Hungary’s defence budget should
reach its target of 1.8 percent in 2001.
In 1997, NATO Europe
estimated average defence expenditures to be 2.2 percent of a
nation’s gross domestic product, while the average from 1990 to
1994 was 2.7 percent. Individual countries varied widely, from 1.4
percent in Spain to 4.6 percent in Greece. NATO officials do not
expect the decline to change, but are hopeful that the downward
trend will level off.41 As a result, new member countries
will be under or close to the average.
For modernisation, all
three countries plan to allocate a growing percentage of their
defence budgets to arms procurement and upgrades, infrastructure and
research and development. In Poland’s case, the share will rise
from 17.6 in 1998 to 36.8 percent in 2012. Official sources put the
cumulative sum available at $8.3 billion, not including expenditures
for aircraft. These are described as the "indirect costs of
integration" with NATO.42 Even when the $3 billion
in "direct costs" are included, such as contributions to
NATO’s commonly funded budgets, maintaining delegations at NATO
headquarters and reaching minimal levels of interoperability, the
$11.3 billion figure is still far below earlier estimates.43
For example, the now infamous Congressional Budget Office (CBO)
study estimated Poland’s own costs associated with membership at
between $23.4 and $28.66 billion over a fifteen-year period.44
In a more recent Cato Institute study, Ivan Eland, who also authored
the CBO report, provides numerous figures which are inconsistent
with the actual plans of the three new members. For example, he
calculates an expenditure of $4.7 billion for the modernisation of
military exercise facilities. In reality, both Poland and Hungary
currently earn millions of dollars renting these facilities to
Allied forces, who apparently find them quite satisfactory.45
Planned modernisation
costs for Hungary and the Czech Republic are more fuzzy. Hungary is
developing a new modernisation plan, to be finished this fall, and
informed sources will only predict a growing share of the defence
budget going to procurement. Over the past four years, Hungary has
spent almost $198 million on military goods purchased abroad and
unofficially, some expect imports to double annually to $100
million.46
Since November 1994, the Czech Republic has had a$4 billion 10 year
plan for modernisation which includes aircraft purchase. However, as
one newspaper claimed, financial problems and political
complications have turned the plans "to dust" and in
reality only half that sum is available. As Hynek Fajmon, an adviser
to Defence Minister Michal Lobkowicz explained, "The 10-year
plan for weapons purchases evolved at a time when it did not occur
to anyone, even in his wildest dreams, that we would, evidently, be
a NATO member in a year’s time. Therefore, we made plans for our
defence in all global respects and also envisaged purchasing weapons
that we are not going to need so much after we join the
Alliance".47
However, another MoD official insisted that the original
modernisation plan still is valid and fully funded.48
Target Force Goals
"Look, it’s not a gold mine out there", one US
source said to explain why the Target Force Goals would not be good
news for arms merchants. "NATO has enough of a force structure
to allow a process of gradual development so new members are set up
correctly. Weapons can be cranked in later. That is defence
planning". Polish Ministry of Defence officials have commended
NATO for a process they call "immensely helpful" in
countering pressure from the Polish military and arms lobbyists.
NATO’s assessment of
Poland’s defence program was quite positive. This warm reception
is of particular political importance in Poland, where the arms
lobby and the Deputy Minister of Defence Romuald Szeremetiew have
been pushing for a fundamental revision. According to Szeremetiew,
the program is based on a defeatist 1939 mentality and is too
reliant on allies, who might not defend Poland.
In a classified summary
of Poland’s defence program, Supreme Allied Command Europe (SACEUR)
stated that:
The 1998-2002
Government Program for Modernisation of the Armed Forces lays a
solid framework for modernising the Polish Armed Forces in line
with NATO. This effort, once approved and funded, will provide the
foundation and predictability for full integration into NATO.
Downsizing efforts in structure and manpower, and improvements in
professional training within the armed forces, are focused in the
correct areas. Efforts to form joint units with other NATO
countries will also speed along the process of integration and
plans to declare the bulk of all forces as NATO assigned is very
much appreciated. Modernisation and procurement programs are in
general focused on the critical areas of command and control, air
defence and reinforcement HNS [Host Nations Support] capabilities.
Improvements in
these areas are essential once membership occurs and Poland is
advised to maintain a consistent and fully funded effort. Land
contributions and capabilities are significant and will contribute
greatly to NATO’s abilities to conduct operations in a wide
spectrum. Training levels however are of concern and should not be
slighted over other modernisation efforts. Poland’s maritime
forces constitute undoubtedly a major addition to NATO’s
maritime capabilities in the Baltic, but the real benefits will
only become apparent at the end of the period when more upgraded
and modern equipment will be introduced and interoperability with
NATO forces improved. PA/ADF [Air Force and Air Defence] programs
are in principle comprehensive, however shortfalls in training are
of concern.
Poland is
encouraged to put appropriate emphasis on air defence and air
field reception facilities as these will be most critical in the
period right after accession. The most significant areas of
improvement are in command and control, which is appropriate, and
these enhancements will make full interoperability with NATO
command and control systems a near term reality. The need for
intensified language training, which is part of comprehensive
plans, will require continuing emphasis and solid support.
Overall, ACE
[Allied Command Europe] appreciate Poland’s efforts towards
military interoperability with NATO and willingness to accept the
many military burdens of membership. Poland’s plans for the
future will ensure that, as an Alliance member, Poland will be
able to fully and meaningfully participate in all the activities
of the Alliance.49
The priorities indicated
are repeated in the more detailed Target Force Goals. Of 65 goals,
Poland was able to agree fully to 60 percent. Among the
recommendations which deviated from Polish plans were transferring
funds from land forces to naval forces and putting greater effort
towards logistics.
Hungary’s Defence
Planning Questionnaire did not receive such a warm reception.
"Our general impression is that Hungary is planning along the
right lines", one NATO official commented. "It is a small
country, less well-endowed with resources than Poland and the Czech
Republic, but Hungarians always have been very receptive to advice.
They have not committed themselves to spending large chunks of money
on projects, and that’s both good and bad. Good, because they are
careful not to waste resources, bad, because a lot of decisions have
been postponed. But we are confident about the way they are
going".
According to the Chief
of Staff of the Hungarian Armed Forces Lt. Gen. Ferenc Vegh, of the
48 goals set by NATO, Hungary adopted 29 in full, 15 in part and
made four others the subject for consideration.50 Those
to be considered deviate from Hungarian priorities politically or
militarily, while the partially adopted goals lack a secure
financial background. As priority tasks for Hungary, Vegh cited
anti-aircraft defence, telecommunications and law harmonisation. In
addition, Hungary’s air defence is not currently considered
NATO-compatible and training needs greater emphasis on preparing
Rapid Reaction Forces as a contribution to joint defence efforts. In
1998, Hungary will develop a national military strategy plan with
emphasis on the qualitative sides of army reform.
The Czech Republic’s
defence plan was criticised in a number of areas. Until last fall,
the Czechs were considered to be "pretty well on track,"
but political instability and economic setbacks clouded the picture.
One NATO source said that defence plans containing "bulging
procurement" in the years 2000-2002 are "frankly speaking,
not helpful", because arms projects will set back other goals.
Complicating Czech dialogue with NATO is a "lack of
feedback" from Prague, and a lack of co-operation between
military and Ministry of Defence officials. Among the concrete
examples raised were Czech plans for a Rapid Reaction Brigade to be
assigned to NATO, both as a prime resource pool for peace support
operations and as a contribution to NATO reaction forces. However
recruitment targets for professional soldiers were dramatically
undershot, and it will not be ready before 2003. To increase
recruitment, the Czech government decided to devote a large sum for
quality of life improvements, at the expense of other Target Force
Goals.
Setting Priorities
From the Target Force Goals and national programs, a pattern of
priorities emerges:
• Soft goals:
The human factor is most strongly emphasised. As Hungarian Army
Commander Ferenc Vegh said in February, "Technology replacement
is not the major priority in NATO membership. The important thing is
who mans equipment and what they have in their heads".51
Language training is
severely lacking. Poland requires the most improvement and Hungary
the least. Poland claimed to have 4,177 people with "a facility
in English" in its armed forced by June 1997. The ongoing
education program has increased this figure, but in May 1998, MoD
officials put the number of personnel who had taken an examination
at NATO’s grade 3 level (good language ability) at between 400 and
500. The number speaking "fluent and excellent English" is
between 80 and 120. According to one claim, in Hungary, 4,000 of the
professional staff, or approximately 40 percent of all officers,
speak one or more foreign languages. However, of those, 2.500, speak
Russian and only 1,500 speak English. Some reports indicate that
less than 300 officers in both Hungary and the Czech Republic speak
fluent English.52 Just for staffing purposes at NATO,
between 200 and 300 good English speakers are needed from each
country.
Pay levels are also of
concern. Extremely low salaries drive qualified personnel out of
service and hamper recruitment. In an integrated environment, they
may also create strained relations with much higher paid
professionals from other NATO countries.
Other highlighted items
include: law harmonisation, changes in military education
institutes, improved protection of classified information, and
further changes to the ministerial and administrative structures.
• Command, Control
and Communication: This field involves both human and technical
resources. Traditionally, command authority was held primarily by
officers while NATO stresses the significance of a more developed
non-commissioned officer (NCO) structure. In general, technical
resources are incompatible and at a level below NATO standards. To
date, only two Polish ships, salvage vessels modernised for search
and rescue purposes, are fully interoperable with NATO vessels.
• Air Defence: Needs
in this area are broad, from new radar to missiles to operations
centres with computers. The field typically involves high-technology
equipment, an area in which western producers are often thought to
have a commanding lead. In fact, this year, Hungary took delivery of
the first of 200 French-produced Mistral anti-air missiles, and a
tender for radar will be announced in 1998. But Hungary’s defence
industry is geared to high-tech production and Poland has developed
a praise-winning new three-dimensional radar system, and is also
developing modern anti-air weapons.
• Host Nation
Support: A key requirement is better infrastructure for
reception and servicing of reinforcements. From Warsaw Pact days,
all candidates have an impressive infrastructure. Poland has 55
military airfields, but only 15 are in use. Six will be
NATO-assigned and thus far two are slated for modernisation.
Airfields need better runways, restraints for emergency landings and
NATO-compatible fuel systems. The cost of modernising airfields is
estimated at $106 million.53 According to Polish
officials, harbour facilities in Gdynia and Swinoujscie are already
sufficient for allied needs. However, NATO wants further
improvements such as equipping 13.88 kilometres of quays with
NATO-compatible water and electricity supplies and power stations.
• Logistics:
NATO found logistics in all countries to be lacking, and encouraged
a change of emphasis in plans. In Poland, this translates into
purchases of larger fuel trucks and lorries to carry containers with
kitchens, field hospitals and the like. Fuel should be compatible
with NATO standards.
• Hardware:
Over a 10 to 15-year time period, procurement and modernisation
needs are extensive. Ongoing programs involve upgrading of T-72M1
tanks; in Poland, 112 are to be modernised before 2002. Most
importantly, Poland and the Czech Republic are "tank
heavy" beyond any reasonable measure and NATO has not shown
much interest in tank forces, preferring to place emphasis on attack
and transport helicopters to improve mobility and flexibility for
smaller forces.54
Selling Off Surplus
Equipment
As hardware is phased out, there is potential for resale. The
Czech Republic has already had one scandal involving the sale of
tanks to Algeria, which was finally stopped. Some years ago in
Poland, the Minister of Defence learned, through wiretapping, about
a sale of armoured personnel carriers to Angola. Last year, a Polish
sale of 80 old T-55 tanks to Sudan was allegedly suspended as the
result of US intervention.
Poland’s newly created
Military Property Agency has an impressive list of redundant
facilities and equipment ranging from airfields to ammunition to
toilets. However, the list of redundant fighting equipment is not
long, dominated in large part by aircraft and helicopters so old
that flying them is not recommended. Also for sale are 179 12.7 mm
machine guns, 168 82 mm artillery pieces, armoured personnel
carriers and 32 million rounds of ammunition.
According to one recent
article in a military paper, "It is still unclear how the
agency will solve the problem of getting rid of military equipment
subject to sale restrictions".55 Some envision
transfer of old equipment to the Baltics, but MoD and other sources
do not envision large-scale sale to less developed armies. Also, it
is likely that after entering NATO, political restrictions will be
taken more seriously.
Appendix A:
Areas of concern
While NATO is to be
commended for its efforts in developing rational Force Target Goals
for Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic, concerns remain on a
number of topics.
Arms industry
representatives, both domestic and foreign, have exerted pressure on
aspiring members, linking their chances for membership to purchases
of major weapons systems, considered of secondary importance by
defence planners. Similar pressure continues in countries not yet
accepted for membership. Continued vigilance is necessary to protect
a rational defence planning process.
Planners in the three
new member countries stress close counselling from NATO experts as a
very significant factor in resisting pressure from arms lobbyists
and orthodox military circles. For Partnership for Peace (PfP)
participants, the Planning and Review Process (PARP) has a similar
effect because planning targets emphasise interoperability with NATO
in doctrines, training and procedures rather than equipment. Advice
should be broadened in scope to include general defence planning in
PfP countries. In addition, overburdened NATO staff need to be
reinforced for this task, and an arms control element should be
included.
Powerful domestic arms
lobbies in some aspiring member countries, particularly Poland, are
pushing for Central and Eastern European countries to procure arms
in order to reach the CFE ceilings. However, present ceilings date
from a very different era, and most forces in Western Europe are now
far below their ceilings. Alliance membership ensures that new
members will not face potential threats alone; logically their
ceilings should go down.
Also, using the full
potential of the old quotas will frustrate NATO’s attempt to
create stability zones in a new CFE regime. The stationing of allied
forces within these zones as an element in crisis management is
preconditioned on the existence of head room between actual national
holdings and the CFE ceilings. Preventing re-nationalisation of
defence is an important NATO mission, thus national holdings should
be lowered.
As urged by former
Polish Deputy Defence Minister Andrzej Karkoszka, in future force
planning, NATO must develop its projection/reception capabilities
"in a way, which would not be misperceived by non-NATO states
as an aggressive posture". Karkoszka added that, "Such an
outcome would negate the basis on which the postulated Alliance
posture is construed, as it would cause an overreaction of other
states, notably Russia, shattering the presently generated benign
European relations".56
There is strong support
for providing Allied aircraft on Polish bases with reinforcement
capabilities in order to offer high flexibility defence for the
region without permanently stationing forces there. The low cost of
this option also makes it appealing. However, while reinforcement
capabilities are key to Alliance readiness and the credibility of
NATO’s security guarantee, restraint must also be exercised.
Reinforcement capability provides NATO with additional capacity to
project its air power to the east, and therefore could be of
political and military concern to Belarus and Russia. There are
currently only two bases prepared for Host Nation Support in Poland.
Any increase in this number must be weighed carefully with regard to
the potential effects on stability. Additional arms control,
transparency and confidence-building measures should also be
considered.
To quell urges to
acquire large numbers of modern fighters, NATO should promote
leasing arrangements, as originally envisioned. Training
arrangements for pilots in more well-off member countries could also
ease some of the problems associated with postponement of
acquisition. In addition, new member countries are in danger of
buying "new" planes at a time when these are soon to be
substituted by the new generation of Joint Strike Fighter aircraft,
and air defence will place increasing emphasis on missiles and
remote control planes. Very limited acquisition of earlier
generation aircraft can bridge the time gap between obsolescence of
present air forces and acquisition of new generation systems.
Finally, modernisation
and force structure reductions have already created substantial
equipment surpluses and will continue to do so. Possibilities for
resale are limited due to legal constraints and the age of relevant
systems. However, to prevent sales with destabilising effects, NATO
and all member countries should enforce strict guidelines on exports
and ensure transparency from an early phase.57
Appendix B:
Poland’s Future Procurement Plans58
Poland’s still
classified 15-year defence plan divides technical modernisation into
11 fields and one special government program. According to the
"Defence Review Committee Assessment of Plans of Poland",
reforms and modernisation of Poland’s armed forces aim to create
"a smaller but more capable force structure with well-equipped,
mobile and efficient forces". Poland informed NATO about plans
for cutting total authorised manpower levels to 180,000 in 2002, but
ongoing reorganisation is aiming for a level between 155,000 and
160,000.
The technical
modernisation program for 1998-2012 will receive increasing
resources during that period. In the initial planning period until
2002, funding is generally assured for modest upgrading and
procurement. The funding and actual costs for more ambitious
projects later on are more uncertain. Plans call for increasing
expenditures on equipment, infrastructure and research and
development almost fourfold from $.32 billion in 1997 to $1.23
billion in 2012. For 2001, only $420 million, or 12.74 percent of
the defence budget, goes to major equipment. According to Polish
policy guidelines, 70-80 percent of equipment purchases should be
from domestic producers.
If the program is
followed, by 2012 Poland should be far below the CFE limits set in
1990 (to be revised before 1999). Polish levels would be at: tanks
1,300 (CFE 1,730); armoured personnel and infantry combat vehicles
1,300 (CFE 2,150); artillery 900 (CFE 1,610); combat aircraft
100-150 (CFE 460); combat helicopters 130 (CFE 130).
Notes on the data:
Where possible, additional information available on near-term
projects has been added to the table below. Where systems of Polish
origin are expected, the name is listed in parentheses.
|
CATEGORY
|
COST
|
SPECIFICS
|
|
Detection and
radio
electronic combat systems
|
$1.35 billion
|
-
More than 150
radar systems
-
About 20
reconnaissance aircraft
and helicopters (AN-28 Bryza
aircraft and project Procjon helicopters)
-
NATO
information: before 2002,
purchase two electronic warfare helicopters (project
Procjon)
|
|
Command and
communication systems
|
$1.52 billion
|
-
Almost 20,000
field combat broadcast systems
-
More than 300
digital radio relays
-
More than 200
integrated communication and command systems
|
|
Individual
equipment for soldiers
|
$.47 billion
|
-
Approximately
85,000 pistols and machine guns with munitions (including
Beryl, 5.56 mm machine guns)
-
More than 500
mortars with ammunition
-
More than
50,000 bullet-proof helmets and vests
-
About 30.,000
sets of protective gear
-
NATO
information: before 2002, purchase 10,000 sets of
protective clothing, 45,000 gas masks
|
|
Air defence
equipment and combat resources
|
$.88 billion
|
-
About 700
artillery and close range missile units (Grom)
-
About 100
self-propelled missile-artillery units (Loara)
-
Modernisation
of missile units (Neva, Volchov)
-
Potential for
purchasing long range missile systems, such as Patriot
|
|
Anti-tank
equipment and combat resources
|
$.23 billion
|
|
|
Multipurpose and
attack helicopters
|
$1.7 billion
|
-
About 100
Huzar attack helicopters
-
3,600 guided
anti-tank missiles for helicopters
-
More than 100
Sokol and Anaconda helicopters
-
NATO
information: before 2002, purchase 20 anti-tank Huzar,
26 W-3 Sokol multipurpose; for marine purposes, before
2002, modernise 12 search and rescue helicopters, purchase
8 new Anaconda (13 later for anti-submarine warfare)
|
|
Aviation equipment
|
$1.23 billion
|
-
Modernisation
of MiG-29 and Su-22 aircraft
-
Purchase of
50-60 transport and fighter trainer aircraft (AN-28, Orlik,
Iryda)
-
Purchase of
modern combat aviation equipment
-
Adopting
military airports to NATO standards
|
|
Strategic
government programs
|
Funding outside
MoD budget
|
-
More than 100
fighter aircraft (up to $44 million per unit)
-
Ground system
for securing aircraft use
-
Author’s
note: A high unit price was set to accommodate the
unlikely possibility of F-18 purchases. The unit price for
F-16s varies from $22 to $30 million. Full offsets are
demanded (i.e. co-production).
|
|
Ground artillery
equipment and resources
|
$.52 billion
|
-
155 mm
self-propelled howitzer guns
-
About 15
mortar batteries with fire control systems
-
Modernisation
of rocket artillery
-
Self-guided
artillery and rocket ammunition
-
NATO
information: expected purchase of 34 Zur-23-2T
artillery rocket launchers in 1998; before 2002, 8
artillery fire control systems, 170 Pluto 60 mm mortars
|
|
Armoured personnel
and infantry combat vehicles
|
$1.05 billion
|
-
Modernisation
of tanks and infantry combat vehicles (includes upgrades
of T-72M1)
-
More than 300
Armoured wheel transports
-
New generation
tanks (PT-91 Twardy)
-
NATO
information: in 1997 purchased 10 PT-91 tanks and
upgraded 28, out of a planned 140 T-72M1 tanks to PT-91;
before 2002, purchase 47 BBRDM-2 armoured reconnaissance
vehicles
|
|
Ships - marine
equipment
|
$.73 billion
|
-
More than 10
new combat ships (including 7 Kaszub corvettes,
submarines)
-
Modernisation
of several ships
-
NATO
information: development of 7 Kaszub class corvettes
started, first delivery 2002; five mine hunters, first
delivery 2003; subject to political approval, 13
ship-to-ship missile systems of western origin for Kaszub
corvettes, 2 more land-based
-
Author’s
note: The marine program has dubious funding. NATO
politely calls programs until 2002 "modest".
|
|
Various equipment
|
$1.60 billion
|
-
Ammunition,
combat equipment, battlefield simulators
-
Terrain
vehicles
-
New generation
trucks
-
Logistics
equipment
-
Supplementing
technical stocks
|
Back to European Security home
page
______________
Endnotes
1. Briefing at the
National Press Club, Washington, DC, 9 February 1998. Transcript
distributed by USIS, Wireless File, February 12 1998.
2. This study is based
on two weeks of interviews by the author with representatives of the
international staff and national delegations at NATO Headquarters in
early May 1998. Classified documents were obtained, but not from
NATO sources. Information from new member countries has also been
gathered through several interviews at ministerial level and below.
Unless otherwise indicated, at least two sources have confirmed all
anonymously supplied information.
3. All of the figures in
this paper are in US dollars unless otherwise noted.
4. "Emil
Constantinescu Needs the Bell Helicopters Deal to Polish His Visit
to the United States", Cotidianul, 12 May 1998.
"Signing the Contract With Bell Helicopters Would Mean Romania
Getting Under NATO’s Umbrella", Romania Libera, 19 May
1998.
5. A government decision
in Poland limits imports to 20 percent of the procurement budget.
6. William Hartung,
"Welfare for Weapons Dealers 1998", World Policy
Institute, March 1998, p.23. The prevalent theme in news media
coverage is well-reflected in a 29 June 1997 New York Times
headline which declared: "NATO Expansion Opens Huge Market for
Arms Dealers". Under the headline "NATO's New Arms Bazar"
The Nation informed its readers in its 21 July 1997 issue
that "most independent analysts put the price of expanding
NATO" over a 13-year time period "in the $15-20 billion to
$120 billion range, much of that going to new military
hardware". NATO staff or government officials in the three new
member countries are rarely, if ever, quoted in such stories.
7. Richard Grimmett, Conventional
Arms Transfers to Developing Nations, 1989-1996, Congressional
Research Service, 13 August 1997. Grimmett provides a global figure
of $31.8 billion for 1996.
8. Author interview with
Dr. Andrzej Karkoszka, Deputy Defence Minister from 1993-97, 28
February 1998.
9. Author interview, May
1998. In public, German General Klaus Naumann, chairman of the NATO
Military Committee, strongly rebuked defence contractors for tying
membership to procurement. He saw a need for modernization steps
around the year 2003 or 2004. See Defense Daily, 2 October
1997. Among US generals, US Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense
Robert Osterthaler is on the record dismissing aircraft
modernisations as a priority. See Defense News, 4 August
1997.
10. German researcher
Otfried Nassauer of the Berlin Information-centre for Transatlantic
Security (BITS) supplied this point, which is backed by answers
given by US Secretary of Defence William Cohen and US Secretary of
State Madeleine Albright to Senator Tom Harkin in fall 1997. They
stated that there is no need for nuclear-capable aircraft in new
member countries and no plans to train their pilots for such
missions.
11. "Defence Review
Committee Assessment of Plans of Poland", 25 November 1997.
12. Tomasz Hypki,
"The Polish Armed Forces in 2012 -- Guidelines of the
Modernisations Program" Raport Wojsko Technika Obronnosc,
14 November 1997.
13. Author interview.
14. "NATO's New
Arms Bazaar", The Nation, July 21 1997. In 1996, sources
in the Polish Air Force expressed a desire for at least 200
fighters, but MoD officials found that number excessive.
15. "Keleti
Announces Impending Military Aircraft Purchase", Agence
France Presse, May 6 1998.
16. "Aviation on
the Edge", Rzeczpospolita, 13 February 1998.
17. "Capable of
Flying -- the Army Kept Data on Aircraft to Itself", Mlada
Fronta Dnes, 13 August 1997.
18. "New Czech
L-159 Takes Aim at Global Close Air Support Market", Armed
Forces Journal International, August 1997.
19. "Defence Review
Committee Assessment of Plans of Poland", 25 November 1997.
20. Last October,
General Ladislav Klima, commander of the Czech Air Force, told
Parliament about plans to increase training to 80 hours a year in
1998. However, only 60 percent of pilots would enjoy the privilege,
while the rest would receive 40-50 hours. See "Pilots Are
Leaving the Army in Droves", Pravo, 2 October 1997
21. "Defence
Contractors Woo Old Foes", Philadelphia Inquirer, 18
July 1997.
22. "Poland expects
to invest more than $5 billion on new arms", Defense Daily,
9 May 1997.
23. Author interviews
with military attachés, Warsaw, 1996-97
24. "Defense
Matters -- and So Do Free Markets", Warsaw Voice, 25
January 1998.
25. "Global Demand
for Fighter Aircraft Expected to Rise, Report Says", Defense
Daily, 26 February 1998.
26. "Official: NATO
Enlargement Will Not Hurt Russian Arms Sales", Interfax,
16 July 1997.
27. Summary of Chapter 9
from SIPRI Yearbook 1997: Armaments, Disarmament and
International Security, internet version.
28. "Defense
Matters -- and So Do Free Markets", Warsaw Voice, 25
January 1998.
29. Author interview, 15
May 1998.
30. Author interview, 20
April 1998
31. "JAS Plane
Suitable for New NATO Members", Svenska Dagbladet, 26
June 1997.
32. "Defence Review
Committee Assessment of Plans of Poland", 25 November 1997.
33. "Army
Modernised in Spirit of NATO Membership", MTI in
English, 12 February 1998.
34. "NATO Papers
Belie Modest Expansion Cost", Defense News, 8-14
December 1997.
35. In 1997, Hungary was
far below CFE ceilings in several categories. The figures were:
tanks 797 (CFE 835); armoured combat vehicles 1,300 (CFE 1,700);
artillery 840 (CFE 840),; attack helicopters 59 (CFE 108). MTI
in English, 16 December 1997. A list from the German Ministry of
Defence, supplied in response to a parliamentary request, shows
delivery until 13 March 1998 of surplus equipment from former East
German stocks to several Eastern and Central European countries.
Poland also received 18 Mi-24 helicopters in 1995. Hungary is by far
the largest recipient.
36. "Our Army Is
Not Capable of Defending the Country", Lidove Noviny, 21
August 1997.
37. Author interview, 28
February 1998.
38. Preliminary
conclusions were forwarded to the December 1997 ministerial meetings
by the Senior Political Committee in a classified paper entitled
"Chairman’s Report on Resource Implications of
Enlargement".
39. See "The
Government Programme for the Modernization of Armed Forces in the
Years 1998-2002" and "Directions of their Further
Development up to 2012". Poland's own figure for the defence
budget share of GDP in 1997 is 2.33 percent.
40. "NATO
Candidates Face the Bills", Defense News, 13 October
1997
41. Defence Expenditures
of NATO Countries 1975-1997, NATO Review, spring 1998.
42. "Report On
Poland's Integration With NATO", Ministry of National Defense
of the Republic of Poland, February 1998.
43. Poland's 15-year
plan is being revised, but in an interview with the author, cabinet
member Jerzy Kropiwnicki confirmed that these figures are still
valid.
44. Breakdown supplied
by Ivan Eland, author of the Congressional Budget Office (CBO)
study, in an interview with the author, 25 April 1996.
45. Ivan Eland,
"The High Cost of NATO Expansion", Cato Policy Analysis,
No.286, October 29, 1997.
46. "Keleti
Announces Impending Military Aircraft Purchase", Agence
France Presse, May 6 1998.
47. "The Army is
Resolved to Make Savings in Weaponry", Mlada Fronta Dnes,
25 March 1998.
48. "The Army is
Reassessing the Planned Modernization of its Weapons Because of
NATO", Pravo, 26 March 1998. However, priorities are
being revised, and less emphasis will be placed on a planned
modernisation of 353 T-71 M1 tanks. For 1998 the costs of
modernisation were put at $207 million.
49. "Defence Review
Committee Assessment of Plans of Poland", 25 November 1997.
50. "Army Head
Views Progress in Achieving Seet Targets", MTI in
English, 5 May 1998.
51. "NATO
Membership Will Also Upgrade the Importance of the Army", Magyar
Nemzet, 20 February 1998.
52. "NATO Hopefuls
Lag in Meeting Requirements", Washington Post, 18 March
1998.
53. "The Guard
Duty: How are Polish Armed Forces Prepared for Membership in
NATO", Wprost, 17 May 1998.
54. A heavy assault
against tank forces was carried out by a Lt. Colonel Wlodzimierz
Kaleta in the Polish military daily on 5 December 1997. He favours
anti-tank weapons; three to six such systems can be bought for the
price of one tank.
55. "Polish Armed
Forces Joint Stock Company", Zbrojna, 9 May 1998.
56. "The
Integration of New Members as an Element of NATO Agenda 2010",
speech given at the 1998 European Symposium, National Defense
University (USA), February 10-11 1998.
57. Susannah L.. Dyer
and Geraldine O’Callaghan, Combating Illicit Light Weapons
Trafficking: Developments and Opportunities, Research Report
98.1, British American Security Information Council, January 1998.
58. The information in
this appendix is drawn from supplementary interviews by the author
as well as from: Tomasz Hypki, "The Polish Armed Forces in 2012
-- Guidelines of the Modernisations Program" Raport Wojsko
Technika Obronnosc, 14 November 1997; and "Defence Review
Committee Assessment of Plans of Poland", DRC(INV)D(97)1, 25
November 1997.
The author of this
paper is a Danish journalist with 25 years of experience reporting
on disarmament and military affairs. He has been stationed in Poland
since 1993.
Back to European Security home
page |