THE SOVIET ECONOMIC PREDICAMENT AND EAST-WEST ECONOMIC RELATIONS

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January 1, 1985
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Nationa.! Secret Foreign Assessment Center Economic Relations The Soviet Economic Predicament and East-West Secret SOV 82-I000IX January 1982 Copy 3 O 8 STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 National Foreign Assessment Center Economic Relations The Soviet Economic Predicament and East-West Information available as of 15 December 1981 has been used in the preparation of this report. STAT SOVA Comments and queries are welcome and may be This paper has been coordinated with the Office of Scientific and Weapons Research and the National Intelligence Officer for the USSR and Eastern Europe. (u) Secret SOV 82-10001 January 1982 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83TOO233ROO0100010003-0 Secret Foreword Economic Relations The Soviet Economic Predicament and East-West This is a supplement to the Special National Intelligence Estimate Dependence of Soviet Military Power on Economic Relations With the West, SNIE 3/11-4-81, 17 November 1981. That estimate examined the contribution of Western goods and technology to Soviet economic perform- ance and defense programs and outlined possible Western restrictions on East-West economic relations. This assessment provides more detailed discussion of topics covered in the estimate. Although not coordinated with other NFIB agencies, the assessment has taken into consideration comments from those agencies. Like the estimate, it omits consideration of such topics as: the economic costs to Western countries participating in trade restrictions; the problem of obtaining Western cooperation; how to restrict leaks, diversions, espionage, or the flow of open information; and how to differentiate between Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union in Western export control policy. Secret SOV 82-! 0001 January 1982 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83TOO233ROO0100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Secret The Soviet Economic Predicament and East-West Economic Relations Key Judgments As the Soviet Union completes the first year of its new five-year plan, the economy has turned sour-even before the long-anticipated labor and energy. problems have come into play. Three: bad harvests have left agriculture in disarray, and transportation and materials bottlenecks and dwindling productivity gains have reduced industrial growth sharply. Soviet GNP growth may well be limited to 1 to 2 percent on average by the mid-1980s. Slower economic growth will give President Brezhnev and his colleagues increasingly tough and politically painful choices in resource allocation and economic management. Annual increments:.to national output in the early 1980s will be too small to simultaneously meet mounting investment requirements,. maintain growth in defense spending at the rates of the past, and raise the standard of living. Simply stated, something will have to give. The Soviet need for Western goods and credits will therefore increase greatly. Imports- can relieve some economic problems by raising the technological level of key.Soviet industries and by reducing shortages of grain and such important industrial materials as steel. During the 1970s, increased. imports made a sizable contribution to the Soviet production of oil and gas, chemicals, and motor vehicles, and vastly increased grain purchases were critical to raising and then sustaining Soviet meat con- sumption. In .the 1980s, Western equipment and know-how will be particularly important to raising. productivity in the critical machine- building and energy industries. The Soviets must continue importing large amounts of agricultural products.-and will probably expand their purchases of steel and some other industrial materials.: In obtaining and exploiting Western technologies and equipment, however, the Soviets give priority to those having military application. Through legal and illegal means-including clandestine acquisitions and third-country transfers-they have obtained Western designs, test data, production know-how, and actual hardware and have used them in developing new weapons or improving existing military capabilities. The Soviet defense establishment has in some cases been able to: ? Avoid, false starts .in early weapon design: ? Reduce the time in which more reliable weapon testing programs are conducted and weapon systems manufactured. v Secret Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 ? Save years in improving production processes for critical weapon parts. ? Incorporate acquired Western components directly into weapon proto- types to maintain development schedules. ? Develop. countermeasures effective against specific Western weapons. The USSR knows that it must scramble in the 1980s to keep pace with technological improvements of Western weapon systems. Western technol- ogy could be especially valuable in: ? Production of microelectronic devices critical to guidance systems for missiles, precision-guided munitions, and signal-processing devices for ASW and ballistic missile defenses. ? Manufacture of electro-optical devices for night vision. ? Production of advanced airframes and aircraft propulsion systems. The.-USSR will also need Western equipment and technology to manufac- ture weapon systems more cheaply for itself and its Warsaw Pact allies. A Western effort to hamper Soviet defense programs by, increasing the restrictions of East-West economic relations could take several forms: ? Because the prospects for Soviet hard currency earnings in the 1980s are far from bright, Western credits will have to cover an increasing proportion of Soviet imports from the West. Limits on credit availability could therefore force the USSR to reduce hard currency purchases, especially in the early 1980s. To stop the flow of technology most directly useful to Soviet military programs would require 'the tightening of existing export controls and the expansion of the existing controls to cover emerging technologies such as robotics and nonmetallic materials, as well as more effective blockage of illegal acquisitions. ? Western embargoes of selected goods and technology-such as grain and petroleum equipment-could seriously aggravate existing Soviet econom- ic problems. ? A sustained, total embargo by the USSR's principal Western suppliers could hurt Soviet economic growth by creating more bottlenecks in key sectors than Moscow could handle simultaneously. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Secret If Moscow were convinced that it could not break up an embargo by playing upon the economic interests of individual Western countries, it would probably respond by becoming less cooperative in some aspects of its foreign policy and by pursuing more autarkic economic development. Heavy military spending probably would continue, with Soviet consumers forced to tighten their belts. Even so, a denial of critical strategic technology would delay Soviet defense development and procurement programs, although the main impact on Soviet military capabilities probably would not be felt until the 1990s. In the longer run, as economic problems increase, a post-Brezhnev leadership will be forced to reconsider development priorities and- perhaps-to consider economic reform. Any decision to reduce defense spending at that point will depend heavily on the political balance in the Politburo, the confidence of the new leaders, how much more desperate the economic situation has become, the level of consumer dissatisfaction, and-above all-the international environment. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Key Judgments The Soviet Economic Predicament Agriculture Industry Energy 1 Rising Costs 2 Labor Productivity 2 Support to Eastern Europe 2 Hard Currency Bind 3 Consumer Welfare 4 Leadership Response 5 Outlook for the Economy 5 Soviet Benefits From East-West Economic Relations 6 Agricultural Products 6 Other Agricultural Commodities 8 Oil and Gas Equipment 9 Industrial Materials 10 Machinery and Technology in Other Priority Sectors. 11 Microelectronics 14 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 The Defense Burden and East-West Technology Transfer 16 The Acquisitions Effort 16 Methods of Exploiting Foreign Technology 17 Examples of Military Gains From Technology.. Transfer 17 Military Requirements for the 1980s _ 18 Impact of Western Restrictions on Trade and Credits, 23 1. Average Annual Percentage Rates of Growth of Soviet Industrial Production 2 2. Output and Productivity in Soviet Industry (Average Annual Percentage increase) 3 3. Soviet Hard Currency Exports of Products Other Than Oil and Gas 4 4. Soviet Hard Currency Trade 5. Share of Hard Currency Trade in Total Soviet Trade 6. Soviet Hard Currency Trade With Selected Countries, 1980 8 7. Measures of the Importance of Soviet-Western Trade to Selected Western Countries, 1980 9 8. Potential Impact of Western Trade Restrictions on Selected Soviet Economic Sectors . 20 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 The Soviet Economic Predicament and East-West Economic Relations (v) As was described in the estimate, Soviet economic performance is worsening. Although the economy is still growing, its rate of growth is falling, from nearly 4 percent per year in the 1970s to an average of 1.5 percent per year in 1980 and 1981. The chief causes of the slowdown are rising resource costs, an ineffi- cient economic system, production shortfalls in agri- culture and industry, and an accumulation of plan- ning mistakes. As a result, growth in labor productivity has slowed just as demographic trends are beginning to curtail the supply of new labor.n Agriculture Agriculture has been Moscow's biggest headache. The Soviets have now suffered their third straight harvest failure. We estimate that the 1981 grain crop was about 170 million tons-19 million tons less than 1980's poor crop. Meat production and most other Soviet crops are expected to exceed last year's de- pressed level, however, and total farm output, there- fore, probably increased slightly compared with that of 1980. Nevertheless, output will still fall short of the 1976 level. F__1 While the odds are that the weather will be better next year, an early return to the unusually favorable weather patterns that existed from the mid-1960s to the mid-1970s seems unlikely. Rather, the somewhat harsher conditions that prevailed for 20 years prior to the mid-1960s are likely to be the rule. In that environment, the gains in agricultural output that. accrued between the mid-1960s and mid-1970s- largely the result of good weather-will be nearly impossible to achieve in the 1980s unless Moscow speeds up sharply the deliver of machinery and fertilizer to agriculture Industry While agriculture has had most of the headlines, industry also has been doing poorly. Growth in almost every major sector is running behind the pace of a year ago. Industrial output grew by less than 2 percent in 1981, well below its nearly 3-percent growth during 1980. This is the worst performance in the postwar period (see table 1). Key problem areas include: ? Industrial Materials. Lagging output of raw mate- rials and semifinished products is a major reason for the economy's malaise. Shortages of basic materials such as steel, cement, nonferrous metals, and lum- ber have become serious in recent years. This has constrained new fixed investment, created bottle- necks throughout the economy, and disrupted-and in some cases halted-construction activity and industrial operations. ? Energy. Sluggish increases in energy output will pose a major problem during the coming decade. Growth in primary energy production probably fell to less than 2 percent in 1981 and is likely to average only '2 to 3 percent through the mid-1980s, despite a substantial investment in energy. (Energy growth during most of the 1970s, in contrast, aver- aged almost 5 percent annually.) Oil output at best is likely to stagnate at 12.million barrels per day (b/d) through the early 1980s before dropping, and production of coal will increase only slightly during most of the decade. Consequently, natural gas and nuclear power' must provide practically all of the growth in energy output through at least the mid- 1980s. Meanwhile, spot fuel shortages have become more frequent, reflecting a tighter energy supply as well as distribution problems. The Soviets are trying to increase the efficiency of energy use, but substan- tial success is unlikely until the late 1980s. (c) ? Machinery.. Machine building has been the focus of Soviet investment programs-both military and ci- vilian-and has outperformed other industrial sec- tors in recent years. Nonetheless, growth of civilian Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Average Annual Percentage Rates of Growth of Soviet Industrial Production 6.6 6.3 5.9 3.4 1.9 5.4 2.6 1.6 7.2 5.1 4.0 1.1 -0.1 5.9 2.6 0.1 12.0 8.9 8.6 3.9 3.9 5.4 1.8 0.9 Wood, pulp, and paper 2.6 2.9 2.6 0 2.0 Fuels 6.3 5.0 5.0 3.3 1.1 Electric power 11.5 7.9 7.0 4.5 2.1 Machinery 7.4 6.9 7.9 5.4 2.4 Civilian 8.9 8.2 9.0 5.8 1.5 Military 4.1 3.6 4.5 3.4 6.0 Consumer nondurables 4.8 6.4 3.4 1.6 1.7 Light industry 2.6 7.2 2.7 2.6 1.7 Processed foods 6.8 5.9 3.9 0.7 1.7 machinery output (after increasing at about 6.5 percent annually in 1976-79) fell below 4 percent per year in 1980 and to roughly 1.5 percent in 1981. ? Rising Costs. The rising cost of exploiting raw ,-materials has become an increasing drag on indus- trial productivity. The. general quality of mineral deposits has declined, and most minerals, energy, and timber must now be obtained from remote areas, notably Siberia. Labor Productivity. - the increase in labor productivity reflects rising raw material costs, imbalances in production, a slower rate of technical progress, and worker disinterest (see table 2). Productivity in industry during 1981 increased at an estimated annual rate of 1.2 per- cent-far below the average of 4.2 percent targeted ..,for the 1981-85 plan.) Support to Eastern Europe During the past decade Moscow has also shouldered a sharply increasing foreign aid burden in order to maintain a buffer of politically reliable regimes on its western border. Soviet economic support of Easter Europe rose from nearly US $5 billion in 1975 to more than $18 billion in 1980. (This was almost 801 percent of Moscow's total aid to Communist countries and more than 1 percent of Soviet GNP.) The aid has taken two primary forms: selling fuels and commod- ities to East European countries at below-market prices and permitting some of them to incur trade deficits with the USSR occasionally. Although Mos- cow is trying to reduce its aid burden, mainly by reducing annual oil deliveries, its concern for contin- ued political stability and Soviet influence in the region will not permit substantial aid cutbacks soon. 25X1 25X1 ^ 25X1 25X1 I 25X1 25X1 2 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Output and Productivity in Soviet Industry (Average Annual Percentage Increase) a Estimates are based on 10-month data. Capital Shortages The Soviets have apparently decided to cope with tightening resource constraints by cutting back on the growth of investment in fixed capital. Fixed invest- ment in the 1981-85 Five-Year Plan is to increase-at an average annual rate of less than 2 percent-well below the 7 percent per year achieved in 1966-75 and below the 3.5 percent attained in 1976-80. This constraint will exacerbate the Soviets' already diffi- cult problems in investment allocation. Within indus- try, energy is slated for a sharp 50-percent increase in investment and machine building for a 40-percent increase. Agriculture will retain its past 27-percent share of total economy-wide investment. F__1 9.2 6.4 5.9 3.4 1.9 2.6 3.0 1.5 1.6 0.7 6.4 3.3 4.4 1.8 1.2 Hard Currency Bind Moscow can loosen some of the domestic resource constraints by importing foreign goods and technol- ogy-but its ability to import is threatened by declin- ing hard currency revenues. The Soviet hard currency position deteriorated in 1981 because of softer world prices for Soviet oil and other raw materials and sharply increased imports of Western agricultural L 25X1 25X1 goods. The 1981 Soviet trade deficit probably reached $6 billion. Moscow's overall financial position with the West is still good; its hard currency debt service ratio is only To meet the rising requirements of energy, the de- fense industry, and agriculture, Soviet planners will have to shortchange the branches that produce con- sumer goods and even some critical sectors such as steel and transportation. They will make their produc- tion plans look consistent on paper only by decreeing unrealistically high goals for conservation of the raw materials and the semifinished products produced in lower priority sectors.F_~ The growth in investment can slow down-or even fall-without a sharp impact on economic growth in the near term. The Soviets''stock of plant and equip- ment will continue to increase fairly rapidly for a time, even with little growth in investment. But the. investment decisions taken now are bound to reduce the growth of fixed capital in the economy consider- ably by the mid-1980s. F__-] I about 15 percent. Nevertheless, hard currency earn- 25X1 ings will almost certainly worsen during the 1980s as exports decline. The basic problem is that Soviet oil j)'4 deliveries to the West will probably fall in the next few years because of stagnating or falling production and rising demand at home. The Soviets' only sub- stantial new hard currency earner will be gas exports, when the Siberia-to-Europe pipeline project is com- pleted. Gas earnings will not rise substantially before the mid-1980s, however, and total gas earnings by the late 1980s will barely cover the drop in oil revenues. Soviet production costs are high. In commodities other than oil and gas, the Soviets will do well to hold annual exports constant at roughly $9 billion through the 1980s. As table 3 shows, these commodities have not been doing well lately. Pros- pects are poor for sales of both raw materials and anufactured goods, because: ? Western demand for raw materials is sluggish, and Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 25X1 25X1 25Xl 25X1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Soviet Hard Currency Exports of Products Other Than Oil and Gas 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 Total 1,801 2,281 2,430 2,313 2,994 3,160 2,821 Coal and coke 93 86, 89 88 70 65 58 Machinery and equipment 140 277 319 314 514 566 507 Ferrous metals 129 182 174 123 142 141 134 Wood and wood products 365 361 449 427 405 380 `..328 Chemicals 67 159 129 143 196 324 403 Agricultural products 205 264 227 256 175 138 112 Diamonds 175 282 284 291 376 380 376 Other 627 670 759 671 1,116 1,166 903 ? Most Soviet manufactures are not well suited to Western markets. Soviet arms sales are already substantial-currently $5 billion a year-and are unlikely to increase much further, while exports of Soviet gold and platinum group metals could not increase substantially above current levels without depressing the market.) Consumer Welfare The Soviet population enjoyed substantial improve- ment in living standards during the 1960s and 1970s, but this improvement is beginning to taper off. The year 1981 was the third in succession of increasing food shortages, mostly in the area of quality foods-meat and dairy products. Rationing of these items, mostly in the form of informal purchase limits, has become increasingly frequent and widespread since the winter of 1980/81. Factors other than the nationwide per capita availability of food supplies, however, explain the shortages. These are: large-scale leakages from government food distribution channels, the mainte- nance of fixed prices in state retail outlets, and growing demand generated by wage increases. Whatever the cause of the shortages, the consumer's mood is generally one of pessimism and resigned acceptance. Although some work stoppages occurred in 1981, Soviet workers are still a long way from venting their dissatisfaction as the Polish workers have. To diminish the potential for labor unrest, th leadership has allowed the proliferation of special food distribution systems (once reserved largely for the Soviet elite) at the factory level. The special food distribution, coupled with the traditional stoicism of the populace, has been enough to maintain labor peace. In effect, the leadership has shifted the worst burden of the food shortage to social groups like the elderly, who are the least likely to protest. The most serious consequence of the slowing growth in consumer welfare, from the leaders' point of vie is its impact on labor productivity. We expect per capita consumption to stagnate during the mid-to-la 1980s; and this interruption in the Soviets' modest progress toward improved living standards is likely to reduce worker motivation-and hence productivity. The leadership is counting upon gains in labor produc- tivity alope to provide 90 percent of the growth in industrial output and the entire growth in agricultural output called for in the current five-year plan Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Moscow thus faces a dilemma. Rather than increasing investment to restore past rates of economic growth and boost consumer welfare, it is relying upon a strategy of promoting efficiency and productivity throughout the economy. But the Soviet labor force is less willing than it once was to defer material satisfac- tions to the future, and unless Moscow provides sufficient increases in quality foods and goods now, we do not think this strategy will work. Leadership Response So-far the leadership's response to growing economic difficulties has been cautious and conservative. We have seen, for example, no sign of an effort to curb military outlays in order to boost the civilian econo- my. Physical indicators of future levels of defense spending-such as programs in train and investment in defense production and R&D facilities-point to continued real growth of about 4 percent per year. ' Nor have we seen the Politburo take any significant steps to change the system of planning and manage- ment in order to cope with the economic slowdown. The planners' main concession to the resource bind has been to cut investment growth during 1981-85to the lowest rate since World War II. Nonetheless, the leaders' reluctance to make any fundamental changes in resource allocation or eco- nomic organization suggests that their view of the Soviet economic situation is less pessimistic than ours. They have taken some steps to improve planning and stimulate technological progress and believe these will be successful eventually. In addition, Soviet leaders believe that some of their problems are transitory. They apparently expect that: ? Demographic trends will lead to an upturn in the labor supply in the 1990s. ? Better weather and greater efficiency will restore growth in farm output and help solve the food problems. ? Increased production of gas-plus energy conserva- tion in general-will more than offset any stagna- tion in oil production in the years ahead. ? New technological fixes and breakthroughs will improve economic performance and productivity. More generally, they tend to make their economic assessments in comparative terms and may take some solace in the fact that the Western economies are also experiencing serious difficulties and challenges. ent leadership. Perhaps the most important reason for the inertia in Soviet domestic economic policy, however, is the inability or unwillingness of an aging leadership to undertake decisive actions and fundamental reforms. The ruling group seems incapable of making the hard policy choices involved in shifting resources in a major way, modifying administrative arrangements, and changing organizational structures. Such choices, which would necessarily affect entrenched institution- al interests and generate bureaucratic conflicts, would be fraught with political uncertainties. Fundamental changes in economic policy thus must await a differ- Outlook for-the Economy The economic problems now facing the Soviets in agriculture, industry, and capital formation are for the most part familiar. They have increased in intensi- ty, however, leaving the Politburo less and less room for maneuver. In the 1960s and early 1970s, Moscow was able to satisfy a number of economic priorities simultaneously: ? Average living standards rose appreciably. ? Productive capacity increased rapidly in all sectors of the economy. 25X1 I 25X1 25X1 25X' 25X1 M 25X1 SIAI Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 ? Sustained growth in defense spending led to major qualitative improvements in weapons systems as well as an impressive expansion of military forces. In the 1980s, a many-sided attack on priorities will no longer be possible. In this new environment, there will be some losers, greatly complicating decisionmaking. The leadership must face these facts: ? GNP growth may be limited to 1 to 2 percent per year by the mid-1980s. ? If defense spending continues to rise at about 4 percent per year, the defense share in increments to GNP could rise from about one-fourth now to one- half in the mid-1980s, and to two-thirds by 1990. Slower growth in industry and steady growth in defense means much slower growth in investment and increasing tensions among regional interests. ? Consumer-oriented programs probably will lose out, and those responsible for public order will have to worry more about the popular mood. The present leadership. is not disposed to undertake new policy initiatives, but economic circumstances in the mid-to-late 1980s will force the Soviet leadership then in.power to decide anew on development priori ties and-perhaps-to consider the need for economic reform. Soviet Benefits From East-West Economic Relations Dissatisfied with the nation's economic performance but unable to improve. it immediately, Moscow has sought relief through East-West trade and technology transfer. In particular, Moscow has sought help in (1) raising the technological level of Soviet fixed cap- ital, (2) relieving industrial supply bottlenecks, and (3) increasing living standards. Accordingly, imports balance-of-trade surplus with France, Italy, and the Netherlands but ran sizable deficits with a number of countries-notably Japan.and the major grain export- ing countries (table 6). While hard currency trade rose in importance for the Soviet Union between 1970 and 1980, trade with the USSR still plays a relatively minor role in Western trade (table 7). In the 1980s, increased reliance on productivity gains will heighten Soviet interest in obtaining Western goods and technology. As in the 1970s, access to Western products and ideas can fill or at least reduce important gaps in agricultural and industrial perform- ance. Soviet purchases will focus on: ? Agricultural products, especially grain. ? Oil and gas equipment. ? Industrial materials. ? Chemical equipment. ? Machinery and manufacturing technology in priority sectors. other ? High technology, particularly computers and mi- croelectronics. Agricultural Products Because of chronic agricultural problems; the USSR has been a net importer of agricultural products over the past decade, with its purchases rising substantially in the last few years. Without Western grain, Soviet consumers. would not have had the increase in meat .. consumption they enjoyed in the early 1970s and would have had to endure a much sharper decline in consumption in recent years. Net grain imports aver- aged. 14 million tons during the past decade. In 1981, grain purchases and record imports of meat and other agricultural products will total nearly $13 billion-40 percent of Moscow's total hard currency imports. of machinery, ferrous metal products, and foodstuffs Grain. Grain has accounted for 50 percent, or more of have dominated Soviet-Western trade-primarily in hard currency imports of agricultural commodities in return for. Soviet fuels and raw materials (table 4) ll but three years of the past decade. The need for Purchases from the West rose from 17 percent of total Soviet imports in 1970 to 38 percent in 1980. This was a nearly ninefold increase in value and a twofold increase in volume (table 5). In 1980, the USSR had a rain derives from Moscow's promise to the people of larger supplies of quality foods, particularly livestock products. Increasing or at least maintaining meat . consumption is essential to the regime's efforts to boost worker morale and productivity. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83TOO233ROO0100010003-0 Mill US ion $ Percent of Total Million US $ Percent of Total Million US $ Percent of Total Million US $ Percent of Total Million US $ Percent of Total Million US $ Percent of Total Fuels 49 3 22 3,887 48 15,095 64 8 NEGL 497 3 700a 3 Crude oil and petroleum products 38 7 18 3,276 41 12,028 51 8 NEGL 497 3 700, 3 Natural gas 1 3 1 -220 3 2,706 , 12 0 0 0 0 0 0 Coal and coke 9 3 4 391 5 362 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 Machinery and equipment 14 0 6 560 7 1,388 6 927 34 4,593 .32 6,039 23 12 9 6 167 2 246 1 279 10 2,567 18 3,469 13 6 7 3 256 3 765 3 208 8 742 5 1,565 6 84 3 214 2 203 1 20 5 9 572 7 478 2 615 23 3,856 27 8,800 34 Grain 2 2 1 3 NEGL 0 0 101 4 2,323 16 4,400 17 Other 18 3 8 569 7 478 2 514 19 1,533 11 4,400 17 215 3 152 1 260 10 436 3 745 3 Cn -I A A T a Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83TOO233ROO0100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Share of Hard Currency Trade in Total Soviet Trade Crude oil and petroleum products 26 40 43 10 72 NA Machinery and equipment 5 9 3 22 37 26 Wood and wood products 44 37 48 34 27 15 Agricultural products 14 24 25 27 42 66 Grain 5 1 0 73 87 90 Consumer goods 23 26 13 12 9 9 After three consecutive poor grain harvests, imports of grain will. play a more critical role than ever before. Even with respectable grain crops, the USSR will need large imports-20 to 25 million tons of grain annually-for several years just to push up per capita meat consumption by 1 to 2 percent annually. If the USSR could buy no grain after 1981, its average annual meat production would be cut by about 2 million tons, even if its own grain crops were respect- able. Without foreign meat as well as foreign grain, per capita availability of meat would fall by roughly 20 percent. Other Agricultural Commodities. During the 1970s, hard currency outlays for agricultural products other than grain-largely meat, butter, vegetable oil, sugar, and soybeans and meal-have registered fairly steady growth. If these purchases had not been made, the quality of the average Soviet citizen's diet would have deteriorated substantially. Imports of soybeans and Soviet Hard Currency Trade With Selected Countries, 1980 Exports Imports Trade, Balance Total 23,498 26,017 -2,519 Developed West 21,304 21,330 -26 Australia 9 1,194 -1,185 Austria 894 610 284 Canada 46 1,496 -1,450 France 3,453 1,326 1,127 Italy 3,235 1,438 1,797 Japan 1,463 .2,730 -1,267 Netherlands 1,582 555 1,027 Sweden 546 496 50 Switzerland 686 620 66 United Kingdom 1,323 1,467 -144 United States 233 2,081 -1,848 West Germany 4,767 4,603 164 Others 3,067 1,714 1,353 LDCs 2,194 4,687 -2,493 Argentina 47 1,790 -1,743 Brazil 34 390 -356 Iraq 729 398 331 Libya 252 443 -191 Others 1,132 1,666 soybean meal have become particularly important as domestic oil seed production has declined and as the n d to stretch feed-7 plies for livestock has grown. If the Soviet Union could not buy these products in the West, its people would not go hungry, but they would be forced to consume an increasing share of calories from grain and potatoes. The already serious food shortages would become more widespread, and worker morale and productivity would suffer corre- spondingly. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Secret Measures of the Importance of Soviet-Western Trade. to Selected Western Countries, 1980 Soviet Trading Partner Exports to USSR as Percent of Imports From USSR as Percent of Percent of Trading Partner's GNP Exports to World Imports From World Exports to the USSR Imports From the USSR Argentina a 15.0 Australia 5.1 Austria 2.7 Brazil a 2.1 Canada 2.1 0.1 0.5 NEGL France 2.2 2.7 0.4 0.6 Italy 1.6 3.0 0.4 0.8 Japan 2.1 1.3 0.3 0.2 Netherlands 0.7 1.6 0.3 0.8 United Kingdom 0.9 1.5 0.2 0.4 United States 0.7 0.2 0.1 NEGL Oil and Gas Equipment Western equipment was important in increasing the. Soviets' energy production in the 1970s and will be critical to the modest gains planned for the 1980s. Western products are most needed in the oil and gas industries. For example: ? Soviet deficiencies in drilling, oil extraction, and gas and oil pipeline construction prompted Moscow to buy about $5 billion in oil and gas equipment in the 1970s. ? High-capacity US oil pumps have probably added 2 million b/d to Soviet oil output in recent years. ? Purchases of large-diameter pipe from Western Europe and Japan ($4-5 billion in the 1970s) have been critical to rapid growth of gas production. The Soviets now need to import a broad range of Western petroleum equipment, including equipment for exploration, drilling, oil production, offshore oper- ations, and gas pipeline construction. They have al- ready found most of the relatively shallow, easily located, accessible oil and gas deposits, and will need Western seismic and well logging technology to boost oil reserves in the 1980s. The 5- to 6-year time lag between discovery and production would prevent Western equipment ordered today from having much impact on oil production before the late 1980s.1 Western rigs, drill pipe, tool joints, drill bits, blow-out preventors, and drilling-fluid technology can substan- tially aid Soviet efforts to nearly double the amount o drilling for oil and gas in 1981-85 and to increase it further in the late 1980s. The Dresser drill-bit plant, expected to be in operation soon, would certainl enhance Soviet oil producti b the late 1980s Foreign equipment is important to Soviet plans to double the number of oil wells aided by submersible pumps and gas-lift equipment. Soviet-made submers- ible pumps and gas-lift equipment are of low capacity and reliability, and because the amount of water 25X1 25X11 25X1 25X1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 extracted along with oil is increasing, fluid lifting capacity will have to increase by the mid-1980s 'merely to maintain oil output at 12 million b/d. The Soviets probably expect to import about 100 submers- ible pumps annually (in the 1970s they imported a total of 1,200). The Soviets also have an increasing need for Western enhanced-oil-recovery technology, but the effect of Western assistance would be relatively small and felt only after 1985. Moscow has received substantial assistance from the West in exploring offshore zones that will enhance oil and gas production by the late 1980s. Continued Western assistance could especially speed development in the Caspian area. The USSR relies extensively on the West for gas pipeline equipment-large-diameter pipe and valves, compressors, and pipelayers. It imported 10 to 12 million tons of line pipe alone in the past decade, at a cost of $4-5 billion. Although the Soviets have recent- ~ly built a plant to manufacture large-diameter pipe, they have yet to master the production technology.' Pipeline capacity is therefore the principal bottleneck in Soviet gas production, and a denial of pipeline equipment would be a major setback to the industry. If the USSR did not have access to Western equip- ment and pipe, the oil and gas production lost could amount to 2 or 3 million barrels a day (calculating gas in oil-equivalent terms) in the middle and late 1980s. The larger part of this loss would be gas. The oil and gas output foregone in that case would represent up to roughly 10 percent of the energy output which we expect by 1985. If Soviet oil production declined and gas production increased much less than we currently forecast, Moscow's hard currency earnings might fall sharply, and economic growth would be even slower than the rate of 2 percent or less that we now expect. ' Although the Soviets produce pipe up to 1,420 mm (56 inches) in diameter, little is for natural gas pipeline service. Most Soviet pipe is spiral welded and lacks the high-strength, low-alloy metallurgy of Western steel for Arctic pipeline service. Most of the large pipe imported by the USSR is fabricated with_a single longitudinal weld Industrial Materials The only industrial materials for which the USSR relies substantially on the developed West are steel, molybdenum, and some chemical products. Steel im- ports-primarily large-diameter pipe'from Western Europe and Japan-helped Moscow avoid serious bottlenecks in some industrial sectors during the 1970s. Imports of molybdenum, much of it from the United States, increased from 3,000 tons. in 1970 to 13,000 tons in 1980, making Moscow a net importer. The bulk of Soviet imports of tin, cobalt, and tungsten come directly from less developed countries. Continued large purchases of steel would help offset the inadequacies of current investment in new steel- making making capacity and help offset shortfalls in the production of iron ore and coking coal. The USSR also needs continuing access to Western metallurgical technology to reduce its dependence on imports of Western specialty steels. The French are helping to build the important Novolipetsk steel plant, which will produce 7 million tons of specialty steels per year when it comes on stream (in 1986 at the earliest). Moscow continues to buy chemical products from the West, including phosphate materials, plastics, dyes, pesticides, manmade fibers, and catalysts. Purchases from the West totaled nearly $1.6 billion in 1980. Several major trade and technical cooperation agree- ments with Western firms will provide support for this trade: ? Among the most important is a $6.5 billion 10-year reciprocal trade agreement (signed in late 1980) with France's Rhone Poulenc for equipment and technology, pesticides, fertilizers, and animal feed in exchange for Soviet energy-intensive chemicals such as naphtha, ammonia, methanol, and possibly crude oil. ? The Soviets signed a $1.5 billion 10-year deal in. early 1980 with Italy's Montedison for seven chemi- cal plants (together valued at $800 million) in return for raw materials, fertilizer, and petrochemicals., 25X1 25X1 I Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Secret ? Smaller agreements signed with UK and Japanese firms will provide the Soviets with oil-recovery chemicals, pesticides, dyes, plastics, and catalysts. Chemical Equipment Western equipment and related process technology has contributed heavily to the growth of the chemical industry: ? In the 1970s the Soviets doubled their output of nitrogen fertilizer and plastics and tripled their synthetic fiber production, largely because of im- ported equipment. ? Relying heavily on Western technology, Moscow has doubled ammonia output and become the world's leading ammonia exporter. ? Chemical equipment imports accounted for almost one-third of Soviet purchases of Western machinery in the -1970s. Soviet equipment imports increasingly have been as- sociated with product buy-back or "compensation" deals, under which Western firms agree to long-term purchases of Soviet products-usually the products that are manufactured in the Western-equipped fa- cilities. The Soviets plan substantial orders during 1981-85 for Western chemical equipment and/or technology to produce urea, pesticides, ethylene, benzene, and downstream petrochemicals-as well as 14 additional ammonia plants. Deficiencies in Soviet pesticide de- velopment and the need to achieve balanced develop- ment of pesticides and fertilizers will also prompt purchases of Western pesticide production equipment. Moscow will probably buy Western equipment for planned West Siberian complexes producing fertiliz- ers, plastics, manmade fibers, synthetic rubber, and petrochemicals Denial of Western chemical equipment and technol- ogy would: ? Slow down the increases in Soviet production of consumer goods and chemical-based industrial materials. ? Hurt agricultural production. ? Delay Soviet acquisition of a more efficient chemi- cal industry with enhanced export capabilities. Without Western equipment, the Soviets would have to import many more chemicals than they currently do-or cope with more serious shortages than they already have Machinery and Technology in Other Priority Sectors Western equipment and technology have aided other priority machine-building sectors considerably in the 1970s. Moscow has a pressing need to raise the quality of its industrial output while using fewer material resources, and this need ensures a continuing Soviet demand for Western products Motor Vehicles. The Soviets have modernized and expanded their motor vehicle industry with Western help. When they began an ambitious 15-year modern- ization program in the mid-1960s, specialized Soviet machinery for mass automotive production was scarce. They turned to the West for massive help, spending an estimated $3 billion for equipment and technology during 1966-80. The truck industry received the lion's share of the imports: ? About one-half of Soviet hard currency investments were for the Kama Truck Plant; the United States provided some of the world's most advanced auto- mated foundries, as well as automated diesel engine machining and assembly lines. ? The Likhachev Truck Plant (ZIL), a major producer of military trucks, received substantial manufactur- ing technology from US, Japanese, and West Ger- man firms. The 15-year program was completed in 1980, and investment in the automotive industry will probably decline. No new truck or passenger car plants are called for in the current five-year plan period (1981-85). Existing Soviet plans to install new capac- ity for heavy trucks could be activated after 1985, however, creating a large new demand for Western production technology. Construction Equipment. Many industrial programs have been delayed because the construction and earthmoving equipment needed to build plants has not been available in sufficient variety or quantity. Soviet Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 production of a 75-ton off-highway truck, for exam- ple, began only in the late 1970s, more than 10 years late. Manufacture of heavy industrial tractors and bulldozers has been set back by faulty tractor and engine designs. The USSR also is weak in the manu- facture of heavy-duty transmissions, suspension sys- tems, and axles that can support weights of 50 tons or more. To overcome domestic shortcomings, Moscow now plans to buy Western plants and technology for producing construction equipment: ? Fiat of Italy will supervise construction of a turnkey facility to produce earthmoving equipment. ? Negotiations are under way with several Western firms for technology to produce industrial tractors and engines. ? The USSR will purchase US technology to produce electric wheel drives. ? The Soviets are interested in obtaining licenses and technical help for manufacturing US tractors Until these programs are completed, the Soviets still will need to buy construction and earthmoving equip- ment from the West. Denial of Western goods would seriously disrupt their plans to become more self- sufficient and would force them to use less efficient equipment. East European production of construction equipment is too limited in scale and variety to meet Soviet demand. Mining Equipment. The Soviets produce most of their own mining equipment, but imports have been important, especially where higher capacity machin- ery is required. Between 1972 and 1980, Moscow imported about $1.6 billion worth of Western equip- ment, primarily heavy-duty dump trucks, excavators, bulldozers, and mining drills. About one-third of this total was provided by the United States and most of the remainder by Japan and West Germany. Most of the mining equipment that the USSR buys abroad, however, is provided by Eastern Europe-notably East Germany, Czechoslovakia, and Poland.~ The South Yakutia coal mines, developed with Japa- nese assistance, have employed most of the Western mining equipment. Earthmovers, particularly bulldoz- ers, are used in gold mining operations in the Magadan, Irkutsk, and Lena regions, as well as in other coal and ore mines. We believe that the Soviets will continue to depend,on Western mining equipment in the 1980s. For example: ? Vast open-pit Siberian coal mines are being devel= oped and will require enormous earthmoving and:.. hauling capability. ? Development of the Ekibastuz coal basin has been, lagging badly, and increased imports of large-capac- ity dump trucks, for example, could speed it up.~ Without access to Western equipment, the Soviets would encounter some short-run problems. The big-. gest would be the grounding of some existing machin- ery soon because of the lack of new spare parts. In time, however, the Soviets could increase imports . from Eastern Europe or shift their own production lines Machine Tools. The USSR is the world's largest producer of both conventional and numerically con- trolled (NC) machine tools. Its output, however, co silts mainly of general-purpose machine tools rathe than special-purpose and complex types.( Moreover, many machine tool models are still produced well after they are obsolete. This practice yields some economies of scale, but it reduces the flexibility an precision of the Soviets' machine tool park Machine tool production has fallen far short of re- quirements in recent years: ? Output of basic metal-cutting machine tools has dropped the past five years. ? A few new plants were built in the 1970s to produce automatic transfer machinery for the automotive industry, but little new capacity has been added in other areas of machine tool production. ? Computer numerical control (CNC), used increas- ingly in the West by 1980, exists in the USSR only in prototypes. 25X1 25X1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Secret ? The USSR produces more NC tools than the United States does, but they are inferior because of the poor quality of controller, electromechanical positioning, =and feedback devices and the relatively backward state of minicomputer technology. The Soviets accordingly have turned to the West for some of their machine tool needs. Over the past decade they spent more than $4 billion for tools, of which three-fourths were conventional types. Imports of automated lathes supplemented domestic produc- tion; imports of gear-cutting machinery (from the United States) provided superior precision and pro- ductivity; and imports of closed-loop, multiaxis NC machine tools provided tools that had no domestic counterparts. The USSR has also purchased many machine tools from Eastern Europe, even though they are inferior to Western models. East Germany exports up to half its annual output to the USSR, and other suppliers include Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and Yugoslavia. The Soviets almost certainly will continue to import machine tools, especially advanced types of NC tools and machining centers. Moscow recognizes their val- ue in raising industrial productivity and saving metal. Present CoCom controls on sales to Communist coun- tries are limited to the more advanced types of NC machine tools and some specialized machine tools for military production.' Most Soviet machine tool pur- chases have satisfied these guidelines, but the USSR also has bought advanced equipment when member nations have loosely interpreted ambiguous CoCom definitions or downplayed the strategic implications of a given sale. The Soviets have also responded quickly to most changes in CoCom regulations. When CoCom restrictions on three-axis machining centers and bor- ing mills of small size.and limited accuracy were relaxed in 1977, for instance, the USSR quickly increased its purchases of such equipment, especially the more sophisticated West German and Japanese models. Robotics. The Soviet robotics industry is in its infan- cy. It has a production capacity of only about 350 units a year and is incapable of series production. By ' CoCom members include the NATO nations-except Iceland- and Japan. the end of 1980, the USSR was using an estimated 1,500 to 2,000 robots-well below the 5,000 planned Many of these were of foreign origin. Robots will be increasingly needed to improve productivity in mass- production industries. Soviet industrial robots are relatively primitive by Western standards. Most are first-generation ma- chines performing either a single repetitive function o an unvarying sequence of functions. Most of them lack the microprocessor controls, large memories, and advanced sensors needed for pattern recognition and adaptive operation. The Soviets have made only a few experimental models of more complex robots.F The Soviets have relied on imports for a low-cost L supply of reliable industrial robots. They have bought more than 500 robots from Hungary and an unknown number from Japan, France, and Italy. They also have been using foreign design and manufacturing technology. 25X1 25X1 STAT 25X1 STAT M The need for substantial imports of robots and related technology probably will continue for some time. Moscow has approached several Japanese firms abo acquiring industrial robot technology and related know=how. It has arranged with Renault of France to jointly develop miniature robot drive units and indus- trial robots for serial production. High Technology The technology gap between the USSR and the West in high-technology products is large and growing. Computers. Large computers and minicomputers in the Soviet Union are two generations behind current US offerings. Development of even these older model has been slow. The most important deficiencies are: ? Soviet computer systems are unreliable. This is due in part to the low quality of the imported materials and in part to a lack of modern computer production and test equipment. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 ? Neither the USSR nor its East European partners r.can supply the large numbers of magnetic disk auxiliary memory devices with the high speed and large capacity essential to advanced data processing. Proper software and other support (such as mainte- nance and spare parts) have been deficient, if not absent altogether. In microelectronics, the Soviets have not kept up with the West in making rapid advances in technol- ogies related to production and test equipment, materials, assembly, and packaging. The strong ~ military orientation of the microelectronics program instead has encouraged the use of the tried and true. Weaknesses in computer production in the Council of Mutual Economic Assistance (CEMA) countries have induced the Soviets to buy Western. Since 1972, Moscow has imported more than 1,300 computer systems (valued at $400 million) and $70 million worth of add-on peripheral equipment-and spare parts. Minicomputers, generally for R&D, represen .95 percent of the units imported and 64 percent of their value. The relatively few large systems pur- chased have been for high-visibility, high-priority projects such as the Kama River Truck Plant, the Moscow regional air traffic control system, and the Olympic Games system. CoCom controls on computers are extremely complex. In general, however, they provide that: ? Low-performance computers, including most mini- computers, may be exported at the discretion of th( exporting country. Somewhat more powerful computers, including many high-speed, high-capacity computers, are sub ject to a pro forma submission to CoCom. The CoCom members have agreed in advance to approve the export of these computers if certain conditions are met. ? The most powerful computers require unanimous CoCom agreement for sale to proscribed destina- tions. Computers of the type that CoCom has agreed in advance to approve are available from the United States and other CoCom countries. They are built in Japan by Fujitsu and Hitachi, in the United Kingdom by ICL, in France by CII, and in West Germany by Siemens. The USSR would continue its campaign to acquire the most powerful Western computers wheth- er legal sales were halted or not. The value of illegal acquisitions would be enhanced if Moscow could also acquire the related software and support applications. East European countries would be inhibited from diverting their legally acquired computers to the USSR by fear of discovery and sanctions-and be- cause they need the computers themselves. However, Moscow is in a position to obtain East European help if it insists. Microelectronics. During the past decade the USSR has obtained a full range of microelectronics-related technology, materials, and equipment from the West worth several hundred million dollars. These pur- chases have included unembargoed items, embargoe~ items legally approved for export by CoCom, and embargoed items acquired illegally and clandestinely) The overwhelming majority of acquisitions are em- bargoed items obtained illegally by diversion. Such equipment is generally of reduced effectiveness, how ever, since illegal channels do-not easily convey a manufacturer's installation, training, or maintenance services or provide easy access to spare parts Although most of the equipment that has been ac- quired illegally is of US origin, Japan and West. European countries have become important suppliers' .Firms in Italy, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and West Germany have diverted basic materials and technologies, and firms in these countries and France have diverted some advanced production equipment. Telecommunications. The Soviet common carrier telecommunications system, like the Bell Systems in the United States, provides .communications services to government, the military, commerce and industry, 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Secret and the general public. The Soviet system, however, cannot satisfy the rapidly growing demand for serv- ices in either quantity or quality. It is therefore undergoing major expansion and modernization.F- The USSR supplements domestic production of com- munications equipment with imports. The United States is not a major supplier. The USSR buys radio relay links, switching equipment, and transmission equipment from Eastern Europe for use in its common carrier system. A few of these items are manufactured under Western license, but the United States cannot prevent these sales. The USSR also imports communications equipment from CoCom countries and from Sweden, Yugoslavia, and Finland. Most of the equipment it needs either is not on the CoCom list of controlled items or can be sold at the discretion of the exporting country.' The Role of Western Credits Western willingness to extend credits to the USSR and Soviet willingness-to accept an increasing debt burden will heavily influence the scale and timing of Soviet hard currency imports in the 1980s. Between 1971 and 1978, Western credits provided approxi- mately 12 percent of the USSR's import capacity. During 1979-80, thanks to the rapid increase in oil and gold prices, Moscow was able to increase its imports from the West without increasing its net debt. The share of imports covered by credits will have to rise, however, if East-West trade is to contribute significantly to offsetting domestic shortfalls on a broad front, rather than in a narrow range of produc- ing sectors Overall, we expect Soviet imports that must be paid for in hard currency to grow at an annual average rate of 3 percent during 1982-90. This 'is faster than the ' CoCom controls do apply to a $172 million French contract with the USSR for computer-controlled telephone switching equipment and a turnkey plant for its manufacture. The plant would give Moscow a serial production capability for modern telephone ex- changes. The equipment technology, moreover, exceeds that re- quired for the communications system. France apparently now agrees with the US contention that the sale should not proceed in its original form. However, even if the sale is stopped, the Soviets could obtain less sophisticated switching equipment and production rate implied by Planning Chairman Baybakov in his plenum address on the 1981-85 Plan but not as fast as the annual 5-percent rate recorded in 1976-80. As Soviet planners face domestic resource constraints in the next several years, a slower rate of increase in import volume would add to their troubles in dealing with prospective shortages and raising the technologi- cal level of domestic fixed investment. Moscow encountered a hard currency bind in 1981 (page 3), and, with no relief in sight, it faces even more of a crunch in the coming years. It could try to get around the earnings constraint by borrowing more, but this would increase its debt very rapidly. The key considerations are: ? If hard currency oil exports were held at current levels through mid-decade, the maintenance of a 2- to 3-percent real growth of hard currency imports- a reasonable rate for meeting the economy's major import needs-would raise Soviet debt from $19 billion in 1981 to almost $40 billion in 1985. ? If oil exports virtually disappeared during 1982-85, however, debt would exceed $50 billion. ? Beyond 1985, debt would rise in either case to unmanageable levels Neither Soviet planners nor Western bankers would permit such a massive financial burden to develop. The Soviets might try to borrow on such a scale if they thought their earnings constraint would end soon; but because it probably will not, their borrowing is likely to become much more conservative. Thus a Western imposition of credit restrictions-plus Soviet retrenchment-would accelerate the decline in Soviet import capacity in 1982-85. In the late 1980s, howev- er, Moscow could import almost as much as if no credit restrictions had been imposed, because the restrictions would have appreciably reduced its debt service. A harder Western stance on financing terms would also raise the cost of Soviet imports. Moscow now Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 LJ/\ I 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 benefits substantially from subsidized credits ex- tended by Western Europe and Japan: ? Roughly 40 percent of the USSR's outstanding debt carries interest rates 4 to 5 percentage points below commercial market rates. ? A denial of concessionary terms on the roughly $2 billion a year the USSR now receives in official financing, for example, would raise Moscow's annu- al debt service costs by an average of $100 million per year in 1982-90. The Defense Burden and East-West Technology __Transfer ,,;:The problems in the economy as a whole have made the acquisition of Western goods and technology increasingly important to Soviet defense programs: ? Western goods have helped to improve the perform- ance of a strained economy (page 6), and this has lightened the burden of growth in defense spending. ~? More directly, legal and illegal acquisitions of mili- tary-related technology have saved the Soviets con- siderable time and resources in designing and pro- ducing new weapons and military support systems. The importance in the 1980s of raising the technologi cal sophistication of weapons will ensure continued Soviet interest in obtaining advanced Western tech- nologies Guns vs. Butter Moscow continues its extraordinary allocation of re- sources to the military. Soviet defense programs ac- counted for an average of 11 to 13 percent of gross national product (GNP) in 1965-78 and 12 to 14 percent in 1979-80. Since the mid-1960s, military programs have preempted about 15 percent of final industrial output. This figure includes more than 30 percent of the final output of the critical machine- building and metalworking sector, leaving less than 60 percent for investment and the consumer. The effect of defense spending on production for the civilian economy is not easily measurable but is certainly considerable. Soviet leaders seem to be increasingly concerned about the defense burden. There have recently been indications of disagreement among Soviet leaders over the extent of the connec; tion between consumer material well-being and labor productivity. This suggests that guns-or-butter ques- tions are more contentious now than they were when the economy was performing better.F--] Most resources freed up by defense budget reductions would not increase production for civilian consump;, tion immediately, but consumer welfare would benefit in the longer run. For example, the release of some of the skilled labor, R&D capability, and technologically advanced machinery that is now producing weapon systems would eventually improve productivity in critical sectors of civilian industry. A redirection of materials bound for defense would also raise output by easing the supply bottlenecks that have played an important role in slowing industrial growth. The Acquisitions Effort Although Soviet weapons are designed to minimize the requirements for technologies ,in which the USSR is deficient, the USSR has turned to legal and illegal acquisitions of Western technologies to make up for domestic shortcomings. The Soviet program to ac- quire and exploit Western technologies having mili- tary applications has top priority. Through the acquisitions of Western technology and hardware, the Soviets have: ? Reduced engineering risks by following or copying proven Western designs. clearly fall into the third category and are in comnetition with grain imports (included in the second category). ,25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 LOA-1 LOA-1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Secret Cut R&D time and production costs by using Western designs and technology and equipment. Incorporated countermeasures early in the Soviet nearly always a stopgap measure to accelerate the initial operating capability of the weapon while Soviet defense industries develop an ability to pro- 25X1 25X1 25X1 weapon development process. r; rl ethods of Exploiting Foreign Technology eSoviets exploit Western technology and hardware n several ways: Researchers adapt Western materials research, manufacturing processes, and specifications to de- velop improved Soviet materials for military appli- cations. ? Military designers compare Western technical doc- umentation on preliminary designs and on success- ful finished designs, gaining insights which they use to avoid technical risks and to reduce the traditional Soviet resistance to the use of unproven components in military systems. This permits them to avoid unprofitable R&D paths, saving substantial time, and resources. ? Technical insights gained from the analysis of Western military hardware samples often influence Soviet weapon designs; they also contribute to the development of measures for countering the exploit- ed Western weapons. ? Developers make direct use of Western test proce- dures, technical data, and instrumentation to im- prove their own diagnostic routines. This allows them to use shorter, more reliable testing programs for complex components and systems and conserves highly skilled military development manpower. tion processes, equipment, and know-how directly. Production process specifications and process con- trol systems acquired through legal and illegal channels are used to manufacture critical high- quality military components-years before Soviet defense industries could develop the same capability on their own. In a few cases, Soviet weapon designers have even directly incorporated key components purchased in the West into Soviet weapon designs in order to meet a critical mission requirement. This practice is duce the components. Examples of Military Gains From Technology Transfer Evidence has been accumulating on Soviet gains in the military area from legally and illegally acquire Western equipment and technology. Some examples follow. Illegal acquisition of ASW-related technology and a wide variety of CoCom-controlled minicom- puters has enhanced Soviet ASW capabilities. The Soviets are applying Western designs and industrial technology to the IL-76 aircraft that will be used in their AWACS program; numerically controlled West- ern machine tools are used in the production of the SUK-25 ground support fighter; and Western wide- body technology has been incorporated into the new bomber/cruise missile carrier, the AN-400. The Unit- ed States has provided powdered-metallurgical manu facturing know-how that the Soviets probably will us to develop improved domestic tungsten-based alloys for kinetic-energy armor-piercing ammunition.F The USSR has been willing to tolerate a short-term dependence on foreign sources of technology in order to speed the development and production of high- priority weapon systems. The SA-7 shoulder-fired tactical surface-to-air missile is a good example of direct Soviet use of Western components for a weapo system. Certain components purchased from Japan reportedly were used by the Soviets for the first several years of serial production. The Soviets have reduced their resource costs and enhanced their manufacturing capabilities by using foreign materials technology and manufacturing know-how. For example, the direct use of US semi- conductor production and test equipment (including turnkey lines) has significantly raised the technologi- cal level, quality, and reliability of critical Soviet microelectronics components. The Soviets have used Austrian precision high-speed rotary forging equip- ment in their production of small arms gun barrels and artillery gun tubes rather than expending consid- erable time and resources to develop their own domes tic capability. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 25X1 ^ 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Only rarely have the Soviets successfully reverse- engineered sophisticated production tooling in order to produce equivalent equipment in the USSR. To the extent that the improvement in military materials and manufacturing can find more generalized applications in other products, the acquisition of technology im- proves the general level of the Soviet development and production base, to the benefit of the entire economy /The Austrian rotary forges that produce gun barrels are used to produce axles for railcars. Through illegal acquisition, the Soviets have in addi-{ ion been able to evaluate specific Western weapons rd develop effective countermeasures. Some Soviet around their turrets as a measure against shaped- charge munitions. Avoiding false sta the most importan achieve savings vi learned from the rts and worthless research is one o t ways in which the Soviets can a technology transfer. Had they experience of the US-manned lung landing program, for example, they would have achieved tremendous savings in time and resources in their own program. The US development program for the manned lunar landing prompted the Soviets to undertake development of the TT-05 large space- launch vehicle. For over 14 years the TT-05 program consumed the energies of thousands of designers and engineers at a major missile design bureau, a major production plant, and numerous subcontracting orga nizations. The phenomena that destroyed three prot~ types on the launch pad-vibration and acoustic disturbances-had been diagnosed by the United States during its Saturn V missile program in the early 1960s. The Soviet Union did not begin to appreciate these problems until the mid-1970s, after the space-launch vehicle program had been canceled and its chief designer fired. Military Requirements for the 1980s The need for substantial qualitative improvement in military capabilities will heighten Soviet interest in obtaining Western goods and technology. During each of the last two decades the Soviets have deployed about 200 military and aerospace systems (this count includes both newly designed and substantially modi- fied systems). Preliminary analyses suggest that the USSR may have more than 200 under development in the 1980s. We have already identified about 110 systems slated by the Soviets for deployment in the 1980s, of which 60 to 70 are expected to be deployed by the middle of the decade. Because of the rising importance of quality in the ompetition between Eastern and Western military capabilities, advances in sophisticated microelectron- cs and materials probably will pace the development ~f new weapon systems. Accordingly, the Soviets and heir Warsaw Pact allies will probably find that many bf the new Western component and subsystem tech- nologies are critical to their military programs. For example, Soviet ability to produce sophisticated microelectronic devices is critical to production of guidance components for missiles and precision-guid- ed munitions, of signal-processing devices for ASW and airborne-radar systems, and of minicomputers for ,electronic warfare systems and other battlefield elec- tronics. Production of ultrapure detector materials is critical to the production of electro-optical devices for night vision and target acquisition. Advances in pow- dered-metallurgical materials processing are critical to the production of advanced airframes and aircraft propulsion systems and penetrators for kinetic-energy After acquiring these advanced technologies, the So- viets, will need to master material-processing technol- ogies before they can apply them to their military `"hardware. Production of microelectronics requires strict clean-room environment, ultrapure material processing techniques, and such sophisticated fabrica- tion techniques as electron-beam welding and laser trimming, etching, and masking. The ultrapure mate- rials themselves require advanced refining techniques. In addition to advanced powdered-metallurgical man- ufacturing processes for making high-quality turbine blades, high-performance turbojet and turbofan en- gines require very precise, intricate disks and gears that can be machined only by computer-assisted numerically controlled tools. Production of composite materials for airframes depends on advanced tech- niques for processing and fabricating fiber-reinforced polymer materials. '25X1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Secret The specific technology transfers that are or would be useful to a particular Soviet weapon program are often difficult to identify, however. For example: ? Delays encountered in the acquisition abroad of component technologies for a major system may force the Soviets to develop substitute technologies that could go undetected for years. The West may thereby perceive a Soviet deficiency where none actually exists. This was the case with Soviet MIRV development. That program began in the early the early 1970s, in part because of our estimates of what the Soviets would need-but did not have-to develop a MIRV capability. ? Technologies abandoned by the West may prove useful to the Soviets. Long after the United States had discarded the Dynasoar and Manned Orbiting Laboratory satellite programs, the Soviets apparent- ly pursued the discarded US technologies in their .corresponding development programs. Denial of agricultural products by the United States alone would not have a major effect, even in the short run: ? Moscow could buy most of the grain it needs in the next few years from other suppliers, although it might have to pay premium prices. ? In the longer run, Moscow could expand its trade with major non-US grain exporters; non-Soviet markets could be supplied out of US stocks. ? Under a US embargo the Soviets could not get the mix of wheat and corn they prefer, however, be- cause the United States is the world's major corn exporter. Unilateral US restrictions of sales of energy equip- ment and technology would also not have much impact: ? US producers now have a monopoly in manufactur- ing critical high-capacity pumps for extracting oil, but other Western suppliers could enter the field within two years if those pumps were embargoed. ? The acquisition of some material on foreign technol- ogy may give the Soviets only a few pieces of a technological puzzle. We may know they have these ? Western firms also could eventually fill any gap created by US denial of equipment for oil explora- tion and drilling. missing pieces may be critical to the successful ? Only West European and Japanese firms manufac- integration of the range of complex technologies and ture the large-diameter gas pipe and valves essentia 25X1 intricate components that comprise a modern weap- to Soviet gas production, and they can also supply L on system. the necessary pipelayers and compressor station 25X1 equipment. 25X1 Limits to US and Western Restrictions The countries participating in CoCom control almost all of the technology directly related to Soviet military R&D and weapons programs. In theory, therefore, they, could take steps to stop the leakage of equip- ment, designs, test data, and the like to the USSR. A sustained and effective denial of goods and technology by the United States and its allies would also create appreciable problems in most Soviet economic sectors. In some cases, however, CoCom-wide actions would not be sufficient to block Soviet access to valuable goods and technology (see table 8). In most cases, an embargo limited to US exports would be ineffective. In chemicals and other industrial materials, the Unit- ed States has only a slightly greater potential for causing economic difficulties for Moscow: ? US suspension of sales of superphosphoric acid (SPA) would upset development of the Soviet fertil- izer industry, forcing Moscow either to install evap- orators to concentrate merchant-grade phosphoric acid, or to import additional phosphate materials. ? Denial of US chemicals other than SPA would have little impact. In 1980 the United States supplied, in value terms, only 0.1 percent of the pesticides, 2 percent of the plastics, and 4 percent of the man- made fibers imported from the West. (Two years Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Potential Impact of Western Trade Restrictions on Selected Soviet Economic Sectors Product or Technology Grain Small Substantial Other agricultural products Small Moderate Oil and gas equipment Small Substantial Large-diameter pipe and rolled steel Small Substantial Chemical products Moderate Moderate Allied action, including Australia, could reduce Soviet imports by 70 percent; Soviets can import grain from non-US suppliers to fulfill needs. Allied embargo would aggravate already serious food shortages; US is not a major supplier. Allied denial would reduce expected Soviet oil-and gas output by 2-3 million barrels/ day by late r' 1980s. Allied countries within roughly two years could overcome US monopoly in high-capacity oil pumps. Western Europe and Japan supply all of the pipe critical to growth in gas production and most of the rolled steel imports for machine building and metalworking. Allied embargo would be felt throughout econo- my; US denial of superphosphoric acid would hurt Soviet fertilizer production. Pesticides are needed to boost crop yields. Western denial would affect all economic sectors; US provides only a small share of equipment imports. Substantial CoCom countries provide most of Soviet needs; non-US suppliers are numerous. Construction and mining Small Moderate Western denial of production technology for construction equipment would disrupt Soviet plans to increase domestic equipment manufacture; denial of mining equipment would create only short-run difficulties; non-US equipment is widely available. Soviets are unlikely to need substantial imports of Western equipment and technology in next few years. Allied restrictions would have considerable impact on large computers but not on minicomputers, which are available from non-CoCom members; Soviets prefer US products and services, although non-US firms could almost duplicate some US offerings. ern equipment and technology-by legal and illegal means; US retains leading edge, but Japan and Western Europe can supply most Soviet needs. Soviets can cover most needs from Eastern Europe and non-CoCom Western countries. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Secret earlier the comparable US shares were about 10 percent, 5 percent, and 6 percent.) ? US unilateral restrictions on other industrial mate- rials could do little, since Western Europe and Japan dominate the Soviet steel market, and molyb- denum-which the United States has sold to the 1 Soviets-could be purchased through a chain of Western brokers or through East European trading organizations. Similarly, in construction and mining equipment and machine tools, the United States has no technological monopoly: ? Komatsu and Sumitomo of Japan and Fiat, in particular, now match-or have the technological capability to match-US-produced off-highway trucks, industrial tractors, and earthmoving equipment. ? Most Soviet needs for Western mining equipment can also be satisfied by Japan and Western Europe. ? Much of the advanced numerically controlled ma- chine tool technology is widely available from non- US suppliers. ? The United States has the most advanced robot technology, but the Soviets more urgently need simpler types for routine applications, such as repet- itive welding operations in car manufacturing. Mos- cow may thus prefer Japan to the United States, since Japan has a greater robot production capacity and more experience in practical applications. In computers and microelectronics, the Soviets still prefer US equipment. Other countries, however, could rapidly fill most Soviet needs. should the United States pull out: ? The United States leads the world in manufacturing the very-high-speed, high-capacity scientific com- puters and the most advanced peripherals and microprocessors. ? The United States can also provide a more complete range of hardware, software, and support than can Japan, its closest competitor. ? Several foreign firms, however, could come close to duplicating US services. ? The United States could not prevent other CoCom countries from selling their own computers unless (1) it were willing to renege on its prior agreement in CoCom not to-object to exports by others and (2) other CoCom countries concurred. ? The United States has some control over sales of other foreign systems to the USSR because parts and peripherals may be of US origin. 25X1 25X1 ? Moscow prefers US microelectronics equipment be- cause it has found some non-US products to be poor substitutes and because the United States can sup- ply the full range of state-of-the-art technology from basic materials through final test. In the event of a US embargo, however, Japan and Western Europe could satisfy most Soviet microelectronics 25X1 needs. 25X1 Not even a CoCom-wide embargo could seriously affect some Soviet economic sectors: ? The participation of Australia would be needed to reduce Soviet imports of grain and grain products as much as 70 percent. ? CoCom restrictions on offshore oil production E equipment would be undercut by sales from Fin- 25X1 land, Singapore, Mexico; and Yugoslavia. - 0 ? Non-CoCom countries such as Austria, Switzer- land, and Sweden have been important (though small) suppliers of machine tools to Moscow. (MAAG of Switzerland is one of the world's top manufacturers of precision grinding machinery.) Israel. ? Minicomputers are available in non-CoCom coun- tries such as Brazil, Austria, Switzerland, and Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 The Economic-Defense Linkage: Summing Up The survey of Soviet policy and practice presented above shows how the USSR's military programs have benefited indirectly as well as directly from East- West economic relations. Although the Soviet econo- my is large and diverse, with a broad technological and scientific base, the USSR has had to make an extraordinary commitment of resources to achieve its present military power. Beset by stagnating productiv- ity and growing resource constraints, it has used imported Western products to: ? Minimize the encroachment of growing civilian economic needs on defense production facilities, primarily those in machine building. ? Raise the efficiency and quality of industrial pro- duction intended for military procurement. Western restrictions on trade and technology transfer, by increasing the strain on the economy, would therefore hinder the Soviet defense effort. The Economic Base Restricting the quantity of Western goods and tech- nology imported for civilian use would increase the strain on military programs since most defense indus- tries also produce for the civilian sector. The focus of the USSR's efforts to improve both civilian and military industrial capabilities is the machine-build- ing and metalworking branch of Soviet industry. Western embargoes on machinery and materials that are used either to produce machinery or to supple- ment domestic machinery production therefore would impinge most quickly on the resources available for military production.' ? An embargo on specialized oil and gas production equipment would force Moscow to allocate military- oriented metallurgical and machine-building facili- ties to produce such equipment; reduced Soviet petroleum output_in the interim would aggravate civilian industrial problems and might therefore cause additional encroachment on defense production. imposed are sustained and effective. ? An embargo on large-diameter gas pipe and other high-quality steel products could cut into production of such military items as submarine hulls. ? An embargo on equipment for plants manufacturing cars, trucks, and mining and construction vehicles Kas well as an embargo on such vehicles themselves) would increase the pressure in the Soviet Union to devote more floorspace in military plants to produc- ing those items Western denial of grain and other agricultural prod- ucts would also hamper the Soviet military effort. To increase domestic farm output, Moscow might have to allocate more factory space, for example, to producing farm machinery instead of tanks and armored person- nel carriers. A Western embargo on selling farm machinery or on building the facilities that manufac- ture such machinery would also put. pressure on existing priorities. Reduced per capita food consump- tion would work against Soviet efforts to raise worke productivity, increasing the problems facing industry By curtailing Soviet import capacity-primarily by restricting credits but also by hampering Soviet oil and gas production and thus hard currency exports- the West would clearly raise the cost to the Soviet Union of maintaining the present policies on resource allocation. Moscow probably could maintain top- priority imports and thus cushion the immediate impact on military industries. The increased number of bottlenecks created in the civilian economy, how- ever, would eventually force allocation of military- related resources to general economic needs. Military Procurement Tighter restrictions on Moscow's acquisition of West- ern industrial technology would slow the qualitative improvements in Soviet weapon systems needed to keep pace with Western military capabilities. As has been shown, the Western know-how and the plant and equipment that can improve civilian industrial output often serve a dual function-particularly in machine building and metalworking-by aiding weapon devel- opment. Reducing Moscow's access to advanced ma- terials, specialized machine tools, and electronics would particularly affect Soviet defense procurement. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Secret A Western embargo of industrial plant and equipment would clearly hurt military programs: ? Denial of microelectronics components and produc- tion technology would hamper the development of weapon guidance systems and precision machine tools for specialized defense production. ? Denial of minicomputers and related technology would hamper the development of electronic war- fare capabilities. ? Denial of numerically controlled machine tools would hamper many defense-related industrial proc- esses, such as the manufacture of gears and disks for high-performance turbojet engines. ? Preventing Western design or construction of indus- trial plants-like the agricultural combine factory proposed by International Harvester-would ham- per Soviet production of vehicles, ships, and other equipment for military as well as civilian use. Because many advances in Soviet weapon capabilities will depend on substantial improvements in materials processing, Western restrictions on Moscow's acquisi- tion of processing technology might also affect de- fense procurement. ? Denial of powdered-metallurgical material process- ing know-how would retard development of ad- vanced airframes. ? Denial of techniques for producing ultrapure mate- tals would slow microelectronics development for Moth military and civilian use considerably. Impact of Western Restrictions on Trade and Credits The Soviets' worsening economic performance pre- sents the West with correspondingly greater opportu- nities to aggravate their defense burden. The economy is increasingly strained to meet the demands of consumption, investment, and defense. Although Moscow planned to increase investment in the non- defense sector, it reportedly has redirected some resources back to the military because of the stepped- up US defense program. If Soviet military spending continues to grow at a high rate, the civilian sector will receive increasingly smaller increments in eco- nomic output for both consumption and investment. Efforts to raise productivity will be undercut as a result, intensifying the pressure on supplies of raw materials and semifinished goods. Moscow will thus have less flexibility than before to adapt to bottle- necks created by substantially reduced availability of Western goods and technology. Several forms of Western restrictions on East-West trade and technology transfer could hurt Soviet eco~ nomic performance and-directly or indirectly- Moscow's defense programs. The restrictions differ, however, in their ability to affect areas of major economic and military importance. Western actions with the greatest potential for hindering the military effort include: ? The expansion of CoCom controls to include emerg- ing technologies such as numerically controlled ma- chine tools and robotics, older Western technologic that the Soviets have not mastered, and areas such as shipbuilding and the manufacture of cars, trucks, and construction vehicles.' ? Greater efforts to prevent illegal technology trans- fer, including increased compartmentation and clas- sification of US weapon designs and test data- actions that can be taken unilaterally. ? Embargoes on key products and technologies such as grain and oil and gas equipment, which would seriously aggravate Soviet economic problems with- out halting East-West trade entirely. In the short run, Western restrictions on technology transfer probably would not prompt Soviet reduction of military spending. Although the Brezhnev regime would have to deal with several painful choices re- garding resource allocations that it has thus far avoided, it almost certainly would maintain the high priority of defense, particularly if East-West tensions 6 Because the USSR uses Eastern Europe as an illegal conduit for hard-to-trace technology, the value of any extension of the CoCom list would be seriously weakened if Eastern Europe were not 25X1 25X1 25X1 '') F Y 1 25X1 25X1 I Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Secret were high. A post-Brezhnev regime would try to convey an impression of stability, continuity, and unity-avoiding radical changes in resource alloca- tion. In such an environment, it is unlikely that any Soviet leader would be inclined or able to challenge the defense establishment's top priority. Consumer- oriented programs would suffer as a result. Over the longer run, however, the military's priority may decline as a new generation of leaders takes command. Being less personally committed to today's approaches, and facing mounting economic problems aggravated by the sustained denial of Western goods and technology, the new leaders might eventually see substantial advantages in reducing military, spending in order to free up the labor and material resources urgently sought in key civilian sectors Any cuts in defense programs would occur slowly, however, particularly if international tensions re- mained high. Overall Soviet military capabilities would therefore be affected only gradually. The cuts would probably be concentrated in the general pur- pose forces, especially the Ground Forces, because: ? The Soviets probably are relatively comfortable with their military positions-against both the West and China-in general purpose forces. In particular, they probably consider themselves ahead in the number of their ground force weapon systems. ? A reduction in general purpose forces could return more people to the general civilian work force than would a reduction, for example, in the ICBM force. ? The production facilities and industrial materials- notably steel-now used for general purpose forces are less specialized than those now used for strategic forces and thus can be transferred more readily to critical civilian needs such as energy, transportation, and agriculture In addition to possibly prompting reductions in gener- al purpose forces, a stringent Western denial of goods and technology could interfere with qualitative im- provements across a range of Soviet weapon systems. The effects of this denial on Soviet military power would be delayed but would accumulate in the last half of the 1980s and could have a major impact o Soviet programs in the 1990s. 25X1 25X1 25X1! Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0 Secret Secret Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/23: CIA-RDP83T00233R000100010003-0