My knowledge of most of these countries is marginal to non-existant, so I will comment on the country I know enough to talk about with a degree of authority; Russia.
Several points to keep in mind: the question of the Russian economy stands firm. The Russian economy has seen huge growth, however it still remains unclear whether this is inflated growth of the consumer goods sector funded by record high oil and gas revenues, or genuine economic diversification. The demographics situation is reversing, albeit slowly. While birthrates are rising and very quickly, the death rate is not dropping in the long term. There is also a deficit of specialists in many fields, including the defense industry and the health industry, partially due to low salary, and partially due to the immigration drain and the poor condition of the education system. The Russian military is recovering from the disastarous decade following the collapse of the USSR, however this recovery is also slow and very painful. Until a real re-armament program is in place, rather then small and non-coordinated orders of defense equipment, the changes to the Russian army strength will be fairly minor. Most notably however are the major recenty military exercises especially in the air force area. The number of contract soldiers has been estimated at 30-40% of the military, with a large number of high readyness units formed exclusively from contract soldiers.
plus sides
-large military, capable of sustained operations (to an extent)
-a (mostly) modern tank and armored vehicle fleet
-a strategic airforce
-a blue water capable Navy (though unlikely to be able to deploy more then one task force in a blue water role)
-strategic RLS network
minus sides
-large numbers of conscripts still accepted each year (est. 300 000 annually)
-no comprehensive modernization or procurement programs
-lack of a clear military doctrine
-poor training of troops, especially airforce
-small military budget (given force size)
-corruption
My prediction is that if the Russian economy genuinely diversifies, corruption is dealt with, and the demographic crisis is resolved, then the current efforts (however insignificant in the short term) will lead to a modern, professional, and very large military in the forseeable future.
Several points to keep in mind: the question of the Russian economy stands firm. The Russian economy has seen huge growth, however it still remains unclear whether this is inflated growth of the consumer goods sector funded by record high oil and gas revenues, or genuine economic diversification. The demographics situation is reversing, albeit slowly. While birthrates are rising and very quickly, the death rate is not dropping in the long term. There is also a deficit of specialists in many fields, including the defense industry and the health industry, partially due to low salary, and partially due to the immigration drain and the poor condition of the education system. The Russian military is recovering from the disastarous decade following the collapse of the USSR, however this recovery is also slow and very painful. Until a real re-armament program is in place, rather then small and non-coordinated orders of defense equipment, the changes to the Russian army strength will be fairly minor. Most notably however are the major recenty military exercises especially in the air force area. The number of contract soldiers has been estimated at 30-40% of the military, with a large number of high readyness units formed exclusively from contract soldiers.
plus sides
-large military, capable of sustained operations (to an extent)
-a (mostly) modern tank and armored vehicle fleet
-a strategic airforce
-a blue water capable Navy (though unlikely to be able to deploy more then one task force in a blue water role)
-strategic RLS network
minus sides
-large numbers of conscripts still accepted each year (est. 300 000 annually)
-no comprehensive modernization or procurement programs
-lack of a clear military doctrine
-poor training of troops, especially airforce
-small military budget (given force size)
-corruption
My prediction is that if the Russian economy genuinely diversifies, corruption is dealt with, and the demographic crisis is resolved, then the current efforts (however insignificant in the short term) will lead to a modern, professional, and very large military in the forseeable future.