Russia is getting ready for its biggest war games since the Cold War — a potential sign they're worried about NATO

A multiple rocket launcher system fires during the Zapad-2017 war games, held by Russian and Belarussian servicemen, at an undisclosed location in Belarus, September 17, 2017. Thomson Reuters

The Russian military is getting ready for what is said to be an "unprecedented" military exercise, but as thousands of men and machines gather in Russia's east, leaders in Moscow may be increasingly concerned about what's going on in the West.
Earlier this month, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu called the upcoming Vostok-2018, or East-2018, exercises "the largest preparatory action for the armed forces since Zapad-81," referring to a Soviet military exercise in 1981 involving about 100,000 to 150,000 troops, according to a CIA estimate at the time.
Shoigu said on Tuesday that the Vostok-2018 exercise, scheduled for September 11 to September 15, will have some similarities to Zapad-81 but involve vastly more personnel.
"In some ways, they resemble the Zapad-81 drills but in other ways they are, perhaps, even larger," Shoigu said, according to Russian state-owned media outlet Tass.
"Over 1,000 aircraft, almost 300,000 servicemen at almost all the training ranges of the Central and Eastern Military Districts and, naturally, the Pacific and Northern Fleets and the Airborne Force will be fully employed."
The Russian military has already begun evaluating its forces' combat readiness and logistical support with "snap inspections" that involve special drills and are done under the orders of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
"Just imagine that 36,000 pieces of military hardware are simultaneously in motion: these are tanks, armored personnel carriers, infantry fighting vehicles and all this is, naturally, checked in conditions close to a combat environment," Shoigu said on Tuesday, according to Tass.
Russia has invited military attaches from NATO countries to observe the upcoming exercises — an offer that a NATO spokesman told Reuterswas under consideration.
Russia conducted another large-scale exercise, Zapad-17, or West-17, in September last year. About 70,000 personnel took part in that — though only about 13,000 of them were part of the main event that took place in Belarus and western Russia. (The number of troops involved became a point of contention between Russia and NATO.)
Russian forces will not be the only ones taking part this time around. Chinese and Mongolian units will also take part, with Beijing reportedlysending more than 3,000 troops, 30 helicopters, and more than 900 pieces of other military hardware.
Chinese participation in Russian military exercises "speaks about the expansion of interaction of the two allies in all the spheres," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Tuesday, according to Tass.
'It fits into a pattern we have seen over some time'
Peskov was asked if the expense of the Vostok-18 exercise was necessary at a time when Russia's economy is struggling and demands for more social spending are rising.
"The social security network and the pension system are a constant element of state policy and a very important component," Peskov responded, according to Tass. "But the country's defense capability in the current international situation, which is frequently quite aggressive and unfriendly for our country, is justified, needed and has no alternative."
Russia has consistently condemned Western military activity and NATO maneuvers as provocative, but Peskov's reply may hint at a growing unease in Moscow, which is still uncertain about President Donald Trump as it watches the defense alliance deploy an array of units to its eastern flank.
Trump has signaled a conciliatory stance toward Russia and hostility toward NATO, but those attitudes haven't translated significantly into US or NATO policy.
"We don't like the picture we are seeing," Vladimir Frolov, an independent political analyst in Moscow, told Defense News.
"NATO is getting serious about its combat capabilities and readiness levels. Trump may trash NATO and his European allies," he said, "but it is the capabilities that matter, and those have been growing under Trump."
NATO members have been boosting their defense spending and working to build military readiness — moves stoked recently by the combination of uncertainty about Trump and concern about assertive Russian action, like the incursion in Ukraine in 2014.
NATO troops, including US forces, are practicing tactics that have been little used since the Cold War. A number of Soviet republics have embraced the West — Poland has even offered to pay for a permanent US military presence.
Some European countries are also debating augmenting their own militaries and defense sectors. Germany, long averse to a large military footprint, is looking to recruit more troops, and some there have restarted debate about whether Berlin should seek its own nuclear-weapons capability.
Moscow has long used confrontation with the West to bolster its domestic political standing, and many leaders in the West have come to identify Russia as a main geopolitical foe — a dynamic that is likely to perpetuate tensions.
Earlier this year, Russian officials called military exercises involving NATO and Ukrainian personnel "an attempt to once again provoke tension in southeastern Ukraine and in the entire Black Sea region" and said "countries ... constantly accusing Russia of threatening regional stability shall be held responsible for possible negative consequences."
This week, NATO spokesman Dylan White told Reuters that countries have a right to conduct military exercises, "but it is essential that this is done in a transparent and predictable manner."
"Vostok demonstrates Russia's focus on exercising large-scale conflict," White added. "It fits into a pattern we have seen over some time: a more assertive Russia, significantly increasing its defense budget and its military presence."
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