"As polar ice melts, Russia, already a major Arctic power,
wants to make the region its own. China has ambitions for a “Polar Silk Road.”
And NATO is embracing Finland — and Sweden too, Washington hopes — giving the
alliance new reach in the Far North.
Climate change is accelerating and amplifying competition in
the Arctic as never before, opening the region to greater commercial and
strategic jostling just at a moment when Russia, China and the West are all
seeking to expand their military presence there.
The rising importance of the region is underscored by the
travels of Antony J. Blinken, the U.S. secretary of state, who will attend an
informal meeting of NATO foreign ministers in Norway on Thursday.
Mr. Blinken is making a point of visiting Sweden and Finland
as well, meeting the leaders of all three countries as they press Turkey to
ratify Sweden’s quick entry into NATO. He is scheduled to deliver a major
speech on Russia, Ukraine and NATO on Friday in Helsinki, the capital of NATO’s
newest member.
For a long time, countries were reluctant to discuss the
Arctic as a possible military zone. But that is quickly changing.
Events in Ukraine plus climate change make “a perfect
storm,” said Matti Pesu, an analyst at the Finnish Institute of International
Affairs. There is a new Cold War atmosphere, mixed with melting ice, which
affects military planning and opens up new economic possibilities and access to
natural resources.
“So all these are connected and are magnifying each other,”
Mr. Pesu said. “It makes the region intriguing.”
NATO alliance in fact has significant vulnerabilities in the
north.
Russia remains a vast Arctic power, with naval bases and
nuclear missiles stationed in the Far North but also along Russia’s western
edge: in the Kola Peninsula, near Norway, where Russia keeps most of its
nuclear-armed submarines, and in Kaliningrad, bordered by Poland and Lithuania.
With climate change, shipping routes are becoming less
icebound and easier to navigate, making the Arctic more accessible and
attractive for competitive commercial exploitation, as well as military
adventurism.
Russia has said it wants to make the Arctic its own — a
fifth military district, on a par with its other four — said Robert Dalsjo,
research director at the Swedish Defense Research Agency.
China has also been busy trying to establish itself in the
region and use new unfrozen routes, one reason the NATO considers China a significant
security challenge.
In its most recent strategy paper, adopted last summer in
Madrid, NATO declared Russia to be “the most significant and direct threat to
allies’ security and to peace and stability,” but for the first time addressed
China, saying that its “stated ambitions and coercive policies challenge our
interests, security and values.”
How to create a “northern bubble” to deter Russia and
monitor China is one of NATO’s newest and biggest challenges.
In response to NATO’s enlargement, “Russia is putting
increasing emphasis on the Arctic, where they’re stronger and less surrounded
by NATO,” said Mr. Pesu of the Finnish Institute. Russia retains its air power,
northern fleet, nuclear submarines and nuclear-armed missiles in the northern
realms.
“So it remains a pretty urgent concern,” he said. Finland,
Sweden and Norway “see this most urgently,” even if some in NATO do not, he
said. As a consequence, Finland, Sweden, Norway and Denmark have decided to
merge their air forces, creating one with more planes than either Britain or
France.
Until now, competition in the region was largely mediated
through the Arctic Council, founded in 1996, which includes Canada, Denmark,
Finland, Iceland, Norway, Russia, Sweden and the United States, and promotes
research and cooperation.
But it does not have a security component, and soon all
members but Russia will be NATO members. The council has been “paused” since
the events in Ukraine in February 2022. When Russia’s chairmanship ended in
May, Norway took over, so activity may pick up again.
Gen. Philip M. Breedlove, then the supreme allied commander
Europe, called for “an anti-access area denial” — to deny Russia entry to the
Baltic Sea from Kaliningrad, the isolated Russian toehold with access to the
sea.
China started making inroads around 2018, trying to buy
ports in Finland and mines in Greenland, opening scientific research stations
as it pursues its “Polar Silk Road,” Ms. Wieslander said, prompting former
President Trump to offer to buy Greenland.
Washington started reinvesting militarily in the Arctic then
with more ships, planes and military exercises, as did other NATO countries in
the region. In 2018 NATO went so far as to set up a new operational command — a
kind of regional headquarters that plans and conducts military operations to defend
specific areas of NATO. The new command, based in Norfolk, Va., is navy-focused
and defends the Atlantic sea routes, Scandinavia and the Arctic.
There remains a concern that China, which now has even
closer ties to Russia, remains active in the Far North, building big
icebreakers. “China will reach Europe through the Arctic,” Ms. Wieslander said.
One main question is whether the real Russian threat to
Scandinavia will come from the sea, as Norway fears, or from the land, with a
possible Russian invasion of the Baltic States or Finland, then a move
westward.
Both Finland and Sweden, when it joins, want to be part of
the same NATO operational command, given their long history of defense
cooperation.
Norway belongs to the Norfolk command, and there is a logic
to making both Finland and Sweden part of that command, since reinforcements
would likely come from the West, across the Atlantic.
But there is perhaps more logic, given the current threat
from Russia, for them to join the land-oriented command based in Brunssum, the
Netherlands, which is charged with defending Central and Eastern Europe,
including Poland and the Baltic nations.
“There is logic for both,” said Niklas Granholm, deputy
director of studies at the Swedish Defense Research Agency. “It’s not yet
resolved.”
According to the Helsingin Sanomat newspaper, NATO is
recommending putting both countries in the Brunssum command, despite Finland’s
early interest in being part of Norfolk, which Sauli Niinisto, Finland’s
president, visited in March.
That’s because it is easier for Finland to be reinforced
from Norway and Sweden, Mr. Pesu, the Finnish Institute analyst, noted.
The fear is that a modernized Russian Northern Fleet could
swing down through the straits between Greenland, Iceland and Britain, a move
known in NATO as a “red right hook,” to cut sea lanes and underwater cables and
threaten the American East Coast with cruise missiles.
Mr. Dalsjo of the Swedish Defense Research Agency, calling
himself a heretic, cautions in a recent paper that this threat is real but may
be overblown.
Russia is predominantly a land power, and its northern fleet
is considerably smaller than it was during the Cold War, when there were
worries about the kind of major Soviet naval attack depicted in the Tom Clancy
novel “Red Storm Rising.”
“If they didn’t do it then with 150 ships,” Mr. Dalsjo
asked, “why would they do it now with 20?”
Komentarų nėra:
Rašyti komentarą