When the MV Saint Confidence and MV
Solidat arrived in Suva Harbor last week to deliver a consignment of donated
Russian weapons and equipment to Fiji, it sparked an immediate reaction.
Opposition MPs and security analysts have made several claims including: the
deal was clandestine, the weapons could potentially be used against Fijian
citizens; and Russia’s increased engagement with Fiji is an opening move in a battle for
influence in the Asia Pacific region.
The Russian arms deal was not secret but
nor was it transparent. During Fiji’s Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama’s
inaugural visit to Russia in 2013, five bilateral agreements were signed,
including new protocols on military technical cooperation. At the
time, Russia’s Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev stated that Russia wanted to pay
particular attention to assisting Fiji with its UN peacekeeping deployments.
Bainimarama also referred to having secured Russian help for Fiji’s
peacekeeping forces in the Golan Heights. In July 2013, the then Land Force
Commander, Colonel Mosese Tikoitoga, announced that Russia had offered to arm Fiji's peacekeepers.
That month also, Fijian Foreign Minister Ratu Inoke Kubuabola stated in the
Russian English language press that Fijian peacekeepers would be issued with Russian-made individual combat gear that includes
small arms. The details were still to be worked out and were
subsequently never officially made known.
Which is why, when the Russians arrived bearing gifts last week, Ratu Isoa
Tikoca, Fiji’s opposition spokesperson on foreign affairs and a member of the
parliamentary standing committee on defense and foreign affairs, demanded the
defence minister explain the consignment and discuss it in parliament.
So why didn’t the Fijian Government
provide the parliament—and the public—with some information about the deal? The
best time to have done so would have been in 2014, after the release of the
Fijian peacekeepers captured by al Nusra Front in the Golan Heights. The
incident highlighted the impact that Western sanctions imposed on Fiji in 2006
had on the Royal Fijian Military Force, reinforcing earlier concerns around military equipment resupply and modernization.
The government could have rode the wave of national relief when the soldiers
were freed by announcing that Fijian peacekeepers would in the future be better
equipped with Russian weapons and kit.
The lack of transparency around the deal
has led to some extraordinary and unhelpful comments being made in Fijian and
foreign media. These include Tikoca claiming that the weapons deal will enable
Bainimarama to control the south-west Pacific. Other
analysts have suggested that the weapons, being dual usage, could also be used
as crowd control on the local population. The recent delivery from Korea of riot control
gear, including tear gas and anti-riot weaponry, to the Fijian Police and
prisons has led to some confusion between the two consignments and further fed
concerns about internal security.
So, is the Russian deal an indicator, as
some analysts have suggested, of Fiji’s pivot away from the West?
Arguably, that pivot occurred around the
time Bainimarama took power in a military coup in 2006 and Australia, New
Zealand and the United States imposed sanctions. Russia’s equipping of Fijian
peacekeepers is as a result of Fiji pursuing non-traditional friends in the
face of international sanctions and, as one analyst has suggested, an attempt
to diversify patrons and prevent dependence on China. Perhaps. China
is rumored to be a potential donor towards the completion of the Blackrock
Integrated Peacekeeping Centre. But Russian troops are far more battle
experienced than the PLA, especially in regards to terrorism, and a benefit of
Russian weaponry is the ready availability of Russian ammunition in the Middle
East.
When sanctions were
lifted, there was a clear expectation on the part of Washington, Canberra and
Wellington that Fiji would come in from the cold and relations would go back to
how they were. A series of high level visits by Western powers in December 2014
revealed how out of step the West had become with Fiji. The billboards around
Suva depicting the Chinese President Xi and Indian Prime Minister Modi during
their respective visits were visual reminders that, during the sanction years,
Fiji had built new strategic partnerships. What this means for
military-to-military cooperation is that there is a whole new cadre of RFMF
officers who received their staff course education in Russia, China or India,
for example, and have no ties to Australia and New Zealand; a point lamented by
former senior RFMF officers. These officers have built their careers on these
new relationships and this has changed both the culture and the trajectory of
the military. As a consequence, Australia and New Zealand’s strategic relevance
to Fiji has diminished.
Relations between Suva and Moscow
intensified in 2013 following Fijian Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama’s
inaugural visit to Russia (from 2011 there was a series of high-level
ministerial visits, including Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov's visit to Fiji). In response to Lavrov’s
visit, Australia’s then Parliamentary Secretary for Pacific Island Affairs,
Richard Marles, accused Russia of cheque-book diplomacy.
Marles was referring to Moscow seeking the support of Pacific Island states for
recognition of Georgian breakaway states South Ossetia and Abkhazia. This is a
far cry from the cheque-book diplomacy practiced by China and Taiwan, when they
were bidding for recognition in the Pacific, but it does demonstrate that the
contests on Russia’s borders (both old and new) have reached the South Pacific.
In 2014, to mark forty years of diplomatic relations between the two countries,
Fijian Foreign Minister Ratu Inoke Kubuabola stated: “Russia is emerging as one
of Fiji’s significant partners in its pursuance of its Look North policy.” Lavrov responded,
writing that “deepening interaction with the island nations of the South
Pacific is an integral part of the Russian agenda in the region.” This agenda
is part of Russia's proposal for a new regional architecture to ensure equal
and indivisible security in the Asia Pacific which Lavrov promoted at the 2013
East Asia Summit.
Aside from diplomatic support, what more
does Russia want from Fiji?
Russia’s interests in the Pacific go
beyond Fiji. The Western Pacific has become a site of Russian power projection
and sabre-rattling. In 2013 American F-15 jets were scrambled to intercept
Russian bombers and in 2014 Russian strategic bombers (Tu-95 Bear H bombers)
circumnavigated Guam. USPACOM confirmed that the Russian bombers entered Guam's
outer air defense identification zone.
Russia is clearly set on restoring its maritime power. In 2013 Rear Admiral Sergei
Avakyants, Commander of the Pacific Fleet announced that Russia would begin a naval buildup in the Pacific
Ocean the following year including a strategic nuclear submarine presence. In
2015 the first of four Borei-class nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines
joined the Pacific Fleet. Russian Navy Commander-in-Chief Viktor Chirkov stated
in 2015 that the deployment of Russian ballistic and multipurpose
nuclear submarines on operational duty in the Pacific Ocean has
increased almost 50 percent over the previous year.
Not surprisingly, analysts are speculating
that the next logical step to Russia’s increased submarine activity in the
Pacific is a submarine fleet support base in the South Pacific.
Next month the twenty-five containers
stored at Queen Elizabeth Barracks in Nabua will be opened and Russia’s gift
unveiled. We suspect we will have to wait much longer to find out whether that
gift has a price.
Anna Powles is a Senior Lecturer in
Security Studies at Massey University and the editor of the United Nations Peacekeeping Challenge (Ashgate: 2015).
Jose Sousa-Santos is a senior strategic
and security analyst and an IHS Jane’s contributor on Asia Pacific security
matters. He is a former analyst with the United Nations Joint Mission Analysis
Centre and is currently researching the nexus between terrorism and
transnational crime in the Asia Pacific.
This article first appeared the Interpreter.
Image: Wikimedia Commons/U.S. Air Force.
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