Document #1196464
Jamestown Foundation (Author)
On November 6, President Vladimir Putin  sacked Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov (50), replacing him with  Sergei Shoigu (57), who was appointed governor of the Moscow region last  May after serving for more than 20 years as chief of Russia’s Emergency  Situations Ministry (Ministerstvo po Chrezvychaynym Sytuatsyam or  MChS). Shoigu, a low-level Communist Party official before 1991, was  promoted to emergency chief by President Boris Yeltsin in 1991. Shoigu  has been one of the most popular ministers in multiple governments under  Yeltsin and Putin. The MChS is a militarized institution, and Shoigu  eventually was promoted to the rank of Army General (four stars). This  week, Putin reinstated Shoigu into active service. So today Russia once  again has a defense minister in uniform—the first time since 2001  (Interfax, November 7). 
Serdyukov has been ousted as a result of  an investigation of corruption in the defense ministry–controlled  holding company “Oboronservis” (see EDM, October 25, November 1).  Russia’s Investigation Committee (Slyedstvenny Kommitet Rossye—SKR) has  accused defense ministry and “Oboronservis” officials of defrauding the  federal budget of “over three billion rubles” ($100 million) through  fraudulent real estate deals. According to the SKR, former state-owned  real estate was sold under the counter at knock-down prices to members  of an organized criminal ring (Interfax, November 8). Three persons have  been already arrested in the “Oboronservis” investigation. Eugenia  Vasilyeva (33), a former top defense ministry official closely  associated with Serdyukov, is under investigation. Vasilyeva owns an  apartment in a posh condominium in central Moscow where Serdyukov also  has a flat. The Moscow press is full of rumors that Serdyukov and  Vasilyeva are having an extra-marital affair, and this affiliation has  been one of the main reasons Putin decided to ditch Serdyukov  (Vedomosti, November 7). Last week, investigators searched Vasilyeva’s  apartment and reportedly confiscated a bounty of jewelry, paintings and  cash allegedly worth $10 million. It is also claimed that Serdyukov was  present during the search and that Vasilyeva told investigators some of  the confiscated valuables “were presents from Serdyukov” (Kommersant,  November 7).
Rumors in the Moscow press alleged that Serdyukov  helped Vasilyeva escape from Russia. Later, the SKR announced that  Vasilyeva was discovered in a military hospital in Moscow, “is under  surveillance and will be interrogated as soon as she is fit” (Interfax,  November 8). In a further bizarre twist, it was rumored that Vasilyeva  is pregnant with Serdyukov’s child.
Serdyukov, a businessman from  St. Petersburg, entered the inner circle of power in Russia, through  his second marriage with Julia—the daughter of Putin’s old-time  associate and prime minister in 2007–2008, Victor Zubkov. The marriage  breakdown apparently isolated Serdyukov, who in the course of a radical  military reform that began in 2008, has made himself multiple powerful  enemies in the ruling Moscow nomenclature. Prime Minister Dmitry  Medvedev; the present chief of Putin’s presidential administration,  Sergei Ivanov; the vice prime minister in charge of the defense  industry, Dmitry Rogozin; Putin’s old-time KGB buddy, arms industry and  trade tycoon Sergei Chemezov; the Finance Ministry; the Federal Security  Service (FSB—former KGB); the tax service—all have been listed as  contributors to Serdyukov’s downfall (Vedomosti, November 7).
Serdyukov  seems to have virtually no friends left, and his ouster was reportedly  greeted with overall glee within the ranks of the military. Many in the  military disliked Serdyukov and the reforms he initiated—even those who  apparently benefited from them. Serdyukov trimmed the Russian military  in size, introduced a structure of brigades instead of clumsy divisions  and regiments, as well as tried to improve service conditions and  increase pay. But the lack of well-trained sergeants, deficiencies in  the officer corps, along with the deficit of well-motivated and able  conscript and contract solders have seriously undermined the actual  battle readiness and capabilities of the newly formed army brigades  (Kommersant, November 7). This year’s servicemen pay hikes tuned to be  out much less lavish than anticipated, since they were coupled with the  cutting of different additional bonuses (VPK, November 7). An ambitious  rearmament program has been constantly running into technical glitches  and confrontation over the disbursement of massive budget funds between  Serdyukov and Rogozin.
Putin and Medvedev have praised  Serdyukov’s reform efforts as he was ousted. Putin ordered Shoigu to  continue the reform and rearmament, while Medvedev called for the  “Oboronservis” investigation to continue (Interfax, November 6).  Serdyukov’s ouster did not stop the public campaign against him in the  Kremlin-controlled press and state TV channels. Putin’s support of  Serdyukov has been undermined, and a coalition of multiple enemies seems  to be pressing on to fully destroy the disgraced minister. There is a  distinct possibility criminal charges may be pressed against Serdyukov,  and even a public anti-corruption show trail is feasible (Kommersant,  November 7). 
Serdyukov drastically changed the composition of  the defense ministry, increasing the number of civilian employees from  13 to 46 percent (Kommersant, November 7). This may now be reversed  together with other reforms, since the top civilian officials Serdyukov  has promoted are those accused of theft. The appointment of Shoigu will  inevitably lead to drastic changes in the top military leadership too,  since in Russia (as in many other authoritarian nations) there is no  serious practical difference between political and career (uniform)  appointees. Russia’s top general—the first deputy defense minister and  chief of the general staff, Nikolai Makarov, who was driving Serdyukov’s  drastic reorganization of the military—will apparently go soon as well.  Makarov’s replacement, as is the custom in Russia, will appoint his own  trusted cohorts; they will bring in their own buddies—and so on down  the defense ministry ranks to the bottom. A change of defense minister  and chief of the general staff in Moscow is like a new administration  coming into Washington. Shoigu is also bringing in his own men from the  MChS as well as the Moscow region administration and is distancing  himself from the Serdyukov legacy (Kommersant, November 8).
The  change of guard in the defense ministry may take many months to  complete, and this delay will gravely paralyze decision making as  middle-ranking officials continue to guess: will they be ousted, posted  to garrisons outside of Moscow or arrested? Shoigu will face the  daunting task of solving the serious problems of undermanning, overall  backwardness and inefficiency of the Russian military. Still, Shoigu has  the advantage of being an experienced and highly popular politician.  The new defense minister seems to have the support of Putin, the uniform  military and the general public to try once again to reshape Russia’s  battered armed forces.