Russia Maritime Studies Institute
Russia has re-emerged as a major force in international affairs. Russian economic and military entities have appeared around the world, from the Arctic to Africa, from the Euro-Atlantic to the Indo-Pacific. Moscow’s global power aspirations drive Russia into the maritime domain, and Russia sees its economic future, its national security, and its ability to influence other nations as linked to the world’s oceans. Understanding these dynamics is critical to understanding the future global security environment.
About Russia Maritime Studies Institute
The Russia Maritime Studies Institute (RMSI) conducts research on Russian military and economic issues linked to the world’s oceans. This includes naval strategy and operations, economic statecraft, and broader questions about Russia’s place in a maritime world.
Goals for RMSI
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The goals for this institute are to:
- Inform U.S. Navy, Joint Force, and international decision making regarding Russian maritime issues.
- Provide analysis that supports U.S. and allied planning efforts.
- Educate U.S. and allied military personnel on Russian maritime issues.
- Develop new knowledge that contributes to scholarship on Russian economic and security issues.
To achieve these goals, RMSI conducts research into a wide variety of issues, including naval policy, strategy, and operations; maritime technologies; shipbuilding; maritime law; deterrence; and naval diplomacy.
More on RMSI
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RMSI faculty seek to use the Naval War College’s (NWC) unique position at the nexus of academic, policy, and operations communities to develop and expand intellectual synergies. We combine cutting-edge foreign-language academic research and NWC’s traditions of war gaming and operations analysis to generate unique net assessments on issues related to Russia’s maritime domain. We also provide English-language of translations of official unclassified Russian documents related to the maritime domain.
RMSI Translations
2024: Decree by the President of the Russian Federation on Military-Administrative Divisions of the Russian Federation
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In February 2024, the President of the Russian Federation signed the Decree, which identified the updated Military Districts’ administrative boundaries, effective 1 March 2024. Russia dissolved the Northern Fleet Military District and the Western Military District and redistributed their ground and air military installations, forces, and capabilities between the newly established Moscow and Leningrad Military Districts. Under this reorganization, all Russian Navy fleets and flotillas, including the Northern Fleet, were separated from the OSK structure and subordinated directly to the Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Navy.
Read the Decree
2024: The Naval Policy of the State in Modern Conditions
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This article examines the state’s naval policy as an integral part of the Russian Federation’s military security system. It describes the role of Navy leaders and naval scientists in the formation of naval policy at the beginning of the 21st century. The authors identify the main issues of naval policy in modern conditions that are intertwined with the formation and development of the Navy. The article is particularly compelling as Admiral Kuroyedov provides a first-hand account of the development of Russian naval policy through the 1990s and 2000s, and links that development to Russia’s current strategic environment.
Read the Article
2022: Amendments to Russia's Law on Internal Waters
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In 2022, the Russian Federation twice amended articles relevant to navigation in the waters of the Northern Sea Route included in this law. The first and second set of amendments were signed by President Vladimir Putin on June 28, 2022 and December 5, 2022. It amends the law and stipulates that foreign-flagged ships sailing in the internal sea waters of the Russian Federation must comply with legislation of the Russian Federation, navigation rules in the internal sea waters, and mobile and satellite communication regulations established by the Russian Federation.
Read the Amendments
2022: Maritime Doctrine of the Russian Federation
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The 2022 Maritime Doctrine of the Russian Federation was approved by President Vladimir Putin on July 31, 2022. It supersedes the previous 2015 Maritime Doctrine. The 2022 document expands and sharpens many of the themes resident in the earlier document, including the need to secure and protect critical resources at sea, expand Russia’s maritime presence in global trade, and develop infrastructure that supports this growth. It also contains new information, such as Russia’s broader approach to piracy, international cooperation, and mobilization readiness.
Read the Doctrine
2019: Strategy for the Development of Maritime Activities of the Russian Federation
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Russia is taking a systematic approach to developing its presence in the maritime domain. Three documents published by Moscow since 2015 provide the roadmap for Russia’s global maritime ambitions. These are the Maritime Doctrine of the Russian Federation (2015), the Fundamentals of the State Policy of the Russian Federation in the Field of Naval Operations to 2030 (2017), and this document, the 2019 Strategy for the Development of Russia’s Maritime Activities to 2030. The Maritime Doctrine and the Naval Fundamentals articulate high-level policy objectives and provide a set of ways and means for achieving those objectives. In contrast, the Strategy focuses on implementation challenges as well as ways to determine measures of effectiveness in achieving the ends stated by its predecessor documents.
Read the Strategy
2015: Maritime Doctrine of the Russian Federation
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The 2015 Maritime Doctrine of the Russian Federation is arguably one of the most important doctrinal statements to emerge from that country in recent years. It is in any case Russia’s most important recent articulation of its maritime interests and goals, and therefore provides insight into how Moscow envisions Russia’s global role. Yet because of the challenges of reading Russian and the absence of a publicly available translation of this essential document, western understanding of it is largely limited.
Read the 2015 Maritime Doctrine
2015-2020: Russian-Syrian Naval and Air Basing Agreements, 2015-2000
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Since Moscow’s formal intervention in the Syrian conflict in September 2015, the Russian Federation and the Syrian Arab Republic have concluded a 49-year lease for the use and expansion of the naval base at Tartus, and a separate agreement on stationing the Russian "aviation group" at Humaymim airfield in Syria. These agreements build off longstanding Russian-Syrian ties, treaties, and cooperation agreements, and form the legal basis for Russia’s long-term presence in Syria. Further, the agreements denote the rights and protections Russian military members and contractors enjoy in Syria.
Read about the Basing Agreements