Financial Times FT.com

Moscow marches on with military reform

By Charles Clover in Moscow

Published: June 26 2009 03:00 | Last updated: June 26 2009 03:00

Russia's armed forces are facing their most ambitious reform since 1856, when defeat by Britain and France in Crimea convinced Tsar Alexander II of the need for a national army with universal conscription.

The model worked against Hitler's Panzers but fared less well in Afghanistan and, although recent wars in Chechnya and Georgia ended in victory, they exposed shortcomings in a war machine designed to fight a single large conflict with conventional forces.

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