Eurasia’s Great Game: India, Japan and Europe play to Putin’s needs
By James M.
Dorsey
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version of this story is available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr, Patreon, Podbean and Castbox.
Eurasia’s
Great Game is anything but simple and straightforward.
A burgeoning
alliance between China and Russia that at least for now is relegating potential
differences between the two powers to the sidelines has sparked a complex
geopolitical dance of its own.
With India,
Japan and Europe seeking to drive a wedge between the two Asian powers, Central
Asian states, where anti-Chinese sentiment is rising, are quietly rooting that
Asian rivalries will grant them greater manoeuvrability.
Indian prime
minister Narendra Modi on a visit to Russia this month during which he attended
the annual Eastern Economic Forum in Vladivostok, established to attract Asian
investment in the country’s Far East, announced a
US$1 billion credit line to fund development of the region.
Mr. Modi and
Russian president Vladimir Putin also agreed to establish a maritime link
between the Far East’s capital, Vladivostok, and Chennai that would reduce
transport time from 40 to 24 days.
The connection
potentially could serve as an extension of the Indian Ocean Corridor that links
India to Japan and the Pacific and competes with China’s pearl of strings, a
series of ports across Asia in which China has invested heavily.
In contrast
to Mr. Modi, Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe, who has attended the forum
since its inception in 2015, did not announce any major deals in response to
Mr. Putin’s insistence that “the development of the Russian Far East,
strengthening its economic and innovation potential, and raising the living
standards of its residents among others, is our
key priority and fundamental national goal."
With the
trans-Atlantic alliance fraying at the edges, Markus Ederer, the European
Union’s ambassador to Russia and one of the EU’s top diplomats, appeared to
recognize Mr. Putin’s priorities when he urged
the bloc, to engage on a massive scale with Russia on some of the most tricky
political and security aspects in their relationship despite differences
over Russian aggression in Ukraine and Georgia, human rights and alleged
Russian interference in various European elections.
In a memorandum
to senior bureaucrats, Mr. Ederer suggested that 5G mobile communications,
personal data protection, the Artic, regional infrastructure and the
development of joint policies on matters such as customs and standards by the
EU, Russia, Norway and Iceland, should be topics on the EU-Russian agenda.
Mr. Ederer said
that these were areas “where leaving a clear field to our competitors by not
engaging would be most detrimental to EU interests.”
He argued
that a “pragmatic” move towards “enhanced co-ordination” with Russia was needed
to combat “Eurasian competition” as China’s influence grows.
The EU
“would have everything to lose by ignoring the tectonic strategic shifts in
Eurasia. Engaging not only with China but (also) with Russia…is a necessary
condition to be part of the game and play our cards where we have comparative
advantage,” Mr. Ederer asserted.
Messrs.
Modi, Abe and Ederer see opportunity in what Thomas Graham, a former U.S.
diplomat and managing director of Kissinger Associates, describes as Russia’s
need for “diversity of strategic partners in the (Far East) to maintain its
strategic autonomy (from China) going forward.”
The EU,
India and Japan hope to capitalize not only on Russia’s requirement for
diversified investment but also Mr. Putin’s need to counter widespread
anti-Chinese sentiment in the Far East that has turned against his government
at a time that protest in Russia is accelerating and after Mr.
Putin’s party this month lost a third of its seats in the Moscow district
council.
Public
sentiment east of the Urals is critical of perceived Chinese encroachment on
the region’s natural resources including water, particularly in the
Trans-Baikal region.
A petition
initiated earlier this year by prominent Russian show business personalities
opposing Chinese plans to build a water bottling plant on the shores of Lake
Baikal attracted
more than 800,000 signatures, signalling the depth of popular resentment
and pitfalls of the Russian alliance with China.
Protests
further erupted earlier this year in multiple Russian cities against
Chinese logging in the Far East that residents and environmentalists charge has
spoilt Russian watersheds and is destroying the habitats of the endangered
Siberian tiger and Amur leopard.
The
protesters, who also denounced
construction of housing for Chinese workers, are demanding a ban on Russian timber
exports to China.
Underlying
the anti-Chinese protests is the lopsided nature of economic relations that
Russia scholar Leo Aaron says fits Karl Marx and Vladimir Lenin’s definition of
colonial trade, in which one country becomes a raw material appendage of
another.
“China is
Russia’s second-largest trading partner (after the EU) and Russia’s largest
individual partner in both exports and imports. For China, the
Russian market is at best second-rate. Russia ranks tenth in Chinese
exports and does not make it into the top ten in either imports or total
trade,” Mr. Aaron said.
He noted
that three-quarters of Russia’s exports to China were raw materials and
resources as opposed to consumer goods, electronics and machinery that account
for the bulk of Chinese sales to Russia.
European,
Indian and Japanese efforts to capitalize on anti-Chinese sentiment taps into a
deeply embedded vein.
Writing
under the pen name P. Ukhtubuzhsky, Russian author Nikolai Dmitrievich
Obleukhov warned already in 1911 that “Russians are being displaced by the
yellow races who seize commerce, industry, wages, and so on… God guides people.
Those nations who protect Good and Truth will be victorious. If Russia,
carrying the light of Orthodoxy, faces in Asia the yellow races wallowing in
the darkness of paganism, there cannot be any doubt as to the outcome of this
struggle.”
Mr. Putin,
presiding over a country in economic trouble, can’t create the margins of
manoeuvrability that he needs on his own. He hopes that India, Japan and Europe
will come to his aid.
Dr. James
M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at Nanyang Technological University’s S.
Rajaratnam School of International Studies, an adjunct senior research fellow
at the National University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute and co-director
of the University of Wuerzburg’s Institute of Fan Culture
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