News that
Russia is strengthening
its air and missile defenses in the Baltic, Crimea and Far East—and
Russia’s wish to preserve its global status—suggest that its dismissal of its
so-called “pivot” to Asia should be taken seriously by the United States and
its NATO allies. And some widespread assumptions about that pivot having taken
place after the imposition of western sanctions on Russia for invading and
dismembering Ukraine in 2014 do not stand up to scrutiny.
As a unique country in terms of
geopolitical location (according to the Kremlin)
and as a Eurasian power, Russia cannot turn to only one side.
But the Asia-Pacific is a high Russian priority, and Moscow sees good prospects
for cooperation with countries in this region. At the same time, Russia hopes
to get back to business as usual
with the EU.
Russia’s keenness to remain a major world
influence is reflected in its attempts to strengthen its ties with many
countries in the Asia-Pacific. But Russia has shrugged off talk about its
strategic turn to the East—and not without reason. Russia’s deployment of
missiles in the Baltic, Crimea and Russian Far East, and its current interests
in West Asia, Europe, the Asia-Pacific and the Arctic, show that it is testing
the ground—or trying to gain military ground—on four sides, as it were.
Militarily, Russia’s presence in the
Asia-Pacific predates Ukraine in 2014. Russia’s Pacific Fleet, one of its most
powerful naval forces, and its possession of the Kurils, which is contested by
Japan, testify to its long-held position as a Pacific power.
But the only Russian base in the
Asia-Pacific is in Vietnam.
Given its own Eurasian location Russia’s
bases in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan hardly reflect an eastward—or
even an Asian—pivot. Military bases in Belarus, Moldova (in the partially
recognized state of Transnistria) and Crimea reflect a turn to Europe, and the
Middle Eastern base in Syria a westward turn. Bases in Armenia and South
Ossetia lie immediately to the south of Russia. None of this amounts to a
“pivot” to the Asia-Pacific.
Russian and Chinese Interests Do Not Always Coincide
On the economic front, President Vladimir
Putin’s keenness to persuade foreign investors to develop the Russian Far East
was obvious from the early days of his presidency in 2000. Russia has welcomed
Chinese investment in the subregion. At another level, 2014’s famous $400 billion Sino-Russian gas
deal had been under negotiation for more than a decade, which hardly
suggests the quick turn on a central point implied by the term “pivot.”
Moreover, China overtook Germany
as Russia’s largest trading partner in 2010.
At another level, the Russia-China
economic relationship has not been trouble-free. Trade between Russia and China
has actually decreased from $88.8 billion in 2013 (pre-Ukraine) to $61.4
billion in 2015. This is not much more than Sino-Russian trade in
2010, and a great deal less than the $100 billion that the two countries had
hoped for last year. And after a brief interlude that lasted barely
two years, Saudi Arabia has reportedly displaced Russia
as China’s largest oil supplier.
Additionally, different mindsets block the
development of joint Sino-Russian ventures in the Russian Far East. China holds
that the majority of the obstacles are created by Russian bureaucracy, outdated
legislative and administrative mechanisms, and the lack of thinking in market
terms.
Putin accepts that the United States is
the world’s only superpower, but what unites China and Russia is their wish to
challenge the United States’ global power. China, especially, challenges
America’s primacy in Asia. Neither Russia nor China has many friends. So they
can be useful to each other at the global level. That is one reason for their
opposition to the deployment of American THAAD missiles in South Korea. Russia
has not opposed China’s attempts to rebalance power in the South China Sea and
has supported the Chinese stance that disputes over its international waters
should be settled bilaterally. But it does not want to get involved in the
South China Sea.
Moscow also has to take care that any
perceived new closeness to Beijing does not alienate some ASEAN countries with
whom it seeks to expand its ties—even if Russia has a long way to go to
increase its influence in the ASEAN area. Russia has been trying to strengthen
those ties since 2011 (pre-Ukraine), through cooperation on counterterrorism
and by offering some ASEAN member states arms and energy. Russia is pushing
sales of arms to countries that are threatened by China’s saber-rattling and
expansionist aims in the South China Sea. Russia is already Vietnam’s main arms
supplier. Arms deals with Vietnam show that Russia will not sacrifice defense
relationships with countries that contest China’s claims to parts of the South
China Sea. However, the planned sales of matériel to Vietnam and Laos will not
change the strategic equation in Asia.
Recently Russian warships
took part in a major international naval drill
(which included the United States) in Brunei and another one in Indonesia.
But compared to Europe (remember the
buildup near Ukraine?), the Asia-Pacific appears to be a strategic diversion
for Moscow, a political stage on which it cannot play the lead.
What about trade? In 2015, ASEAN-Russia commerce was less than 1 percent of the
group’s total trade. Russian investment barely registers in ASEAN statistics,
and is falling.
At the ASEAN-Russia summit in Sochi last
May, ASEAN countries said they would consider Russia’s proposal for a
“comprehensive” free-trade agreement between ASEAN and the Eurasian Economic
Union, a single market with a gross domestic product of about $4 trillion.
The Sochi Declaration signals the interest
of both ASEAN and Russia to forge greater cooperation, but it does not mean
that Russia will become a strategic partner with ASEAN. Russia’s own mismanaged
economy hardly sets an example to aspiring Asian economic tigers.
Generally Russia is an economic
lightweight in the Asia-Pacific, so it cannot compete strongly with the United
States and China in the ASEAN region. At the same time, Moscow’s ties with
Beijing could block its path to closeness with China’s fearful neighbors.
Currently, Russia is juggling several balls in Asia, unable to catch even one.
The simple facts are that Russia’s
interest in Asia stems from an overriding desire to expand its own influence
there—not to help China to establish primacy in the region—even while Russia
resents America’s military preeminence in the Asia-Pacific. But Putin has yet
to attend an East Asia Summit, the principal security forum that is attended by
regional heads of state.
As for Central Asia, in May 2015 China and
Russia pledged to harmonize work of the Russian-fostered Eurasian Economic
Union and China’s Silk Road. But that goal is not the end-all for either
country. For instance, China is not enthused by Russia’s wish to include India,
Pakistan and Iran in the EEU. Incapable of exporting much more than arms and
energy, Russia cannot offer its Central Asian neighbors more investment than
China—but they would also like to diversify their economic ties by examining
the possibility of of cooperation with India and Iran, among other countries.
However, the crucial point is that Russia’s historical political and military
clout over the region remains unchallenged by China.
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It is unsurprising that Russian foreign
minister Sergey Lavrov, trying to paper over the cracks in the troubled
Sino-Russian relationship, says two things in the same breath: claiming that
the current level of Sino-Russian relations is “the highest in historical
perspective,” while admitting that there is no consensus on many issues. That
absence of a China-Russia consensus on many Asian issues suggests that they do
not pose a major threat to the United States in Asia—even if they would like to
curb its influence there.
Perhaps strategic issues count the most.
With NATO and Russia seeing each other as their biggest threats, Russian
security forces are concentrated in Europe and are being strengthened against
NATO.
Strategic interests themselves are the
primary definition of any “pivot,” and Russia’s economic and military ties with
Asian countries are weak. Even that old economic-military druzhba-dosti
(friendship) with India has been replaced by deepening Indian economic and
military ties with the United States on India’s side and Russian arms sales to
India’s neighboring foes—China and Pakistan—on the other.
All told, the Asia-Pacific looks like an
afterthought, a secondary priority to a Russia that wishes to enhance its
global prestige. The reality is that strategic and economic interests are
likely to keep Russia focused in Europe even as Moscow attempts to develop ties
with countries in the Asia-Pacific.
Anita Inder Singh is a Visiting Professor
at the Centre for Peace and Conflict Resolution in New Delhi.
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