Russia’s
Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev (L) inspects a machine gun regiment during his
visit to Iturup Island, one of four islands known as the Southern Kurils in
Russia and Northern Territories in Japan, August 22, 2015
The bilateral political ties appear reaching new
lows after Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev traveled to the Kuril Islands despite
vocal objections from Japan. The Kremlin insisted that the country’s top
officials would keep visiting the disputed Southern Kurils despite Japanese
protests.
On Aug. 22, Medvedev traveled to Iturup, one of the Kuril Islands. He
reiterated that Russian officials “visited, visit and will visit” the Kurils
and ordered cabinet members to travel to the islands more frequently. He also
described the Kurils as Russia’s gateway to Asia-Pacific.
Medvedev voiced expectations of friendly relations with Japan.
Simultaneously, he advocated a deployment of more “modern and combat-ready”
troops in the Kurils.
Japanese officials reportedly described the visit as an unacceptable
development that would adversely affect bilateral dialogue.
Moscow lashed out at Japanese objections against Medvedev’s visit to the
Kurils. This criticism indicates that Japan keeps contesting the results of the
World War Two, the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Aug. 22.
The Russian Foreign Ministry also dismissed Japanese media reports that
Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida delayed a visit to Russia, planned for the end
of August. “The talks in Moscow were not announced and it’s impossible to delay
what was not agreed upon,” the Foreign Ministry said.
Kishida’s trip to Moscow was understood to be aimed to make preparations
for President Vladimir Putin visit to Japan later in 2015. However, it became
far from certain whether a bilateral summit meeting could take place this year
against a backdrop of the latest developments.
The bilateral relations already dealt a blow after then President
Medvedev traveled to Kunashir in November 2010, sparking vocal protests in
Tokyo. In 2011, Medvedev also ordered the Russian Defense Ministry to arrange
sufficient arms supplies to troops deployed in the Kurils.
Four years ago, the Russian Defense Ministry officials initially denied
plans to deploy the advanced S-400 air defense missile systems in the Southern
Kurils. But they subsequently confirmed plans to deploy S-400s in the Russian
Far East.
With a background of the continued territorial dispute with Japan, the
Kremlin also took action to expedite economic development of the Kuril Islands.
The earlier program to develop the Kurils till 2015 involved disbursement of
some 18 billion rubles ($270 million) in federal and regional grants and
subsidies.
Earlier this month, the Russian government approved a new program to
develop the Kurils in 2016-2025. The program is expected to cost 70 billion rubles
(about $1 billion) in federal and regional grants and subsidies to finance
infrastructure development, residential and road construction.
In recent years, Russian officials have urged to develop bilateral trade
and economic ties so as to create conditions for signing the peace treaty
eventually. But Moscow has been refusing to discuss a return to Japan of four
islands, Kunashir, Iturup, Shikotan and Habomai, known as the Southern Kurils
in Russia and the Northern Territories in Japan. Moscow has consistently
dismissed Japan’s insistence to return all four islands.
Incidentally, on August 22 the Russian government released the decree No
845 to extend the country’s continental shelf into the Okhotsk Sea. The decree,
signed by Medvedev, stipulates that some 50,000 square kilometers of seabed in
the Okhotsk Sea beyond Russia’s 200-nautical-mile zone should be deemed
Russia’s continental. The move was approved by the UN Commission on continental
shelves in 2014, following extensive consultations with Japan, according to the
Russian government press-service.
In a yet another coincidence, on Aug. 20 seven Chinese naval vessels
arrived in Vladivostok for a joint drill. The Russian-Chinese naval exercise,
“Naval Interaction 2015 (II) on August 23-27, are aimed to practice joint
defense against naval, air and submarine assaults. The joint naval drill by
Russia and China, two nations having island-related territorial disputes with
Japan, inevitably sends a forceful signal to Tokyo.
The Kremlin seemingly became upset by Japan’s support of the Western
sanctions against Moscow. Therefore, Russia apparently decided to take a more
hard-line stance on the territorial dispute over the Southern Kurils.
Sergei Blagov is a Moscow-based independent journalist and researcher. In the past
three decades, he has been covering Asian affairs from Moscow, Russia, as well
as Hanoi, Vietnam and Vientiane, Laos. He is the author of non-fiction books on
Vietnam, and a contributor of a handbook for reporters.
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