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New Russian military doctrine labels NATO as main threat
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) Dec 26, 2014


China praises Hong Kong for not giving in to protesters
Beijing (AFP) Dec 26, 2014 - China's president on Friday heaped praise on Hong Kong's embattled leader Leung Chun-ying as they met in Beijing, commending him for maintaining "stability" in 2014, a year marked by massive pro-democracy protests.

Beijing refused to give concessions to demonstrators who held rallies in Hong Kong for more than two months demanding free leadership elections for the semi-autonomous city, and police cleared the last of their sprawling protest camps on December 15.

Protesters have nonetheless continued to hold nightly gatherings on the streets, with police clashing with angry crowds on Friday for a second night running.

"In the past few months, Hong Kong has faced unprecedented challenges and difficulties... on the issues of rule of law, social order and security," Leung told President Xi Jinping, while thanking China's leaders for backing him.

Xi offered praise in return, saying Beijing holds the work of his government in "high regard".

"This year, under your leadership... the overall stability (of Hong Kong) was preserved," Xi told Leung at the exclusive Zhongnanhai leadership compound near the Forbidden City.

"Pushing forward political reform... needs to be to the benefit of safeguarding the country's sovereignty and development," Xi added.

Leung arrived in the Chinese capital on Thursday for his first visit since the sit-ins were cleared.

Beijing has refused to back down on its insistence that candidates for Hong Kong's next leadership election in 2017 must be vetted by a loyalist committee.

Democracy campaigners say this will result in the election of a pro-Beijing stooge.

"The central government's basic policy for Hong Kong has not and will not change," Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said as he met with Leung.

Hong Kong police said they made 37 arrests overnight for illegal assembly and criminal damage, a night after they used pepper spray and batons to disperse hundreds of protesters, with a dozen arrested.

Their protest camps have been cleared from the major road junctions they occupied for more than two months, but they have continued to make their voices heard, holding nightly rallies they colloquially refer to as "going shopping".

Large banners have appeared on landmarks, pop-up markets have sprung up selling memorabilia of the movement, and there is even an "Occupy hotel" where guests can pay to spend the night in a tent.

The Kremlin on Friday branded the expansion of NATO as a fundamental threat to Russia in a revised military doctrine that dramatically reflects deteriorating relations with the West.

The new document, approved by Russian President Vladimir Putin, decries the "reinforcement of NATO's offensive capacities directly on Russia's borders, and measures taken to deploy a global anti-missile defence system" in Central Europe.

NATO was already seen a major threat in an earlier version of the doctrine published in 2010, but the war in Ukraine has further raised tensions to levels not seen since the Cold War.

The alarmed tone of the new version comes in the wake of repeated protests by Moscow over NATO's decision to position troops in alliance member states like Poland or the Baltic states that border Russia.

The Kremlin has also opposed NATO's American-driven plan to base its anti-missile defence shield in Central Europe, which Moscow views as directed foremost against Russia.

The doctrine's harsher tone also follows Wednesday's decision by Ukraine to abandon its non-aligned status -- a symbolic move that provoked Moscow's anger by potentially clearing the way for Kiev to request NATO membership.

Ukraine faces a huge task to bring its military up to NATO norms, and key members of the alliance, including France and Germany, remain sceptical about it joining the alliance.

Despite its new anti-NATO edge, the Russian doctrine remains primarily defensive in nature, calling any military action by Russia justifiable only after all non-violent options to settle a conflict have been exhausted.

In the same vein, it notes the "decreased likelihood of a large-scale war against Russia", although it does list a number of increasing threats to stability like territorial disputes, "interference in the internal affairs" of nations, and the use of strategic arms in space.

Russia's new military doctrine also introduces the concept of "non-nuclear dissuasion" based on maintaining a high degree of preparedness of conventional military forces. It also urges active participation in regional security organisations like the Commonwealth of Independent States, made up of nine former Soviet Republics; and the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation formed by Russia, China, and several ex-Soviet Caucasian republics.

It reserves however the right to use the country's nuclear arsenal in the event of aggression against Russia or its allies, or in case of "threat to the very existence of the state."

Among the principal duties listed in the doctrine for the country's armed forces during times of peace is the protection "of Russia's national interests in the Arctic", a strategic region in Russia's future energy development to which the United States and Canada also lay claim.


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SUPERPOWERS
Russia's Military Doctrine Remains Defensive Despite NATO Buildup
Moscow, Russia (Sputnik) Dec 24, 2014
The Russian military doctrine will remain defensive despite NATO military buildup in eastern Europe, but Russia will make consistent and determined efforts to safeguard its security, President Vladimir Putin said Friday. "Our military doctrine, which has an absolutely defensive nature, remains unchanged, although we will protect our security consistently and determinedly," Putin said at a ... read more


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