This paper seeks to explain the Russian military's unexpected quiescence—particularly the absence of a widely-predicted military coup—during the past several years of political and economic turbulence. It specifically asks why the military has not carried out a coup d'état even though it has had a powerful motive to do so; why, despite substantial social unrest and weak political and economic institutions—the casebook description of a “praetorian” society—has the military not acted against the government? Through the use of military survey data and Russian press reports, this paper argues that the military's quiescence is due not to lack of motive, but to Russian officers' weak assessment of their capabilities to carry out a coup. This assessment has resulted from the military's steady organizational decline and disintegration over the past several years. This disintegration has provided officers with a formidable motive to carry out a coup, while at the same time presenting substantial barriers to doing so—a phenomenon I have labeled the “paradox of disintegration.” While particular attention is paid to 1992 and 1993, the period of greatest unrest and potential intervention, the implications of this analysis are still relevant today. The danger of a military coup has been, and essentially remains, largely a myth, perpetuated by panicky publics and politicians, both Western and Russian alike.
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September 1994
Research Article|
September 01 1994
Explaining Russian Military Quiescence: The “Paradox of Disintegration” and the Myth of a Military Coup Available to Purchase
David Mendeloff
David Mendeloff
*
Department of Political Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge MA 02139, USA
* This is a revised and greatly-abbreviated version of a paper written for Timothy Colton's spring 1993 graduate seminar on Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics at Harvard University. I am especially grateful to Stephen Van Evera and Donald L.M. Blackmer of MIT for invaluable comments on earlier drafts of this paper. Research and writing was made possible by the invaluable support of my colleagues and the administrative resources of the MIT Center for International Studies.
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* This is a revised and greatly-abbreviated version of a paper written for Timothy Colton's spring 1993 graduate seminar on Soviet and Post-Soviet Politics at Harvard University. I am especially grateful to Stephen Van Evera and Donald L.M. Blackmer of MIT for invaluable comments on earlier drafts of this paper. Research and writing was made possible by the invaluable support of my colleagues and the administrative resources of the MIT Center for International Studies.
Communist and Post-Communist Studies (1994) 27 (3): 225–246.
Citation
David Mendeloff; Explaining Russian Military Quiescence: The “Paradox of Disintegration” and the Myth of a Military Coup. Communist and Post-Communist Studies 1 September 1994; 27 (3): 225–246. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/0967-067X/94/03/0225-22
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