The growing maritime intimacy between the two powers has major strategic
implications.
One of
the more interesting aspects of Asian maritime politics is the Russia-China
naval relationship. Both are major maritime powers with considerable stakes in
regional security. Like Beijing, Moscow has sought to safeguard its maritime
interests in strategically vital spaces in the Asia-Pacific by initiating a
military modernization program aimed at projecting a strong national image.
Significantly, despite having common areas of interest and operations, the PLA
Navy and the Russian Navy have managed to maintain a smooth working
relationship, which has only been getting stronger with time.
The
nautical synergy was on ample display last month when the Russian and Chinese
navies embarked on their latest maritime exercise.
“Joint Sea 2015 II,” held in the Sea of Japan between August 20and 28, was an
interaction of unprecedented operational integration and a workout menu that
featured live-firing drills, anti-submarine operations, close-support combat
drills, and even joint-beach landings. The sheer magnitude of the exercise – in
terms of the size of the fleets involved, the duration of engagement, and the
nature of joint drills – made it a remarkable undertaking. With 16 surface
ships, two submarines, 12 naval aircraft, nine amphibious vehicles fielded by
the Russian navy, and six warships, six helicopters, five fixed-wing aircraft,
and amphibious assets from the Chinese side, this was arguably the largest
maritime exercise the two navies had ever undertaken.
It was
the presence of 400 Chinese marines, however, that was the event’s most
striking feature. After the Chinese defense white paper
announced an expeditionary template of operations in May 2015, recent PLA-N
exercises have had an amphibious component, including ground assault drills by
marine forces. The PLA-N has also conducted a series of island defense
exercises, involving the deployment of dedicated amphibious assets in the
Western and Far-Eastern Pacific. In keeping with the new focus on expeditionary
operations, the participating contingents conducted a joint amphibious and
airborne landing at the Cape Klerk firing range in Russia’s Far East.
A
follow-up to Joint-Sea 2015 – a smaller naval exercise held in the Mediterranean Sea
and Black Sea in May 2015 – the recent interaction was aimed
ostensibly at countering America’s strategic dominance of maritime-Eurasia.
Russian and Chinese leaders believe that the U.S. is the central destabilizing
factor in the region’s geopolitics and that it is involved in a systemic
containment of Moscow and Beijing. By staging close-combat naval exercises,
they hope to warn Washington that its days of lording over maritime-Asia are
numbered.
To be
sure, China and Russia have their political differences. Russia has had its
concerns about Chinese encroachments in the Russian Far-East and the loss of
Central Asia to China’s growing influence. However, following Moscow’s
isolation in Europe after its annexation of Crimea, President Vladimir Putin
has had to acquiesce to growing Chinese
ambitions in Russia’s zone of influence. In return, he hopes to
clinch massive oil and gas deals, albeit on terms favorable to Beijing. In
order to diversify Russian energy export markets away from Europe, Putin has
had little option but to develop an asymmetric strategic partnership with
China, granting the latter vital concessions and the status of a special ally.
Still,
Russia isn’t unduly worried. Ever since Moscow and Beijing signed an agreement
in December 1992 on military technology cooperation, China has purchased more
defense items from the Russian Federation than from all other countries combined.
These include Kilo class submarines, Su-27 aircraft, Sovremenny-class
destroyers, and many varieties of munitions and missiles. Although Beijing’s
dependence on Moscow for military platforms has reduced since 2006, Russia has
continued the supply of vital maritime stores and equipment. For Russia’s
strategic elite, growing maritime operational ties with China are a logical
progression of the military relationship.
The
trajectory of recent maritime exercises, however, suggests that the partnership
has exceeded the original template of military cooperation. The naval drills
are significant not only for the size of the contingents involved, but also for
the quality of interaction, which now seems as comprehensive as the U.S. Navy’s
many structured drills with its Asia-Pacific partners. Needless to add, the
maritime relationship has benefited from a huge political investment. Chastened
by the West for Russian aggression in Ukraine, particularly the seizure of the
Crimea, Putin has taken a personal interest in nurturing maritime ties with
China. Beijing, in search of an ally to mount a counter-U.S. rebalance
strategy, has been happy to play along.
The
nautical parleys also reveal the abiding connection between geopolitics and
maritime strategy. The Sino-Russian maritime relationship is the product of a
certain geopolitical context in which both countries have been feeling
strategically vulnerable to U.S. military pressure. Their evolving maritime
strategy has been a reflection of regional maritime politics, which they sense
is being orchestrated to Washington’s advantage. With territorial disputes in
littoral-Asia serving as a focal point of maritime strategy, Russia and China
have also watched U.S. allies – Japan, the Philippines, and Vietnam – bolster
their military presence in the Asia-Pacific with a growing sense of alarm.
Russia has responded by formally co-opting China as a “core partner” in its new
maritime doctrine, thus signaling a desire for greater maritime influence in
the Asia-Pacific. Not surprisingly, Putin was celebrity-in-chief at China’s recent Victory Day
parade in Beijing.
The
symbolism of growing Sino-Russian maritime synergy is both notionally relevant
and functionally instructive. The military exercises have helped bolster the
Sino-Russian strategic relationship, while reinforcing deterrence against
perceived adversaries. By conducting the interactions in spaces dominated by
America and its allies, Russia and China have sought to defy the U.S.-led
maritime order. Their choice of venue for the joint exercises has been equally
symbolic. The May 2014 interaction was held in the Mediterranean and Black Sea
– a NATO preserve, and a theater virtually alien to the Chinese navy. And the
Sea of Japan where the present exercises are being held has rarely seen a
full-fledged Chinese naval deployment. Not only are these theaters considered
politically off-limits for the Russian and Chinese navies, these are regions
where the participating contingents run the risk of getting involved in
accidental skirmishes with other regional navies.
In
material terms too, the drills have a significant implication. Through
close-combat exercises, the Chinese and Russian navies have been able to
bolster their “interoperability” in the Asian littorals. Harmonizing equipment
functioning and standard operating procedures, the two navies have gained
familiarity with functional methodologies specific to each other, while also
finessing maritime doctrine for territorial defense and developing a logistical
plan for joint operations.
The
material and operational gains are, however, dwarfed by the strategic pay-off
for Russia and China. The maritime exercises have provided a framework by which
Russia and China can develop their individual and collective defensive
capabilities. Intensive combat-oriented operations also serve to signal a shift
in the strategic balance of Asia. While the U.S. is still the dominant power in
the Asia-Pacific, growing Chinese and Russian nautical interaction heralds the
beginning of a multi-polar maritime order in Asia.
For
India, maritime intimacy between Russia and China holds significant
implications. In recent times, both Russia and China have expanded their
strategic interaction with Pakistan. China’s decision to include the
development of Gwadar port in the first phase of the proposed $46 billion corridor,
as well as the impending contract for the transfer of eight Yuan-class
submarines make it Pakistan’s principal maritime partner and patron. Russia too
has been deepening its defense ties with Pakistan, much to India’s chagrin. A
growing Sino-Russian-Pakistani maritime nexus in the IOR poses a challenge to
India’s influence in the Indian Ocean and heralds a potential change in the
Eurasian balance of maritime power.
Abhijit
Singh is a research scholar at the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses
and looks at Maritime Security in the Indian Ocean. He is co-author of the
book Indian Ocean Challenges – A
Quest for Cooperative Solutions. This piece first appeared as an
IDSA commentary on August 28, 2015.
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