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    Greater China
     Oct 14, 2009
SPEAKING FREELY
Debating the dragon-bear duet
By Anna Konopatskaya

Speaking Freely is an Asia Times Online feature that allows guest writers to have their say. Please click here if you are interested in contributing.

Over the past decade, China and Russia have adopted official hyperbole about mutually collaborative bilateral relations. Some top experts and analysts, however, have been questioning whether this reflects the beginning of a new and multipolar world order, or if instead Moscow is being pulled into a new form of resource patron-clientism through a host of arrangements in which China holds the upper hand.

Making sense of both sides of the argument will require not just a close examination of recent political developments but also a watchful eye on how Sino-Russian relations continue to develop.

Advances and agendas
The July 16, 2001, signing of the Treaty of Good-Neighborliness

  

and Friendly Cooperation Between the People's Republic of China and the Russian Federation (FCT, commonly known as the 2001 Sino-Russian Treaty of Friendship) framed a new chapter - one premised on a strategy for peaceful relations, economic cooperation, environmental security and diplomatic and geopolitical interreliance.

Since the signing, a number of other significant and positive developments have followed, including several high-level exchanges between senior officials, such as Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao's September 2004 visit to Moscow and Russia's then-president Vladimir Putin's October 2004 exchange visit.

As a result, the two countries have several significant political accomplishments - including putting aside enduring disputes like the Sino-Russian border conflict - and have prioritized strategic areas of joint cooperation such as combating international terrorism, preventing proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and furthering the issue of denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula and the continuation of six-party talks.

For some experts, such as, Bobo Lo, author of Axis of Convenience: Moscow, Beijing and the New Geopolitics, the improvement of Sino-Russian relations "is, for all its faults, one of the more convincing examples of positive-sum international relations today".

Others disagree. Stephen Kotkin, professor of History and International Affairs at Princeton University, for instance, suggests that an improved relationship between Moscow and Beijing may allow the Chinese to extract strategically important natural resources from Russia and extend their regional influence, but it affords little more than the pretense of a multi-polar world in which Moscow enjoys a central role.

For both Lo and Kotkin, the crux of Sino-Russian cooperation is a legacy of "pervasive mistrust" rooted in historical grievances, geopolitical competition, and structural factors. Clearly, a realistic forecast of Sino-Russian bilateral cooperation in the 21st century must take into account both economic and geopolitical realities - and there are more than a few ways to interpret the significance of Sino-Russian relations in each and every one of their manifestations.

In terms of geopolitics, China extracts considerable practical benefits in energy and weapons from Russia. Russia, in turn, achieves very real and measurable economic advantages from this relationship. How are these issues being interpreted?

Analysts generally begin from similar clusters of facts before rendering their interpretations. In terms of energy, the situation can be loosely defined as follows:

Much of the new Russian-Chinese trade and economic cooperation is predicated on ambitious agreements in the energy sector. Russia's current policy is to orient the gas industry in eastern Siberia and the Russian Far East to export gas supplies to China, with a goal of 68 billion cubic meters by 2020.

Recently, plans were finalized for a branch oil pipeline to transport 15 million tons of crude oil annually from the Skovorodinoin Siberia to the Chinese border city of Daqing. The proposed pipeline would increase Russia's share of China's oil imports to roughly 8% (up from around 4% now). The Chinese side has already funded an estimated $32 million to design this branch pipeline, and Transneft and China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) are in the final stages of negotiations on transit rates and service prices. Operations are set to start by the end of 2010.

Additionally, in February, China and Russia signed seven energy cooperation agreements to establish joint ventures for exploration and exploitation of oil and gas fields in Russia with refining and marketing based in China.

In terms of weapons technologies, according to US estimates Russia supplies China with 95% of its military hardware, including air defense systems, older combat aircraft and many classes of warships, including Kilo-class diesel submarines. China also remains an eager customer for Russia's military hardware blueprints.

In Kotkin's reading, this cooperation has severe practical limitations. Cooperation in the energy sector appears to be disadvantageous to Moscow in the long run. Factoring in the interest payments Russian companies will owe on their loans to the China Development Bank, the recent oil deals are estimated to result in prices of under $20 a barrel for China - less than half the global price at the time of the deal and less than one-third the market price for future deliveries in 2017.

Considering the plausibility of more advantageous energy deals that have been on the table with the US and European multinationals, Kotkin writes in the September/October issue of Foreign Affairs that Rosneft and Transeft's deal with China "looks like a giveaway".

Russia's weapons exports, for their part, also appear to scholars of Kotkin's pursuasion to be largely an historic artifact resulting from the arms embargo imposed on China by France, the United Kingdom, and the United States after the Tiananmen Square crackdown in 1989, coupled with Russia's desire to keep its defense industry alive.

Russian arms sales to China have declined in recent years, and that decline is seen as continuing - perhaps even as much as 75% in the immediate future, as Andrei Belyaninov, the CEO of Rosoboronexport, Russia's main official arms exporting corporation, warned in February. Both Putin and President Dmitry Medvedev have refused to sell China any items on the long shopping list of advanced, expensive ground warfare and close air support weapons that China still cannot produce but desperately needs to become a truly formidable military power.

The times, are they a-changing?
It is widely recognized that, until recently, political calculations prevailed over economic concerns in the development of Sino-Russian relations. And it is clear that political calculations remain important even for economic matters. For instance, Moscow's seeming economic capitulation to Beijing on the issue of energy exports may be a consequence of the obsession many Russian officials still harbor for denying the United States a strategic foothold in Russia’s energy sector.

However, in sharp divergence from the pessimistic view of scholars like Kotkin and Lo, there is also evidence that the political calculations of both China and Russia are truly converging around the establishment of a multi-polar world order. The two countries have agreed, for instance, that in addition to needing specific guidelines to expand trade and increase Chinese investment in the Russian economy between 2010 and 2020, both sides also must also strengthen their strategic and economic partnerships - including within the United Nations, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, and other international organizations.

For example, in the July 2005 "Joint Statement of the People's Republic of China and the Russian Federation Regarding the International Order of the 21st Century", the two countries codified strategic interactions not only in terms of a deepening of trust between Russia and China, but also via a framework for permanent consultations on global and regional security issues.

The paper outlines mutual commitments towards maintaining sovereignty and territorial integrity as well as to the formation of a new just and rational world order based on the primacy of international law, multilateralism, equality and mutual respect.

Under the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), Russian-Chinese regional cooperation has improved. In this framework, both Russia and China continue to emphasize that they do not intend to make a multilateral, sub-regional association in alliance against any other country or group of countries.

Strategic partnerships are also being developed around security issues under the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Regional Forum. One of the key advances that could result from this interaction is the improvement of the inter-regional anti-terrorism legal framework and anti-crime cooperation between Russia, China and Southeast Asia.

Russia has strongly advocated the establishment of linkages between the regional counter-terrorism center in Southeast Asia and the structure of the SCO Regional Anti-Terrorism, which will allow the two states to better coordinate efforts to crush terrorist movements that threaten the political stability and territorial integrity of these countries.

The road ahead
Is Russia truly entering into a veiled client-patron relationship with Beijing under the pretense of a multi-polar world? Or is the intended mutual economic advancement of both countries a more likely outcome?

By some measures, the contradictions that arise between Russia and China derive from their commitment to non-interference in each other's internal affairs and the political disagreements of their regional counterparts. The troubled politics of the SCO described by Kotkin and others may indeed be reflective of a profound asymmetry in Chinese-Russian relations.

But it is also important to keep in mind that a new political discourse has emerged in recent years - one that centers on mutual respect and trust that takes into account the long-term perspective and commitment to joint development.

While there is certainly evidence of a Chinese-Russian "axis of convenience", as Bobo Lo puts it, it is not entirely clear that such amounts merely to China's ascendency at the expense of Russia. The economic turnabout Russia has witnessed by catering to China's commodities demands has been impressive. Through the development of strategic bilateral relations with France, Germany, and Italy, Russia has also managed to blunt the collective power of the EU. Both countries clearly have something to gain.

Also important to bear in mind is that China has itself accepted a subsidiary role relative to the United States - with impressive economic gains as a result. By taking advantage of its strategic partnership with the United States while sometimes biting the bullet in the face of American dominance, Beijing finds ample room to pursue its national interests without paying the enormous costs of oppositional politics.

How does political discourse on Sino-Russian bilateral relations continue to change in frame and tenor? How are forums for regional cooperation developing (or stagnating)? How are each of the two countries aligning themselves vis-a-vis other issues of global significance? As one ponders such questions, it is important to keep an open mind and a watchful eye.

Anna Konopatskaya is a graduate from St Petersburg State Polytechnic University with a specialist degree in International Relations.

(Copyright 2009, Anna Konopatskaya)

Speaking Freely is an Asia Times Online feature that allows guest writers to have their say. Please click here if you are interested in contributing.


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