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Russia is pouring money into its war machine — but it's still struggling to create new, advanced systems
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尽管俄罗斯总统普京政府近年在军事领域投入创纪录的资金,但一项新报告指出,其在先进军事技术和军事创新方面正面临严峻挑战。西方制裁和持续的战争需求严重阻碍了俄罗斯获取关键技术的能力,并削弱了其军事科研基础。俄罗斯国防开支占GDP比重已达后冷战时期新高,但其军事工业综合体因贸易限制和战时生产需求而“退化”。为应对进口限制,俄罗斯不得不使用质量较低的替代品,甚至拆解飞机零件以维持运作。报告认为,俄罗斯军事创新将趋于渐进式,主要通过对旧系统进行微调而非实现真正突破,其军事生产模式已转变为“保留与适应”,这限制了其长期与先进军事强国竞争的能力。同时,战时经济虽然带来短期宏观经济增长,但正导致通货膨胀、实际工资下降及银行业流动性危机等问题,整体经济已显疲态。

🇷🇺 俄罗斯国防开支激增,但军事现代化步伐受阻:报告显示,俄罗斯国防开支占GDP比重达到后冷战时期高点,但由于西方制裁和战争需求,其获取先进技术的能力受到严重限制,军事科研基础被削弱,导致军事创新和研发速率下降。

🏭 军事工业综合体“退化”,生产与创新受限:西方制裁切断了关键零部件的进口,迫使俄罗斯军事工业使用质量较低的替代品,甚至拆解飞机零件。这严重影响了军工生产能力,并限制了其创新和采用现代军事技术的潜力,导致军事生产模式转向“保留与适应”。

📉 经济面临严峻挑战,战时增长掩盖结构性问题:尽管战时经济带来短期宏观增长,但俄罗斯经济正显露疲态,表现为通货膨胀加剧、实际工资和购买力下降、银行业流动性危机以及制造业活动收缩。低油价和劳动力短缺也进一步加剧了经济压力。

💡 军事创新模式转变为“智能适应”,长期竞争力堪忧:俄罗斯的军事创新正从以研发驱动转变为“智能适应”模式,即在技术和经济限制下,通过对现有成熟系统进行微调来“创新”。这种渐进式发展模式而非突破性创新,将限制其在未来战争中与先进军事强国竞争的能力。

Russian President Vladimir Putin's administration has been spending record sums on military needs in recent years.

Russia is spending record amounts on defense. But it's falling behind in building the advanced, modern military it needs for future wars, according to a new report.

Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine triggered sweeping sanctions that not only damaged its ability to procure advanced technology but also weakened its military-scientific base, wrote Mathieu Boulègue, a consulting fellow in the Russia and Eurasia program at London-based Chatham House, in a report published on Monday.

"This damage, in turn, affects the rate of military innovation and R&D. More importantly, it determines how the Kremlin will wage war in the future," wrote Boulègue, a specialist in Eurasian security and defense issues.

Russia is set to spend 6.3% of its GDP on defense this year — a post-Cold War high.

However, the country's military-industrial complex has been "degraded" by trade restrictions and the demands of wartime production, according to Boulègue.

"Russia's ability to produce military hardware has been severely impacted, and its ability to innovate and adopt modern military technology constrained as a result of these challenges," he added.

With sanctions cutting off access to critical imports, Russia has been left scrambling to replace advanced components with inferior stand-ins. As early as August 2022, Russian state-owned carrier Aeroflot began stripping spare parts from working aircraft due to sanctions-induced supply shortages.

In October, Russia filmed its troops using a Soviet howitzer, showing its military stockpiles were under strain.

Boulègue assessed that the state of Russia's military-industrial complex is one of regression, not progress.

"Russia will likely have to simplify and slow its military production, accept reduced quality of outputs and manage a form of 'innovation stagnation' in its research and development," he wrote, referring to Russia's state armament programme from 2025 to 2034.

As a result, Russia's pathway to military innovation is likely to remain incremental — built on small tweaks to old systems rather than genuine breakthroughs.

"Innovation generally takes the form of integrating technological solutions directly into proven, older-generation systems — which in turn makes them 'modern,'" Boulègue wrote.

Russia's military sector has adopted a "retain-and-adapt" approach because military production is no longer innovation-led.

"In other words, Russia 'innovates' through 'smart adaptation' under technical and economical constraints that have a negative, cumulative effect at the tactical level," he added.

In the short term, Russia's military-industrial complex will likely keep producing systems that are "good enough" to pose a clear and constant threat to Ukraine, NATO, and the West. But its long-term ability to compete with advanced military powers is eroding.

The stresses on Russia's military-industry complex also mean the broader economy is under increasing strain, despite initial signs of wartime growth.

"The war economy brings 'good' macroeconomic results, but is causing real-world problems such as increased inflation, decreasing wages and purchasing power, and a liquidity crisis in the banking sector," wrote Boulègue.

Russia's economy has shown signs of fatigue recently. Manufacturing activity contracted sharply in June as weak demand and a strong ruble affected exports and jobs. Low oil prices are also hitting the country's all-important oil and gas sector.

Meanwhile, a demographic crisis and competition for labor with the military are also hurting the economy in the long and short term.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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俄罗斯 军事开支 军事现代化 制裁 经济
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