Article contents
The Party, the Military, and Decision Authority in the Soviet Union
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 June 2011
Abstract
Soviet military decision making is characterized by a division of labor between the party, which issues broad policy guidance, and the professional military, which oversees the development of the armed forces based on that guidance. There is to date no civilian institution whose functions parallel those of the General Staff. The party is now, and has historically been, dependent on the professional military for the formation of options on strategy, organization, and force composition. The Soviets have never equated civilian control and authority with civilian management. Absolute party authority over defense policy has been maintained through control of personnel and resource allocation.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Trustees of Princeton University 1987
References
1 Meyer, Stephen makes this argument and links it to technology in “Civilian and Military Influence in Managing the Arms Race in the U.S.S.R.”, in Art, Robert J., Davis, Vincent, and Huntington, Samuel P., eds., Reorganizing America's Defense: Leadership in War and Peace (Washington, DC: Pergamon-Brassey's, 1985), 37–61.Google Scholar
2 Scott, W. Richard, Organizations: Rational, Natural and Open Systems (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1981), 256–57.Google Scholar
3 The best English-language source on this period is Erickson's, John classic, The Soviet High Command (London: St. Martin's Press, 1962)Google Scholar. Soviet sources include Tyushkevich, S. A. et al., Sovetski'ye vooruzhenni'ye sily [The Soviet armed forces] (Moscow: Voennoe izdatel'stvo, 1978)Google Scholar, and Korotkov, I. A., Istoriya sovetskoi voennoi mysli: korotkii ocherk [History of Soviet military thought: a short outline] (Moscow: Voennoe izdatel'stvo, 1980).Google Scholar
4 Rice, Condoleezza, “The Making of Soviet Strategy”, in Paret, Peter, ed., The Makers of Modern Strategy (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1985), at 666–67.Google Scholar
5 Nikulin, Lev, Tukhachevskii: biograficheskii ocherk [Tukhackevsky: a biographical outline] (Moscow: Voenizdat, 1964)Google Scholar. Also see an account in Svanidze, Budu, My Uncle Joseph Stalin(New York: G. P. Putnam Sons, 1953).Google Scholar
6 Colton's, TimothyCommissars, Commanders and Civilian Authority: The Structure of Soviet Military Politics (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1979)CrossRefGoogle Scholar is the definitive work on Soviet military politics and the development of the MPA.
7 Tukhachevsky, M. V., Voina kak problema vooruzhennoi bor'by [War as a problem of armed struggle] (Moscow: Voennoe izdatel'stvo, 1930).Google Scholar
8 Gareyev, M. A., Frunze: Voennii teoretik [Frunze: military theoretician] (Moscow: Voenizdat, 1985), 180–81.Google Scholar
9 See Grigorenko, Pyotr, Grigorenkp (Memoirs) (New York: Holt, Reinhart & Winston, 1982).Google Scholar
10 Shtemenko, S. M., General'nyi stab v gody voini, 2 vols. [The General Staff in the years of the war] (Moscow: Voenizdat, 1973) chap. 2, p. 4.Google Scholar
11 Malinovsky stated, “Although nuclear weapons will hold the decisive place in future war … we are devoting due attention to the perfection of weapons of all types”, Izvestiya, October 25, 1961. (Unless otherwise noted, all translations are by the present author.)
12 M. V. Zakharov, Krasnaya zvezda, February 4, 1965.
13 Ivanov, K., “Nauchniye printsipy rukovodstva zashchiniye socialist-icheskogo otechestva”, [The scientific principles of leading the defense of the fatherland], Kommunist vooruzhenykh sil' (No. 16, 1969), 12Google Scholar; cited in Holloway's, David excellent analysis of Soviet military management, Technology and Military Management in the Soviet Union, Adelphi Paper No. 76 (London: International Institute of Strategic Studies, 1977).Google Scholar
14 See John Erickson's “Soviet Cybermen: Men and Machines in the Soviet System”, Signal (December 1984). The classic Soviet work on this subject is Druzhinin, V. V. and Korontov, I. A., Ideiya, algorithm i resheniya [Idea, algorithm and decision] (Moscow: Voenizdat, 1972).Google Scholar
15 Kulikov, Viktor, Akademiya general'nogo staba [Academy of the General Staff] (Moscow: Voenizdat, 1976), 208.Google Scholar
16 The need for caution is sounded in Bondarenko, V. and Tyushkevich, S., “Soveremennyi etap revolutsii v voennom dele i trebovaniya k voennym kadram” [The contemporary stage of the revolution in military affairs and the demands for military cadres], Kommunist vooru zhennykh sil' (No. 6, 1968).Google Scholar
17 Kulikov (fn. 15), 204.
18 Ibid., 144.
19 “General'nyi stab” [General Staff], Sovetskpi voennoi entsikolopedii [Soviet military encyclopedia] (Moscow: Voennoe izdatel'stvo, 1982).Google Scholar
20 See McConnell, James, “The Gorshkov Articles, the New Gorshkov Book, and their Relation to Policy”, in MccGwire, Michael and McConnell, James, eds., Soviet Naval Influence (New York: Praeger, 1977), 565–617.Google Scholar
21 Timothy Colton has developed a useful scheme for understanding the role of the Soviet military; see Colton (fn. 6), 234. See also the work of William E. Odom, including his commentary in Herspring, Dale E. and Volgyes, Ivan, Civil-Military Relations in Communist Systems (Boulder, CO: Westview, 1977).Google Scholar
22 A recent reference to this hierarchy can be found in the speech by Minister of Defense Marshal S. L. Sokolov to the 27th Party Congress. Krasnaya zvezda, March 2, 1986.
23 For the most detailed description of the Defense Council, see the work of Ellen Jones, including the section on Soviet decision making, in Jones, , Red Army and Society (Boston: Allen & Unwin, 1985)Google Scholar. Also see Scott, Harriett Fast and Scott, William F., The Armed Forces of the USSR (Boulder, CO: Westview, 1979).Google Scholar
24 The range and scope of General Staff activities is one indicator. Military staffs are said to resemble “large research institutes” with specialists from a variety of disciplines coming together to analyze problems. The General Staff also “contracts out” to the Voroshilov and Frunze Academies, and sometimes to specialists from the Academy of Sciences. Kulikov (fn. 15), 20.
25 “General'nyi stab” [General Staff], Voennyi entsiklopedkheskii slovar [Military encyclopedic dictionary]; (Moscow: Voennoe izdatel'stvo, 1983), 186.Google Scholar
26 See, for example, Solnyshkov, Yu S., Optimizatsiya vybora vooruzheniya [Optimal selectioof armaments] (Moscow: Voenizdat, 1968).Google Scholar
27 Tolubko, V. F., Nedelin (Moscow: Molodaya Gvardiay, 1979).Google Scholar
28 Solnyshkov (fn. 26), 11.
29 Sokolovskii et al., Voennaya strategiya [Military strategy] (Moscow: Voenizdat, 1963).Google Scholar
30 See Kulikov (fn. 15), 181.
31 Kulikov, , “Strategicheskiye rukovodstvo vooruzhennykh sila” [Strategic leadership of the armed forces], Voenno-istoricheskii zhurnal (No. 6, 1975), 12–24.Google Scholar
32 Ogarkov, , Vsegda vgotovnosti k zashchite otechestva [Always prepared to defend the fatherland] (Moscow: Voenizdat, 1982).Google Scholar
33 Zemsov, Ilya, Soviet Sociology: A Study of Lost Illusion (Fairfax, VA: Hero Books, 1984)Google Scholar. I am indebted to Notra Trulock for pointing out this source to me.
34 Pravda, October 21, 1981.
35 The size of the slowdown is a matter of controversy, and the dollar costing method used is replete with methodological problems. David Holloway has provided a useful discussion of this problem in The Soviet Union and the Arms Race (New Haven: Yale, 1983), 114.Google Scholar
36 Sokolovskii, V. D. and Cherednichenko, M., in “Some Problems of Military Science”, Military Thought (July 1968), 14Google Scholar, tried to suggest more systematic methods for determining the share of state expenditures to defense.
37 Firdman, Henry. Decisionmaking in the Soviet Microelectronics Industry (Falls Church, VA: Delphic Emigre Series, 1985).Google Scholar
38 Solnyshkov (fn. 26), 18.
39 Sokolov, P. V., Voenno-ekonomicheskiye voprosi v kurse politekpnomii [Military-economic questions in the course of political economy] (Moscow: Voenizdat, 1968).Google Scholar
40 Solnyshkov (fn. 26), 11.
41 See especially Holloway's, David work on the early nuclear program, “Entering the Nuclear Arms Race: The Soviet Decision to Build the A-Bomb: 1939–45, Social Studies of Science 11 (Summer 1981).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
42 Defense Minister D. T. Yazov discusses the Warsaw Pact's appeal for these discussions in Pravda, June 27, 1987. He forcefully asserts, however, that Pact doctrine is already defensive.
43 Lebow, Ned. “The Soviet Offensive in Europe: The Schlieffen Plan Revisited?” International Security (Spring-Summer 1985), 44–78.Google Scholar
44 There is an excellent discussion of the role of other factors in Levy's, Jack S.“Organizational Routines and the Causes of War”, International Studies Quarterly (No. 30, 1986), 193–222.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
45 Gareyev (fn. 8).
46 I am debted to David Albright and to Gary Sojka for their insights on the future role of the General Staff.
- 19
- Cited by