Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 5 – In few other
sectors is there a greater likelihood that Western sanctions can directly
affect the Kremlin’s efforts to project power beyond Russian borders than in
the Arctic Ocean where Moscow’s ability to do so depends on Western investment
and on the willingness of other countries to use the Northern Sea Route,
according to Iogann Vais.
The Moscow correspondent says that
Moscow’s drive to achieve “complete control over the Arctic” has not received
the same attention as its aggression against Ukraine and military action in
Syria but may have even greater long-term consequences. That is why the
possibility US sanctions may block it is to critical to the future (cont.ws/@ottuda/843177).
Moscow’s interest in controlling the
Arctic is based on its calculations that the region contains 58 percent of the oil
and gas on the world’s sea beds, some 90 to 100 billion barrels of oil an dup
to 15 trillion cubic meters of gas, increasingly important bio resources, and the
key to trade between China and Europe via the Northern Sea Route, passage
across which is 15 days less than via the Suez Canal.
In support of its drive, Moscow has
built an entirely new port at Sabetta on the eastern shore of the Yamal
peninsula, opened new military camps and airports in six regions of the Arctic
and announced plans for 13 more airdromes and 10 radio location facilities, put
in service two new rocket coastal systems, and renewed plans to build a
northern railway.
But the most important of Moscow’s
actions, still far from complete, is the expansion of its icebreaker
fleet. At present, it has the largest
such fleet in the world, ten in all of which six are in service, and has begun
construction of three new super-ice breakers capable of moving through ice as
thick as three meters. They are scheduled to come on line in the next decade.
Moscow insists that all its action
are peaceful, but many in the West are skeptical about that. And a special
joint commission of the US Congress and the Council of Europe are currently
examining Russia’s program and considering whether it should fall under special
sanctions. Such restrictions could severely
restrict Russia’s plans.
The commission has in its possession
more than two terabytes of classified Russian information on its Arctic
program, Vais says, that were given to the body by a former employee of the Polar
Procuracy of the Russian Federation that was established only in March
2017. That suggests the data are very
current.
Members of the commission, he
continues, have already expressed skepticism on the basis of this documentation
that Russia’s plans in the Arctic are exclusively or even primarily peaceful,
noting that Russian submarines can make use of much of the Kremlin’s Arctic
program and be in a position to sink Western or Chinese shipping almost at
will.
That very threat alone constitutes a
serious challenge, one that sanctions, which would restrict Western investment
in various Russian projects and thus prevent the Kremlin from moving funds to its
military efforts in the north, could forestall.
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