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The Soviet Military-Industrial Complex MTA
Defense, Industry, and the Economy in Cold War Strategy
2nd Edition

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About this book:

The Soviet Military-Industrial Complex The Soviet military-industrial complex was a sprawling, "permanent mobilization" system that prioritized military production over civilian welfare for seven decades. Forged in the fires of the Russian Civil War and crash industrialization, the system relied on a unique command architecture where the State Planning Committee (Gosplan), the Military-Industrial Commission (VPK), and powerful industrial ministries translated strategic requirements into rigid production targets. By isolating talent in secretive "Design Bureaus" (OKBs) and closed cities, the state successfully produced world-class weaponry, including nuclear arsenals and space-launch vehicles, even as the broader economy struggled with chronic shortages and technical backwardness.

This "deterrence economy" operated on a logic of quantity and ruggedness, often substituting mass for the high-precision electronics and computing where the Soviets lagged behind the West. Military production enjoyed absolute priority, siphoning off the best materials, machine tools, and skilled labor, which created a bifurcated society: a privileged, highly trained defense elite living in comfortable enclaves, and a civilian population facing stagnant living standards. Administrative pricing and hidden budgets masked the astronomical opportunity costs of this arrangement, resulting in an industrial base that was formidable in its output but structurally inefficient and resistant to innovation outside of narrow military silos.

The 1980s brought these systemic contradictions to a breaking point as the war in Afghanistan and the high-tech challenge of the U.S. Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) exposed the limits of the Soviet model. Mikhail Gorbachev’s attempts at "Perestroika" and the conversion of defense plants to civilian use largely failed, as the specialized, secretive nature of the complex proved incompatible with market-oriented reforms. Following the 1991 collapse, the complex splintered across successor states, yet its core remains the backbone of the modern Russian state—a legacy of centralized power and strategic production that continues to prioritize the arsenal over the market.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • The institutional architecture of Soviet military power: how Gosplan, the VPK, industrial ministries, and design bureaus (OKBs) formed a command structure that translated strategic vision into tanks, planes, and missiles through planning, secrecy, and privileged access to resources.
  • The mechanics of Soviet defense planning: how the State Defense Order, production targets, and indicators converted strategic requirements into shop-floor schedules, often prioritizing quantity over quality and creating a culture of plan fulfillment over battlefield effectiveness.
  • Sector-specific evolution and limitations: detailed analysis of nuclear weapons, missiles/space, aviation, shipbuilding, armor, and electronics—showing where the USSR achieved parity through brute-force production and where it lagged in precision, electronics, and integration.
  • The dual-use dilemma and systemic distortions: how defense priorities reshaped Soviet geography into defense corridors and monotowns, diverted top talent and machine tools from civilian sectors, and created opportunity costs that weakened the broader economy despite military achievements.
  • From mobilization to legacy: tracing the complex's evolution from WWII evacuation efforts through Cold War stability, 1980s technological strains, Perestroika conversion attempts, and the enduring continuities and ruptures in the post-Soviet defense industrial base.
Who's It For:

This book is essential reading for historians of the Soviet Union and Cold War, scholars of political economy and defense industrial policy, and researchers interested in how command economies innovate under strategic pressure. It will particularly benefit professionals in defense acquisition, military strategy, and technology policy who seek to understand the interplay between planning, production, and innovation in authoritarian systems, as well as graduate students studying industrial organization, technological lag, and the conversion of military industries to civilian use.

Author:

Cheryl Wallace

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

May 2, 2026

Word Count:

61,733 words

Reading Time:

4 hours 19 minutes

Sample:

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