Last week, Minister of the Interior Arsen Avakov floated the idea of
transferring all those who wish to be in, and remain in, the Ukrainian
military, be moved to a contract basis.
“Думаю о волнах
мобилизации по стране. О дебилизации действий военкомов, вручающих повестки
прохожим на улицах Харькова, о контрабандистах Закарпатья, которых записывают в
армию.. О боеспособности страны и ее вооруженных сил в этот непростой период..
С учетом
того, сколько требуется государству средств и сил на призыв, обмундирование,
обучение новобранцев от условного бухгалтера до среднего солдата.. С учетом
невозможности достичь высокой квалификации воинов, при текущей мотивации и
подготовке мобилизованных..
СЧИТАЮ:
Армию
нужно сейчас и немедля переводить на профессиональную контрактную основу,
снизив численность войск и увеличив зарплаты РЕАЛЬНЫМ КВАЛИФИЦИРОВАННЫМ военным
и их обеспечение. Порядок, подготовленность и мотивация – бьет любое
количество.
У такого
подхода – есть будущее, у отлова призывников на улицах и в трамваях – нет.
Как
министр и член СНБО выступлю с предложением о необходимости реализации такого
подхода без промедления. Буду обращаться к Верховному главнокомандующему.
Ведь
правда, вы не станете платить и не доверите свою безопасность пойманному на
горячем закарпатскому контрабандисту или случайному прохожему?
Кому можно доверять
всерьез? Только мотивированным, добровольно заключившим контракт профи. Имея за
спиной опыт последних месяцев, уверен – проблем с формированием таких сил – не
будет!
Мы не достаточно богаты, что б не иметь профессиональной армии!” – Arsen Avakov
Мы не достаточно богаты, что б не иметь профессиональной армии!” – Arsen Avakov
His argument goes that firstly there would be sufficient people willing
to move across from mass mobilisation/conscription, the national guard and
existing military personnel, all with the desire to “soldier on” – whilst at
the same time clearly inferring there are currently more than enough “men at
arms” and those that wish to leave would by default reduce that number to somewhere
close to appropriate/proportionate for the threats Ukraine faces – in his
opinion.
Secondly, the current mobilisation process is
unwieldy/messy/problematic/corrupt and unnecessarily expensive – which is
indeed entirely accurate.
Remaining with the issue of economics, it is far cheaper to train
and kit out those who are inclined to remain in the military. Thus he
proposes an initial 6 month contract whilst the military and the individual
decide whether they actually like each other – thereafter if no issues come to
light, then an automatic contract extension occurs.
Economic savings by dumping mass mobilisation/conscription would then be
used to pay the contract forces more – and equip and train them better
presumably.
Lastly it would put an end to the nefarious incidents regarding corrupt
regional Commissars tasked with meeting mobilisation numbers – or not for $ per
conscript to avoid the draft, whilst simultaneously alienating those that are
carrying weapons under the auspices of (pseudo) military units engaged in
little more than organised criminality that willfully fall outside the command
and control of the armed forces, and/or Mr Avakov’s Interior Ministry.
This by extension would probably ease the tensions within society
regarding the conscripting of the apathetic and/or unwilling, and assist in
differentiating between the genuine military and the unlawfully armed “others”.
So be it. He intends to appeal to the President to make it so.
Naturally the first question is why is the Minister of the Interior and
not the Defence Minister making such a proposal?
Is there perhaps more to this proposal than appears prima facie.
Mr Avakov’s Interior Ministry empire has grown, and not necessarily in a
way he would like – or perhaps better stated, not in a way that suits him now.
Nor indeed has it grown in a way that would necessarily best suit the
State. Somehow the Ministry of Interior has turned into something of a
dumping ground of an ever increasing number of new and reshuffled services.
Aside from the standard services, such as the Migration Service, the
State Border Service, State Emergency Situations Service, Militsia etc., the
MIA is now home to services that previously didn’t exist. For example the
new “Police” and the National Guard now fall within the MIA too.
Very soon somebody is going to start asking why all these services
within the MIA have their own distinct stand-alone administrative support,
their own training departments, their own IT departments, their own logistics
departments, their medical departments etc. How long before Minister
Avakov is accused (perhaps rightly) of administrative waste on a grand scale by
not centralising some, or many of those back-office requirements?
What “service” will get dumped, appropriately or otherwise, within the
MIA next?
How many internal turf wars over institutional competencies and
associated institutional boundaries, not to mention budgets will (and does) Mr
Avakov want to have to referee?
Does he perhaps see the National Guard better suited under the Defence
Minister, or perhaps now surplus to requirements entirely? Does Ukraine
need a National Guard under the control of the Ministry of Interior, which
would give the perception in calmer and more manageable times, of
nothing more than “internal troops” – a very undesirable “Soviet” image.
As the National Guard pretty much legalised and incorporated a large
number of otherwise illegitimate militias and quasi-political movements that
appeared after the Kremlin kicked off its Donbas engagement, is the choice
being offered via this proposal one of contracting to the military within its
existing units and command structure, or becoming illegitimate once more and
fair game for law enforcement?
In short, is his interest in making such a proposal a way to “thin out”
the services, reduce sprawling costs and more than duplicated administrations
currently under his ministerial umbrella, ultimately with a desire to return it
to the more traditional services associated with the Ukrainian MIA? A
deliberate move away from the quasi-military ministry it has by default become?
Perhaps that is all entirely wrong. Yet a proposal to the
President for a fully contract army is surely better – or at least far more
appropriate – coming from the Defence Minister. Why then is the Interior
Minister making such a proposal?
Is it as simple as “early electioneering” prior to the local elections
in October?
Mr Avakov surely has enough to do within the MIA, without publicly
interfering via Facebook in another ministry without reason – so what reason
has he?
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