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Russia
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Background: Russia, a vast Eurasian
expanse of field, forest, desert, and
tundra, has endured many "times of
trouble"the Mongol rule of
the 13th to 15th century; czarist reigns
of terror; massive invasions by Swedes,
French, and Germans; and the deadly communist
period (1917-91) in which Russia dominated
an immense Soviet Union. General Secretary
Mikhail GORBACHEV, in charge during 1985-91,
introduced glasnost (openness) and perestroika
(restructuring) in an attempt to modernize
communism, but also inadvertently released
forces that shattered the USSR into 15
independent republics in December 1991.
Russia has struggled in its efforts to
build a democratic political system and
market economy to replace the strict social,
political, and economic controls of the
communist period. These reform efforts
have resulted in contradictory and confusing
economic and political regulations and
practices. Industry, agriculture, the
military, the central government, and
the ruble have suffered, but Russia has
successfully held one presidential, two
legislative, and numerous regional elections
since 1991. The severe illnesses of President
Boris YEL'TSIN have contributed to a lack
of policy focus at the center.
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Location: Northern Asia (that part
west of the Urals is sometimes included
with Europe), bordering the Arctic Ocean,
between Europe and the North Pacific Ocean
Geographic coordinates: 60 00 N, 100
00 E
Map references: Asia
Area:
total: 17,075,200 sq km
land: 16,995,800 sq km
water: 79,400 sq km
Areacomparative: slightly less
than 1.8 times the size of the US
Land boundaries:
total: 19,917 km
border countries: Azerbaijan 284
km, Belarus 959 km, China (southeast)
3,605 km, China (south) 40 km, Estonia
294 km, Finland 1,313 km, Georgia 723
km, Kazakhstan 6,846 km, North Korea 19
km, Latvia 217 km, Lithuania (Kaliningrad
Oblast) 227 km, Mongolia 3,441 km, Norway
167 km, Poland (Kaliningrad Oblast) 206
km, Ukraine 1,576 km
Coastline: 37,653 km
Maritime claims:
continental shelf: 200-m depth
or to the depth of exploitation
exclusive economic zone: 200 nm
territorial sea: 12 nm
Climate: ranges from steppes in the
south through humid continental in much
of European Russia; subarctic in Siberia
to tundra climate in the polar north;
winters vary from cool along Black Sea
coast to frigid in Siberia; summers vary
from warm in the steppes to cool along
Arctic coast
Terrain: broad plain with low hills
west of Urals; vast coniferous forest
and tundra in Siberia; uplands and mountains
along southern border regions
Elevation extremes:
lowest point: Caspian Sea -28
m
highest point: Mount El'brus 5,633
m
Natural resources: wide natural resource
base including major deposits of oil,
natural gas, coal, and many strategic
minerals, timber
note: formidable obstacles of
climate, terrain, and distance hinder
exploitation of natural resources
Land use:
arable land: 8%
permanent crops: 0%
permanent pastures: 4%
forests and woodland: 46%
other: 42% (1993 est.)
Irrigated land: 40,000 sq km (1993
est.)
Natural hazards: permafrost over much
of Siberia is a major impediment to development;
volcanic activity in the Kuril Islands;
volcanoes and earthquakes on the Kamchatka
Peninsula
Environmentcurrent issues: air
pollution from heavy industry, emissions
of coal-fired electric plants, and transportation
in major cities; industrial, municipal,
and agricultural pollution of inland waterways
and sea coasts; deforestation; soil erosion;
soil contamination from improper application
of agricultural chemicals; scattered areas
of sometimes intense radioactive contamination
Environmentinternational agreements:
party to: Air Pollution, Air Pollution-Nitrogen
Oxides, Air Pollution-Sulphur 85, Antarctic-Environmental
Protocol, Antarctic Treaty, Biodiversity,
Climate Change, Endangered Species, Environmental
Modification, Hazardous Wastes, Law of
the Sea, Marine Dumping, Nuclear Test
Ban, Ozone Layer Protection, Ship Pollution,
Tropical Timber 83, Wetlands, Whaling
signed, but not ratified: Air
Pollution-Sulphur 94, Climate Change-Kyoto
Protocol
Geographynote: largest country
in the world in terms of area but unfavorably
located in relation to major sea lanes
of the world; despite its size, much of
the country lacks proper soils and climates
(either too cold or too dry) for agriculture
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Population: 146,393,569 (July 1999
est.)
Age structure:
0-14 years: 19% (male 14,224,033;
female 13,666,440)
15-64 years: 68% (male 48,407,409;
female 51,768,664)
65 years and over: 13% (male 5,698,356;
female 12,628,667) (1999 est.)
Population growth rate: -0.33% (1999
est.)
Birth rate: 9.64 births/1,000 population
(1999 est.)
Death rate: 14.96 deaths/1,000 population
(1999 est.)
Net migration rate: 2.05 migrant(s)/1,000
population (1999 est.)
Sex ratio:
at birth: 1.05 male(s)/female
under 15 years: 1.04 male(s)/female
15-64 years: 0.94 male(s)/female
65 years and over: 0.45 male(s)/female
total population: 0.88 male(s)/female
(1999 est.)
Infant mortality rate: 23 deaths/1,000
live births (1999 est.)
Life expectancy at birth:
total population: 65.12 years
male: 58.83 years
female: 71.72 years (1999 est.)
Total fertility rate: 1.34 children
born/woman (1999 est.)
Nationality:
noun: Russian(s)
adjective: Russian
Ethnic groups: Russian 81.5%, Tatar
3.8%, Ukrainian 3%, Chuvash 1.2%, Bashkir
0.9%, Byelorussian 0.8%, Moldavian 0.7%,
other 8.1%
Religions: Russian Orthodox, Muslim,
other
Languages: Russian, other
Literacy:
definition: age 15 and over can
read and write
total population: 98%
male: 100%
female: 97% (1989 est.)
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Country name:
conventional long form: Russian
Federation
conventional short form: Russia
local long form: Rossiyskaya Federatsiya
local short form: Rossiya
former: Russian Soviet Federative
Socialist Republic
Data code: RS
Government type: federation
Capital: Moscow
Administrative divisions: oblasts
(oblastey, singularoblast'), 21
autonomous republics* (avtonomnyk respublik,
singularavtonomnaya respublika),
10 autonomous okrugs**(avtonomnykh okrugov,
singularavtonomnyy okrug), 6 krays***
(krayev, singularkray), 2 federal
cities (singulargorod)****, and
1 autonomous oblast*****(avtonomnaya oblast');
Adygeya (Maykop)*, Aginskiy Buryatskiy
(Aginskoye)**, Altay (Gorno-Altaysk)*,
Altayskiy (Barnaul)***, Amurskaya (Blagoveshchensk),
Arkhangel'skaya, Astrakhanskaya, Bashkortostan
(Ufa)*, Belgorodskaya, Bryanskaya, Buryatiya
(Ulan-Ude)*, Chechnya (Groznyy)*, Chelyabinskaya,
Chitinskaya, Chukotskiy (Anadyr')**, Chuvashiya
(Cheboksary)*, Dagestan (Makhachkala)*,
Evenkiyskiy (Tura)**, Ingushetiya (Nazran')*,
Irkutskaya, Ivanovskaya, Kabardino-Balkariya
(Nal'chik)*, Kaliningradskaya, Kalmykiya
(Elista)*, Kaluzkskaya, Kamchatskaya (Petropavlovsk-Kamchatskiy),
Karachayevo-Cherkesiya (Cherkessk)*, Kareliya
(Petrozavodsk)*, Kemerovskaya, Khabarovskiy***,
Khakasiya (Abakan)*, Khanty-Mansiyskiy
(Khanty-Mansiysk)**, Kirovskaya, Komi
(Syktyvkar)*, Koryakskiy (Palana)**, Kostromskaya,
Krasnodarskiy***, Krasnoyarskiy***, Kurganskaya,
Kurskaya, Leningradskaya, Lipetskaya,
Magadanskaya, Mariy-El (Yoshkar-Ola)*,
Mordoviya (Saransk)*, Moskovskaya, Moskva
(Moscow)****, Murmanskaya, Nenetskiy (Nar'yan-Mar)**,
Nizhegorodskaya, Novgorodskaya, Novosibirskaya,
Omskaya, Orenburgskaya, Orlovskaya (Orel),
Penzenskaya, Permskaya, Komi-Permyatskiy
(Kudymkar)**, Primorskiy (Vladivostok)***,
Pskovskaya, Rostovskaya, Ryazanskaya,
Sakha (Yakutsk)*, Sakhalinskaya (Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk),
Samarskaya, Sankt-Peterburg (Saint Petersburg)****,
Saratovskaya, Severnaya Osetiya-Alaniya
(Vladikavkaz)*, Smolenskaya, Stavropol'skiy***,
Sverdlovskaya (Yekaterinburg), Tambovskaya,
Tatarstan (Kazan')*, Taymyrskiy (Dudinka)**,
Tomskaya, Tul'skaya, Tverskaya, Tyumenskaya,
Tyva (Kyzyl)*, Udmurtiya (Izhevsk)*, Ul'yanovskaya,
Ust'-Ordynskiy Buryatskiy (Ust'-Ordynskiy)**,
Vladimirskaya, Volgogradskaya, Vologodskaya,
Voronezhskaya, Yamalo-Nenetskiy (Salekhard)**,
Yaroslavskaya, Yevreyskaya*****; notewhen
using a place name with an adjectival
ending 'skaya' or 'skiy,' the word Oblast'
or Avonomnyy Okrug or Kray should be added
to the place name
note: the autonomous republics
of Chechnya and Ingushetiya were formerly
the autonomous republic of Checheno-Ingushetia
(the boundary between Chechnya and Ingushetia
has yet to be determined); administrative
divisions have the same names as their
administrative centers (exceptions have
the administrative center name following
in parentheses)
Independence: 24 August 1991 (from
Soviet Union)
National holiday: Independence Day,
June 12 (1990)
Constitution: adopted 12 December
1993
Legal system: based on civil law system;
judicial review of legislative acts
Suffrage: 18 years of age; universal
Executive branch:
chief of state: President Boris
Nikolayevich YEL'TSIN (since 12 June 1991)
head of government: Premier Yevgeniy
Maksimovich PRIMAKOV (since 11 September
1998), First Deputy Premiers Yuriy Dmitriyevich
MASLYUKOV (since 11 September 1998) and
Vadim Anatol'yevich GUSTOV (since 11 September
1998); Deputy Premiers Vladimir Broisovich
BULGAK (since 11 September 1998), Gennadiy
Vasil'yevich KULIK (since 11 September
1998), and Valentin Ivanovna MATVIYENKO
(since 11 September 1998)
cabinet: Ministries of the Government
or "Government" composed of
the premier and his deputies, ministers,
and other agency heads; all are appointed
by the president
note: there is also a Presidential
Administration (PA) that provides staff
and policy support to the president, drafts
presidential decrees, and coordinates
policy among government agencies; a Security
Council also reports directly to the president
elections: president elected by
popular vote for a four-year term; election
last held 16 June 1996 with runoff election
on 3 July 1996 (next to be held NA June
2000); noteno vice president; if
the president dies in office, cannot exercise
his powers because of ill health, is impeached,
or resigns, the premier succeeds him;
the premier serves as acting president
until a new presidential election is held,
which must be within three months; premier
and deputy premiers appointed by the president
with the approval of the Duma
election results: Boris Nikolayevich
YEL'TSIN elected president; percent of
vote in runoffYEL'TSIN 54%, Gennadiy
Andreyevich ZYUGANOV 40%
Legislative branch: bicameral Federal
Assembly or Federal'noye Sobraniye consists
of the Federation Council or Sovet Federatsii
(178 seats, filled ex-officio by the top
executive and legislative officials in
each of the 89 federal administrative
unitsoblasts, krays, republics,
autonomous okrugs and oblasts, and the
federal cities of Moscow and St. Petersburg;
members serve four-year terms) and the
State Duma or Gosudarstvennaya Duma (450
seats, half elected in single-member districts
and half elected from national party lists;
members are elected by direct popular
vote to serve four-year terms)
elections: State Dumalast
held 17 December 1995 (next to be held
NA December 1999)
election results: State Dumapercent
of vote received by parties clearing the
5% threshold entitling them to a proportional
share of the 225 party list seatsCommunist
Party of the Russian Federation 22.3%,
Liberal Democratic Party of Russia 11.2%,
Our Home Is Russia 10.1%, Yabloko Bloc
6.9%; seats by partyCommunist Party
of the Russian Federation 157, independents
78, Our Home Is Russia 55, Liberal Democratic
Party of Russia 51, Yabloko Bloc 45, Agrarian
Party of Russia 20, Russia's Democratic
Choice 9, Power To the People 9, Congress
of Russian Communities 5, Forward, Russia!
3, Women of Russia 3, other parties 15
Judicial branch: Constitutional Court,
judges are appointed for life by the Federation
Council on the recommendation of the president;
Supreme Court, judges are appointed for
life by the Federation Council on the
recommendation of the president; Superior
Court of Arbitration, judges are appointed
for life by the Federation Council on
the recommendation of the president
Political parties and leaders:
pro-market democrats: Yabloko
Bloc [Grigoriy Alekseyevich YAVLINSKIY];
Pravoye Delo (Just Cause), a coalition
of reformist, western-oriented movements
[Yegor Timurovich GAYDAR, Anatoliy Borisovich
CHUBAYS, Boris Yefimovich NEMTSOV, Sergey
Vladlenovich KIRIYENKO]
centrists/special interest parties:
Fatherland [Yuriy Mikhailovich LUZHKOV];
Russian People's Republican Party [Aleksandr
Ivanovich LEBED]; Our Home Is Russia [Viktor
Stepanovich CHERNOMYRDIN]
anti-market and/or ultranationalist:
Communist Party of the Russian Federation
[Gennadiy Andreyevich ZYUGANOV]; Liberal
Democratic Party of Russia [Vladimir Vol'fovich
ZHIRINOVSKIY]; Agrarian Party [Mikhail
Ivanovich LAPSHIN]; Working Russia [Viktor
Ivanovich ANPILOV and Stanislav TEREKHOV];
Russian National Unity [Aleksandr BARKASHOV]
note: some 150 political parties,
blocs, and movements registered with the
Justice Ministry as of the 19 December
1998 deadline to be eligible to participate
in the scheduled December 1999 Duma elections;
in 1995, 43 political organizations qualified
to run slates of candidates on the Duma
party list ballot; among the parties not
listed above but holding seats in the
Duma were Russia's Democratic Choice,
Power To the People, Congress of Russian
Communities, Forward, Russia!, and Women
of Russia
Political pressure groups and leaders:
NA
International organization participation:
APEC, BIS, BSEC, CBSS, CCC, CE, CERN (observer),
CIS, EAPC, EBRD, ECE, ESCAP, IAEA, IBRD,
ICAO, ICRM, IDA, IFC, IFRCS, IHO, ILO,
IMF, IMO, Inmarsat, Intelsat, Interpol,
IOC, IOM (observer), ISO, ITU, LAIA (observer),
MINURSO, MONUA, MTCR, NSG, OAS (observer),
OPCW, OSCE, PCA, PFP, UN, UN Security
Council, UNCTAD, UNESCO, UNHCR, UNIDO,
UNIKOM, UNITAR, UNMIBH, UNMOP, UNOMIG,
UNOMSIL, UNPREDEP, UNTSO, UPU, WFTU, WHO,
WIPO, WMO, WToO, WTrO (applicant), ZC
Diplomatic representation in the US:
chief of mission: Ambassador Yuliy
Mikhaylovich VORONTSOV
chancery: 2650 Wisconsin Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20007
telephone: [1] (202) 298-5700
through 5704
FAX: [1] (202) 298-5735
consulate(s) general: New York,
San Francisco, and Seattle
Diplomatic representation from the US:
chief of mission: Ambassador James
F. COLLINS
embassy: Novinskiy Bul'var 19/23,
Moscow
mailing address: APO AE 09721
telephone: [7] (095) 252-24-51
through 59
FAX: [7] (095) 956-42-61
consulate(s) general: St. Petersburg,
Vladivostok, Yekaterinburg
Flag description: three equal horizontal
bands of white (top), blue, and red
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Economyoverview: Seven years
after the collapse of the USSR, Russia
is still struggling to establish a modern
market economy and achieve strong economic
growth. Russian GDP has contracted an
estimated 43% since 1991, including a
5% drop in 1998, despite the country's
wealth of natural resources, its well-educated
population, and its diversealthough
increasingly dilapidatedindustrial
base. By the end of 1997, Russia had achieved
some progress. Inflation had been brought
under control, the ruble was stabilized,
and an ambitious privatization program
had transferred thousands of enterprises
to private ownership. Some important market-oriented
laws were also passed, including a commercial
code governing business relations and
an arbitration court for resolving economic
disputes. But in 1998, the Asian financial
crisis swept through the country, contributing
to a sharp decline in russia's earnings
from oil exports and resulting in an exodus
of foreign investors. Matters came to
a head in August 1998 when the government
allowed the ruble to fall precipitously
and stopped payment on $40 billion in
ruble bonds. Ongoing problems include
an undeveloped legal and financial system,
poor progress on restructuring the military-industrial
complex, and persistently large budget
deficits, largely reflecting the inability
of successive governments to collect sufficient
taxes. Russia's transition to a market
economy has also been slowed by the growing
prevalence of payment arrears and barter
and by widespread corruption. The severity
of Russia's economic problems is dramatized
by the large annual decline in population,
estimated by some observers at 800,000
people, caused by environmental hazards,
the decline in health care, and the unwillingness
of people to have children.
GDP: purchasing power parity$593.4
billion (1998 est.)
GDPreal growth rate: -5% (1998
est.)
GDPper capita: purchasing power
parity$4,000 (1998 est.)
GDPcomposition by sector:
agriculture: 7%
industry: 39%
services: 54% (1997)
Population below poverty line: 28.6%
(1998 est.)
Household income or consumption by percentage
share:
lowest 10%: 3%
highest 10%: 22.2% (1993)
Inflation rate (consumer prices):
84% (1998 est.)
Labor force: 66 million (1997)
Labor forceby occupation: NA
Unemployment rate: 11.5% (1998 est.)
with considerable additional underemployment
Budget:
revenues: $40 billion
expenditures: $63 billion, including
capital expenditures of $NA (1998 est.)
Industries: complete range of mining
and extractive industries producing coal,
oil, gas, chemicals, and metals; all forms
of machine building from rolling mills
to high-performance aircraft and space
vehicles; shipbuilding; road and rail
transportation equipment; communications
equipment; agricultural machinery, tractors,
and construction equipment; electric power
generating and transmitting equipment;
medical and scientific instruments; consumer
durables, textiles, foodstuffs, handicrafts
Industrial production growth rate:
-5.5% (1998 est.)
Electricityproduction: 834 billion
kWh (1997)
Electricityproduction by source:
fossil fuel: 68.14%
hydro: 19%
nuclear: 12.82%
other: 0.04% (1997)
Electricityconsumption: 788.036
billion kWh (1996)
Electricityexports: 24.2 billion
kWh (1996)
Electricityimports: 6.6 billion
kWh (1996)
Agricultureproducts: grain,
sugar beets, sunflower seed, vegetables,
fruits; beef, milk
Exports: $71.8 billion (1998 est.)
Exportscommodities: petroleum
and petroleum products, natural gas, wood
and wood products, metals, chemicals,
and a wide variety of civilian and military
manufactures
Exportspartners: Ukraine, Germany,
US, Belarus, other Western and less developed
countries
Imports: $58.5 billion (1998 est.)
Importscommodities: machinery
and equipment, consumer goods, medicines,
meat, grain, sugar, semifinished metal
products
Importspartners: Europe, North
America, Japan, and less developed countries
Debtexternal: $164 billion (yearend
1998)
Economic aidrecipient: $8.523
billion (1995)
Currency: 1 ruble (R) = 100 kopeks
Exchange rates: rubles per US$122.2876
(January 1999), 9.7051 (1998), 5,785 (1997),
5,121 (1996), 4,559 (1995), 2,191 (1994)
note: the post-1 January 1998
ruble is equal to 1,000 of the pre-1 January
1998 rubles
Fiscal year: calendar year
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Telephones: 23.8 million (1997 est.)
Telephone system: the telephone system
has undergone significant changes in the
1990's; there are more than 1,000 companies
licensed to offer communication services;
access to digital lines has improved,
particularly in urban centers; Internet
and e-mail services are improving; Russia
has made progress toward building the
telecommunications infrastructure necessary
for a market economy
domestic: cross country digital
trunk lines run from St. Petersburg to
Khabarovsk, and from Moscow to Novorossiysk;
the telephone systems in 60 regional capitals
have modern digital infrastructures; cellular
services, both analog and digital, are
available in many areas; in rural areas,
the telephone services are still outdated,
inadequate, and low density
international: Russia is connected
internationally by three undersea fiber-optic
cables; digital switches in several cities
provide more than 50,000 lines for international
calls; satellite earth stations provide
access to Intelsat, Intersputnik, Eutelsat,
Inmarsat, and Orbita
Radio broadcast stations: AM NA, FM
NA, shortwave NA; notethere are
about 1,050 (including AM, FM, and shortwave)
radio broadcast stations throughout the
country
Radios: 50 million (1993 est.) (74.3
million radio receivers with multiple
speaker systems for program diffusion)
Television broadcast stations: 11,000
(1996 est.)
Televisions: 54.85 million (1992 est.)
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Railways:
total: 150,000 km; note87,000
km in common carrier service; 63,000 km
serve specific industries and are not
available for common carrier use
broad gauge: 150,000 km 1.520-m
gauge (January 1997 est.)
Highways:
total: 948,000 km (including 416,000
km which serve specific industries or
farms and are not maintained by governmental
highway maintenance departments)
paved: 336,000 km
unpaved: 612,000 km (including
411,000 km of graveled or some other form
of surfacing and 201,000 km of unstabilized
earth) (1995 est.)
Waterways: total navigable routes
in general use 101,000 km; routes with
navigation guides serving the Russian
River Fleet 95,900 km; routes with night
navigational aids 60,400 km; man-made
navigable routes 16,900 km (January 1994
est.)
Pipelines: crude oil 48,000 km; petroleum
products 15,000 km; natural gas 140,000
km (June 1993 est.)
Ports and harbors: Arkhangel'sk, Astrakhan',
Kaliningrad, Kazan', Khabarovsk, Kholmsk,
Krasnoyarsk, Moscow, Murmansk, Nakhodka,
Nevel'sk, Novorossiysk, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatskiy,
St. Petersburg, Rostov, Sochi, Tuapse,
Vladivostok, Volgograd, Vostochnyy, Vyborg
Merchant marine:
total: 617 ships (1,000 GRT or
over) totaling 4,146,329 GRT/5,278,909
DWT
ships by type: barge carrier 1,
bulk 19, cargo 309, combination bulk 21,
combination ore/oil 6, container 25, multifunction
large-load carrier 1, oil tanker 149,
passenger 35, passenger-cargo 3, refrigerated
cargo 16, roll-on/roll-off cargo 25, short-sea
passenger 7 (1998 est.)
Airports: 2,517 (1994 est.)
Airportswith paved runways:
total: 630
over 3,047 m: 54
2,438 to 3,047 m: 202
1,524 to 2,437 m: 108
914 to 1,523 m: 115
under 914 m: 151 (1994 est.)
Airportswith unpaved runways:
total: 1,887
over 3,047 m: 25
2,438 to 3,047 m: 45
1,524 to 2,437 m: 134
914 to 1,523 m: 291
under 914 m: 1,392 (1994 est.)
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Military branches: Ground Forces,
Navy, Air Forces, Strategic Rocket Forces
note: the Air Defense Force merged
into the Air Force in March 1998
Military manpowermilitary age:
18 years of age
Military manpoweravailability:
males age 15-49: 38,665,138 (1999
est.)
Military manpowerfit for military
service:
males age 15-49: 30,173,495 (1999
est.)
Military manpowerreaching military
age annually:
males: 1,149,536 (1999 est.)
Military expendituresdollar figure:
$NA
note: the Intelligence Community
estimates that defense spending in Russia
fell by about 10% in real terms in 1996,
reducing Russian defense outlays to about
one-sixth of peak Soviet levels in the
late 1980s (1997 est.)
Military expenditurespercent of
GDP: NA%
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Disputesinternational: dispute
over at least two small sections of the
boundary with China remain to be settled,
despite 1997 boundary agreement; islands
of Etorofu, Kunashiri, and Shikotan and
the Habomai group occupied by the Soviet
Union in 1945, now administered by Russia,
claimed by Japan; Caspian Sea boundaries
are not yet determined among Azerbaijan,
Iran, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Turkmenistan;
Estonian and Russian negotiators reached
a technical border agreement in December
1996 which has not been ratified; draft
treaty delimiting the boundary with Latvia
has not been signed; has made no territorial
claim in Antarctica (but has reserved
the right to do so) and does not recognize
the claims of any other nation; 1997 border
agreement with Lithuania not yet ratified;
Svalbard is the focus of a maritime boundary
dispute in the Barents Sea between Norway
and Russia
Illicit drugs: limited cultivation
of illicit cannabis and opium poppy and
producer of amphetamines, mostly for domestic
consumption; government has active eradication
program; increasingly used as transshipment
point for Southwest and Southeast Asian
opiates and cannabis and Latin American
cocaine to Western Europe, possibly to
the US, and growing domestic market
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