Many international actors have recognized the growing strategic and commercial importance of the Arctic Circle and its newly opening waterways.
In August 2017, the Russian tanker completed a northern expedition through the Arctic Circle, traveling from Norway to South Korea in the span of 19 days without an icebreaker escort. News of the voyage provided a jolt to an international community that had been anxiously watching what appeared to be the beginnings of an Arctic arms race.
Less than one year later, China made a dramatic entrance into the strategic arena of the Arctic Circle. On January 26, 2018, Chinas State Council Information Office released its first white paper on . The document announced plans for an Arctic addition to Chinas Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), which spans much of Asia and Europe. The Polar Silk Road aims to enhance cooperation between China and the Arctic nations such as Finland and Russia, while serving to expand Beijings reach into many untapped resources and largely ambiguous territorial claims.
Many observers have taken note of Chinas use of the phrase near-Arctic state to refer to its status in Arctic affairs. The change in designation from non-Arctic to near-Arctic seems to declare, in the eyes of many , an intent to project greater geopolitical influence in the region in the years to come.
As climate change continues to reshape the Arctic Circle, new trade routes are opening and granting access to many resources that have been historically inaccessible. Control of these resources, as well as the shipping routes surrounding them, will largely be a matter of which nations develop a presence in the region more quickly.
Russia, for instance, already has a serious footprint in the Arctic. Over the past few years it has been at a rate not seen since the Cold War. This has resulted in a fleet of icebreakers, among which six are nuclear. Russian investment in the Arctic has been the topic of consternation among NATO powers for the past several years. As partners in the Belt and Road, Russia and China have agreed to cooperate on the泭 in the coming years.
The combination of Russian military presence and Chinese economic investment in the Arctic could pose a real threat to US interests in the region. And yet, the United States has remained remarkably quiet on the Arctic scene. While technically a member of the , actual US involvement in Arctic affairs has traditionally been very limited and seems unlikely to change any time soon. The US currently has exactly one operational heavy icebreaker the Polar Star泭 and according to the it is unlikely to last until 2023, the earliest date by which a new icebreaker may be operational. Meanwhile, China has recently launched the , its first indigenously-built icebreaker, which will operate alongside its Ukrainian-made predecessor, the Snow Dragon, in order to further the goals of the Polar Silk Road project.
Many international actors have recognized the growing strategic and commercial importance of the Arctic Circle and its newly opening waterways. There are currently 13 non-local observer states in the Arctic Council. Although Russia and China have held the media spotlight in recent Arctic affairs, there are three other active observers from the Asia-Pacific region alone. Singapore, as well as Chinas rivals, Japan and South Korea, are among the observers and have been eyeing their own strategic initiatives. Singapore, for example, has been its Arctic presence and deepening ties to Russia in the process.
China, Russia and others are formulating strategies to exploit the altered conditions that climate change is bringing to the Arctic Circle. Meanwhile, the United States is currently led by an administration that does not believe in climate change, even going so far as to perpetuated by the Chinese. Failure to accept the scientific foundation of changing Arctic conditions naturally impedes strategic exploitation of those changes and may explain how the United States has thus far been outmaneuvered by its great power rivals in this arena.
This is not to say that the United States is taking no steps whatsoever. Prompted by a growing bipartisan calls to respond to the shifting strategic landscape in the northernmost reaches of the world, the Pentagon is currently and intends to a new strategy this summer. The US Navy also held its biennial Arctic military exercise in March in order to assess operational readiness in the region.
However, there has been little concrete progress in terms of expanding economic initiatives or deepening transportation capacity. The global race for Arctic influence is already well underway, and Chinas latest moves have put the country in a strong strategic position. As of right now, the United States is late off the starting block and needs to take immediate action before its too late to catch up.
*[Young Professionals in Foreign Policy is a partner institution of 51勛圖.]
The views expressed in this article are the authors own and do not necessarily reflect 51勛圖s editorial policy.
Photo Credit:泭泭/
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