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Show NEWS - J- - Htm- V - " i' " """-y sT i t,. r ---- -- - X'" , '- -. X sii..etoovwi . . u.t.! cvpor Lt. V'' ; - --- vDoI . J ren tnltuana , Nov. 2, 1 990 x - . " 7 Si I o 7 - '"""rV' X)irV VvX ' Tw-i'XJf'x ' Hilltop Times ' vT7 SiA ' ? ' ' A '""AiV ' ir ' j y , - y? J? (7 i , - '' v- - ;. -' . ( . Wands Kuril VJ (adnrumstered by V Sovt Union) 1M Occupied by Union So(l ince 194b. cwjmed by Vapan !: sT j;viv j Ht 'sX "S. '""""xv e ' , -- "wv- T" KJtJ riiki g nbrt,V-- X i 1 r I ' f J 0 I I Railroad f I 0 400 ; Name x . , International boundary - 1 f Kiki xx v I 800 Kilometars 800 Miles 400 ant not necessarily authoritative. .reini - ;.' i ! I t SD1? 'V. fflrQD3 I. It . X I v p , p no-show- . s. ' Photo courtesy of U.S. State Deportment Shrouded in fog Soviet citizens walk in Red Square with St Basil's Cathedral in the backf 1 " ' ground. X - nal debates and uncertain intentions, as well as change and instability. "There is certainly reason to be optimistic about the future trend in the Soviet threat," the secretary said. "But the facts lead only to the conclusion that the Soviet Union remains an enormous military superpower." He said "the intentions of that regime are changing," but intentions are not enough to support dramatic changes in the United States' own level of preparedness. "We must see fundamental and enduring changes in both the capabilities and character of Soviet military power." The secretary added that this would go a long way in convincing the United States that the Kremlin is serious about "new thinking" and tackling its domestic economic problems rather than continuing its traditional geopolitical maneuvers of the Cold . War. r jrV Pentagon releases report, studies nation in deep crisis iU 1 , CglQ(o fQCoiniTQCo 1 WASHINGTON (AFNS) The Pentagon released its annual assessment of Soviet military power and strategists say the United States still faces a changing threat from a nation in deep crisis that possesses enormous military capabilities. Soviet Military Power 1990, released by the Department of Defense at a Sept. 25 press briefing, is a review of political, economic and military changes in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union. This publication looks at what has and has not changed in terms of Soviet military, and chronicles the positive steps the Soviets have taken to reduce tensions and diminish the potential for conflict between East and West. It also describes and assesses the current status and reports considerable of Soviet military build-uSoviet force modernization. This includes a complete upgrade of its intercontinental ballistic missile force, and modernization of the bomber force with new Bear and Blackjack aircraft. Soviet internal problems, such as domestic support for military service, are so great they simply cannot be kept secret, the report states. Largely as a result of the Baltic secession movements, antimili-tar- y and antidraf t campaigns, and the overt resistance of some local government to the draft, Soviet draft evasion has mushroomed. The report said Defense Minister Dmitriy Yazov had admitted that the military's spring draft call-ufallen short, with several thousand The document says the Soviet investment in research on more advanced systems, such as lasers, underlines strong Soviet interest in the military uses ' of space. "Given what must be very intense competition for defense rubles, Soviet spending in the strategic defense area is indeed impressive and indicates an extremely robust commitment to developing a fully missile defense system," Defense Secretary ' capable Dick Cheney said in the preface to the ninth edition of the publication. the Secretary Cheney said any serious analysis of interof vigorous Soviet military reveals a picture x W i PtHliOlHM Sea 7 |