Moscow Sees Northern Sea Route Vitiating Great Silk Road
When the Soviet Union disintegrated, many in
Europe and the United States talked about building an updated version of the
Great Silk Road to link China with Europe via the countries of Central Asia and
the Caucasus and to help redirect the focus of these regions away from Moscow
and toward the West. A great deal has been done to realize that project
involving highways, railways, and pipelines (see “Central Asia, Afghanistan and
the New Silk Road: Political, Economic and Security Challenges,” The Jamestown
Foundation, November 14, 2011). But even as those have gone forward, another
link between Europe and Asia has opened up: the Northern Sea Route. And Russian
experts now believe that it, rather than any Great Silk Road development, not
only will play the predominant role in East-West trade but also give the Russian
Federation enormous influence over that exchange.
Russia has a long
history of navigating the Arctic Sea north of its landmass, but until relatively
recently, it used that route almost exclusively to supply population points
along the coast and to take out natural resources for use elsewhere. In recent
decades that has changed as a result of global warming, which has led to the
retreat of the Arctic ice cover and of the revolution in shipping, as well as
due to the use of the inter-modal container, which has made sending goods by sea
far cheaper than any other means
(http://www.arctic.gov/publications/related/AMSA/scenarios.pdf). Those two
trends were especially evident during the 1990s when, as a result of the
collapse of the Soviet Union, Russia and its northern fleet were in disarray.
This situation opened the way for more international involvement in the Arctic
and allowed many to assume that the Great Silk Road would long remain the most
efficient path between China and Europe.
But today, Aleksandr Pronin says
in an analysis on the Stoletie.ru portal, Russia is moving to recover its
position in the Arctic and especially along the Northern Sea Route. Part of the
reason for this has to do with Russia’s interest in developing the natural
resources of the Arctic itself, including gas and oil, but part of it has to do
with Moscow’s interest in countering the geopolitical consequences of an
unchallenged Great Silk Road project
(stoletie.ru/rossiya_i_mir/morskoj_fasad_rossii_729.htm).
After the
collapse of the Soviet Union, Pronin argues, the Northern Sea Route became much
more important to Russia because “the majority of the major sea ports in the
European part of the former Soviet Union were now the property of Ukraine,
Georgia and the Baltic countries.” Moreover, rail traffic from Russia to Europe
had to pass through newly independent states. only by sea could Russia have
unimpeded commerce with western countries.
Unfortunately, instead of
protecting Russia’s interest in this regard, Mikhail Gorbachev, the first and
last president of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), in 1987 said
that from now on, “the Northern Sea Route [should be] completely open to
international shipping.” Russian President Boris Yeltsin continued what Pronin
describes as that “disastrous” policy—one whose impact was exacerbated by the
virtual collapse of the Russian northern merchant fleet. By the late 1990s,
there was less Russian shipping along the Arctic coast than there had been
Soviet shipping in the early 1930s. Surveying this situation at the time, the
head of the Russian State Committee for the North said that “the restoration of
the Northern Sea Route has the greatest possible significance for Russia, but
the Russian Federation is not in a position to support this path”
(stoletie.ru/rossiya_i_mir/morskoj_fasad_rossii_729.htm).
Few in Moscow
at that time appeared to notice what was going on—even as people along the
northern Russian coast suffered, the export by ship of raw materials from the
Russian North declined, and other countries moved in to try to take advantage.
The decline of Russian shipping had another serious consequence, Pronin says:
Without shipping, there was no fuel for Russian planes, and as a result,
Russia’s domestic air service in the Far North effectively collapsed.
All
this was having the most negative consequences for Russia’s geopolitical
position, especially given the influx of non-Russian-flag vessels, the Moscow
analyst continues. But happily things have begun to turn around. Defense
Minister Sergei Shoigu’s latest moves, including increasing the tonnage of
Russia’s Arctic fleet, the restoration of military air bases in the North, the
creation of special Arctic brigades in the armed forces and the positioning of
men and materiel on Arctic islands and on board ships (see EDM, December 16,
2013), all give reason for hope, Pronin contends.
But the most important
step, Pronin says, is the formulation of a still-secret concept paper on
Russia’s national interests in the Arctic. That paper, he suggests, will make it
clear that the defense of Russia’s interests in the northern ocean is about more
than security and access to resources there: it is very much about countering
the possible but likely declining importance of the Great Silk Road project in
which the West has invested so much hope.
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