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[June 25, 2012] [ Printed Version ]
A Distant Neighbor: Russia’s Search to Find Its Place in East AsiaBy Tsuneo Akaha
HISTORICALLY, EAST ASIAN countries have tended to see Russia as a “distant neighbor” with a distinct civilization —
neither European nor Asian — and political and strategic interests at odds with their own.1 Since the end of the Cold
War, however, Russia has undergone sweeping and often tumultuous changes, politically, economically and socially. As a
result, its foreign and security relations with the neighboring countries of East Asia have improved substantially. Today,
as President Vladimir Putin and Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev look to stabilize national politics and modernize the
nation’s economic foundations, Moscow is paying greater attention to Russia’s role in regional integration in East Asia;2
one sign of this is that the APEC summit in September 2012 will be held in Vladivostok, the largest city in Russia’s Far
East. Moscow is reported to have invested $15 billion or more in the Primorsky region ahead of the summit, an amount
60 times Vladivostok’s annual city budget.3
Does Moscow have a realistic strategy for taking advantage of its Asian neighbors’ economic dynamism by further
expanding bilateral political relations and becoming part of the development of multilateral co-operation and integration
in East Asia? Does Moscow have a realistic vision and effective strategy for turning its Far Eastern territories, long a
front-line fortress against foreign threats, into a “bridge to East Asia?” The Russian government is investing tens of
billions of dollars in large-scale infrastructure development in this long-neglected part of the country. Russia’s growing
engagement with Asia is also evident in its participation for the first time, along with the United States, in the East Asia
Summit (EAS) held in Indonesia in November 2011. Many obstacles remain, however, to Russia’s constructive and
effective participation in East Asia’s deepening regional integration.
Geographically, Russia is very much a part of East Asia. In other aspects, however, Russia’s position in this region is not
as well defined. Politically, Russia has more or less normal relations with all East Asian countries, both small and large,
developed and developing, although the depth, scope and nature of those relations vary widely. Its bilateral trade and
economic relations with regional neighbors vary from somewhat significant, as with China and Japan, to virtually
negligible, as with most Southeast Asian countries. Russia’s impact on the international relations of the region has long
been based largely on its ideological and military interests vis-à-vis the other major contenders for influence in Northeast
Asia, i.e. Japan in the first half of the 20th century and the US and China during the second half. However, with the end
of the Cold War and the demise of the Soviet Union came the end of ideological and military rivalries among the regional
powers and a precipitous weakening of Moscow’s political influence in the region. Most importantly, post-Soviet Russia
virtually disappeared from the strategic radar of the US, the lone superpower in the world and the dominant political
actor in post-Cold War East Asia, forcing Moscow to reach out to Beijing in forging a “strategic partnership” to counter
the dominance of the US in the regional political landscape. Moscow’s co-operation with Beijing, both bilaterally and
multilaterally, for example, through the Shanghai Co-operation Organization (SCO), has helped Russia maintain its
relevance to regional politics. Moscow has also retained a modicum of influence in the region through its participation in
the Six-Party talks over nuclear developments in North Korea. Today, however, none of the big powers in the region
considers Russia a major security factor either positively or negatively.
One area where Russia is an important and growing factor is the energy sector. The nation has the potential to exploit its
energy resources — namely oil and natural gas — not only for its economic development but also as a source of political
influence, particularly vis-à-vis the energy-hungry Northeast Asian countries — China, Japan and South Korea. Energy is
no longer simply an economic asset but also holds important implications for Russia’s strategic position in the region
and beyond. With some of the world’s largest oil and natural gas reserves within its territory, Russia has developed an
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active energy diplomacy, wooing foreign energy trade partners and foreign investment in the exploration and
exploitation of its rich reserves.4 Elsewhere Moscow has attempted to exploit foreign partners’ dependence on its energy
supplies in its foreign policy.5 Today, one cannot describe Russia’s role in international relations without reference to
energy. One may go so far as to suggest that energy has become one of the essential parts of Russia’s identity in the
world.
What are the implications of Russia’s unbalanced presence in East Asia for its role in the region’s future, which will be
characterized by deepening market integration and institutionalized multilateralism for facilitating and managing
regional integration? This brief analysis will locate Russia in East Asia in terms of the main elements of its relations with
the region’s major powers in political, economic, and military-defense spheres and explore its prospects as a constructive
partner in regional integration.
Sizing Up Russian Power
One key indicator of a nation’s relative power is its population size. Russia’s population in 2012, 138 million, was the
third largest among East Asian countries, after China (1.34 billion) and the US (314 million), and ahead of Japan (127
million). However, demographic trends in Russia (along with Japan) indicate a declining vitality, with population growth
in 2009 estimated at -0.48 percent (-0.07 percent in Japan), compared with estimated growth rates of 0.89 percent in
the United States, and 0.48 percent in China (see Table 1).
Russia’s GDP in purchasing power parity (PPP) terms in 2011 stood at $2.38 trillion, far smaller than the United States’
$15.04 trillion, China’s $11.29 trillion and Japan’s $4.39 trillion. Russia’s per capita GDP, at $16,700, compared
favorably with China’s $8,400, but lagged far behind the United States’ $48,100, Japan’s $34,300, and South Korea’s
$31,700 (see Table 1).
Russia’s weight in East Asia has long been based on its military might and presence in the region, and the nation still
remains a formidable military power. Its defense expenditure, estimated at $64 billion, was the third largest in the
region after the United States ($689 billion) and China ($129 billion), and exceeded Japan’s $54 billion and South
Korea’s $28 billion.6
Relations with East Asian Powers
With its population shrinking, its economic performance wanting, yet its military capacity remaining substantial,
Russia’s political performance in East Asia has been very limited. As the processes of regional integration around the
world have social, economic, security, and political dimensions, the prospects for Russia’s potential role in regional
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integration in East Asia are mixed.
Russia’s most important political partner in East Asia is China.7 However, the relationship, defined as a “strategic
partnership,” has its limits.8 Moscow and Beijing share a common interest in denying the US a monopoly on the regional
political agenda. They have resolved their long-standing border dispute, enjoyed frequent reciprocal visits by their
leaders and been united in opposition to US political interests, such as the US-led invasion of Iraq, nuclear developments
in Iran, the “Arab Spring” and the impending civil war in Syria. The generally strong political ties between Russia and
China are limited, however, by a number of bilateral issues. Bilateral trade has been growing much more slowly than
their leaders had hoped. Moscow’s ambiguous position on supplying oil and gas to China via pipelines has frustrated
China’s aggressive energy import policy, confounding the Sino-Japanese competition for the energy resources in Siberia
and the Russian Far East.9 The presence of Chinese traders, workers and tourists in Russia’s Far Eastern territories has
also complicated bilateral policy co-ordination, exposing different interests and priorities between the two countries’
central governments and their regional leaders.10 Although earlier fears of China’s “creeping expansion” or “peaceful
invasion” of the Russian Far East have dissipated due to improvement in bilateral migration management between
Moscow and Beijing since the mid-1990s, such fears may be easily rekindled as the balance of economic power continues
to shift in China’s favor.11 Even the notable progress that Russia and China have made in forging multilateral co-
operation through the SCO is unlikely to help the two sides overcome the effects of the mutual suspicion and their
changing balance of economic power.12
Russia has expanded bilateral trade and economic relations with Japan to their highest level since the end of the Cold
War, but they are far from reaching the full potential indicated by their geographical proximity and the complementarity
of their economic assets and needs.13 Although Russia’s political relations with Japan are potentially as important as
those with China, the long-standing sovereignty dispute between the two countries over the Southern Kuril
Islands/Northern Territories remains a formidable barrier to building a relationship of mutual trust.14 Recent events
have elevated the political salience of the territorial dispute. The leadership in Moscow has intensified its appeal to
patriotism and used the islands issue to this end. On July 7, 2010, the Russian Duma passed legislation establishing
September 2 as the date to commemorate the end of the Great Patriotic War, that date in 1945 being the day when Japan
signed the instrument of surrender. On Sept. 28, 2010, then-President Dmitry Medvedev and Chinese President Hu
Jintao issued a joint statement commemorating the 65th anniversary of the war and pledged further deepening of the
Sino-Russian strategic partnership. This was followed by Medvedev’s visit to Kunashiri Island on Nov. 1, 2010, which
Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan called “an unforgivable outrage.” In response, an ultranationalist group in Japan
desecrated the Russian national flag at a demonstration near the Russian embassy in Tokyo.
Ironically, Medvedev’s visit to the disputed island is a demonstration of Moscow’s interest in developing the economic
infrastructure of the Russian Far East, including the Southern Kurils, for which Russia is courting Japan as an important
economic partner. Japan also sees mutual benefits in closer economic ties with Russia to diversify its energy supplies,
particularly after the March 2011 nuclear reactor meltdown in Fukushima and the subsequent shutdown of all of the
nation’s nuclear reactors pending safety checks. For example, Japan has indicated interest in co-operating with Russia in
building a liquefied natural gas (LNG) plant in Vladivostok. The project is designed to further diversify sources of LNG
supplies to Japan and reduce its current heavy reliance on Asian and Oceanic sources. In the fiscal year 2009, Russia
accounted for 6.5 percent of Japan’s LNG imports, but the planned project will boost the level above 10 percent.15 We
will turn to this aspect of Russia’s policy in East Asia below.
Following his resumption of the presidency in May 2012, Vladimir Putin expressed readiness to resolve the island
dispute if Japan was willing to compromise. With nationalist sentiments mounting on both sides, however, the prospects
for a resolution are very dim. In addition, the fragile political leadership in Japan severely constrains Tokyo’s
maneuverability on this issue.
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Moscow’s relations with Washington are important on their own merit as well as for the influence they exert on its
relations with both Beijing and Tokyo. During the early years of the Cold War, Russia and China were ideological allies
opposed to the US, but a political rift and border disputes between the socialist giants led to a split in the socialist camp
and paved the way for Sino-American rapprochement in the 1970s. The end of the Cold War seemed to remove any
ideological sources of division between Moscow, Beijing and Washington, but the United States’ emergence as the sole
superpower after the demise of the Soviet Union brought the former socialist allies closer. The resolution of Sino-
Russian border disputes in the 1990s also brought Russia and China closer.16 Similarly, Russia’s ideological conflict with
the US defined its political relations with Japan during the Cold War, but the end of the superpower conflict slowly led to
warmer Russo-Japanese relations. This seemed to raise hopes for a territorial resolution between Russia and Japan but,
ironically, it also elevated the political salience of the island dispute in Japan. The Korean crisis, namely North Korea’s
nuclear weapons and missile development program, has also brought Moscow, Beijing and Tokyo into closer co-
operation, although their differences remain. Until North Korea’s repeated nuclear weapons tests and missile launches in
2009, Moscow and Beijing rejected Washington and Tokyo’s call for sanctions against Pyongyang. Following North
Korea’s threatening behavior — and its declaration that it would not return to the Six-Party talks, however, Russia and
China have come to accept the need to use sanctions to induce a more conciliatory policy from Pyongyang. All said,
however, Moscow’s influence in the Six-Party talks is very limited, especially in comparison with that of China and the
US.17 Russia’s opposition to US hard-line policies toward North Korea, as well as toward Iran and Syria, is likely to
continue under Putin’s leadership.
Russia’s engagement with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is fairly recent and its influence at
present is marginal.18 In 1996, Russia became an ASEAN dialogue partner, and on Nov. 29, 2004, it acceded to the
Treaty of Amity and Co-operation in Southeast Asia of 1976 (the Bali Treaty). In November 2011, Russia, along with the
US, joined the East Asia Summit for the first time, indicating the growing acceptance of Russia by ASEAN countries.
Russia also participated for the first time in the ASEAN Defense Ministers’ Meeting in October 2010, along with the 10
ASEAN members, China, the US, Japan, South Korea, India, Australia and New Zealand. Russia wanted to join the Asia-
Europe Meeting (ASEM) since the multilateral dialogue forum was created in 1996.19 Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov’s
participation in ASEM in Brussels in October 2010 marked Russia’s first appearance. The question of whether Russia
should be considered a European or an Asian country stood in the way of its participation in ASEM. Having failed to join
as a European country (because Russia is not a member of the European Union), Russia was able to join ASEM as a
“Eurasian country.”20
Russia’s Place in East Asia’s Economy
How important is Russia as a trade partner in East Asia? In 2005, Russia’s trade with the other countries of the region
amounted to barely 2 percent of the entire trade within Northeast Asia. In contrast, China (excluding Hong Kong)
represented 33 percent, Japan 26 percent and the US and South Korea each 12 percent, of the total intra-regional
trade.21 This picture does not change even if we look at exports and imports separately — Russia’s exports and imports
to other Northeast Asian countries, including the US, amounted to only 2 percent of the region’s total.22
In 2005, Russia’s trade with its Northeast Asian neighbors, including the US, constituted around 12 percent of its
worldwide trade. Clearly, Russia finds most of its trade partners elsewhere in the world. By contrast, China’s trade within
the region represented around 60 percent of its global trade, for Japan the figure was
about 62 percent and for South Korea more than 55 percent
(see Table 2).23 Trade in Northeast Asia is significantly
more important to other regional countries than it is to
Russia, and Russia is the least important trade partner to
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the other countries of Northeast Asia. As Table 3 shows,
Russia’s most important trade partner in Northeast Asia in
2005 was China, with 44 percent of Russian exports in the
region going to China and 33 percent of its imports in the
region coming from China. The second most important
trade partner of Russia was the United States (26 percent of
Russia’s exports and 21 percent of imports),
followed by Japan (13 percent and 26 percent). 24 In short, Russia is the least integrated East Asian economy vis-à-vis
the other economies of the region. Even among the Northeast Asian countries, Russia is a small, if not insignificant,
trade partner.
However, Russia’s potential role in regional trade is
substantial, particularly in the energy sector. As noted at the
outset, Russia holds huge reserves of oil and natural gas. In
2006, it possessed the eighth largest proven oil reserves in
the world. Russia, with 60 billion barrels, followed Saudi
Arabia (264.3 billion), Canada (178.8 billion), Iran (132.5
billion), Iraq (115 billion), Kuwait (101.5 billion), the United
Arab Emirates (97.8 billion) and Venezuela (79.7 billion).
Russia’s proven natural gas reserves (1,680 trillion cubic
feet) were the largest in the world, ahead of Iran (971
trillion), Qatar (911 trillion), Saudi Arabia (241 trillion),
United Arab Emirates (214 trillion),
the US (193 trillion), Nigeria (185 trillion), Algeria (161 trillion) and Venezuela (151 trillion).25 If successfully developed,
these resources can boost Russia’s economic profile to unprecedented levels.
This has several implications. First, to the extent that Moscow relies on its ability to develop and export its energy
resources for pursuing some of its foreign policy goals, global energy prices will have a major impact on Russia’s ability
to leverage those resources. Second, the development of the resources in question requires substantial investment in
infrastructure, including pipelines and other transportation facilities as well as refineries and petrochemical production
facilities. This in turn calls for investment from foreign partners. Third, the nation’s energy reserves may also be
exploited to fuel political rivalries between their potential importers, such as China and Japan. Indeed, there has already
been much written on this aspect of Russia’s international behavior. 26 Fourth, while Russia enjoys unprecedented
energy export revenues, the nation also needs to diversify its economy, gradually reducing its dependence on that very
lucrative sector. Does Moscow have the wisdom and the political will to allocate a growing portion of its revenue to the
development of the non-energy sector? In contrast to the modern and post-modern economic structures of its East Asian
neighbors, will Russia remain largely an exporter of primary commodities and an importer of high-value-added
products? Former President Medvedev answered this question in the negative when he stated in his speech “Go, Russia”
in September 2009:
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The global economic crisis has shown that our affairs are far from being in the best state. Twenty years of tumultuous
change has not spared our country from its humiliating dependence on raw materials. Our current economy still reflects
the major flaw of the Soviet system: it largely ignores individual needs. With a few exceptions domestic business does not
invent nor create the necessary things and technology that people need. We sell things that we have not produced, raw
materials or imported goods. Finished products produced in Russia are largely plagued by their extremely low
competitiveness.27 (Emphases added.)
Medvedev went on to point out that contemporary Russia is plagued by three “social ills” and that the nation needs to
overcome them if it is to regain its great power status in the increasingly competitive world. As he put it, one of the social
ills was “centuries of economic backwardness and the habit of relying on the export of raw materials, actually exchanging
them for finished products.”28 (Emphasis added.)
We will return to this question when we discuss the role of the Russian Far East in the nation’s relations with the
neighboring Asian countries.
How Russia Sees China, Japan & the United states
Russia has been geographically close but culturally and historically distant from East Asian societies, and most Russians
are oriented more toward Europe. The post-Soviet search for national identity among the Russian elite says much about
their ambivalence toward the international community, including East Asia.
This does not necessarily mean that there is no possibility of
Russians developing social and cultural ties with other
peoples of the region. The presence of Asians in Russia,
including in its Far Eastern territories, as well as the
growing number of Russians resident in neighboring Asian
countries will no doubt contribute to the growth of
transnational networks of individual and professional
linkages involving Russian nationals. For the networks to
become a significant
integrating force in East Asia, however, tens of thousands, even hundreds of thousands of Russians need to join those
networks, but this is not a likely prospect in the foreseeable future. . On the contrary, the population in the Russian Far
East has dropped from a peak of around 8 million in the late 1980s to about 6.5 million today, a consequence of internal
migration from the region to European Russia in the post-Soviet years of economic stagnation and social instability in
the Russian Far East.
How do Russians themselves view their own country and its
relations with the neighboring countries of Asia? Some
recent public opinion polls in Russia offer interesting
answers.
According to a 2009 public opinion survey by the Levada
Analytical Center,29 Russians tend to view their own
political evolution as unique and not readily comparable
with the experience in the West
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(see Table 4). Nor do they have any illusions about the state of their economy, with one-third of the respondents thinking
their country is backward with a primitive raw material-based economy (see Table 5), echoing former President
Medvedev’s concern noted earlier.
In another public opinion survey conducted by the Levada Analytical Center in 2009, 32 percent of respondents believed
Russia should co-operate with China in implementing its foreign policy, compared with 22 percent and 15 percent
choosing Japan and the US, respectively, in the same context.30 Meanwhile, 18 percent of respondents considered China
one of the five closest friends and allies of Russia, after
Belarus at 50 percent and Kazakhstan at 38 percent (see
Table 6). In comparison, only 5 percent considered Japan in
the same light. The US did not even appear among the top
20 countries on the list of closest friends and allies; on the
contrary, 45 percent of the respondents named the US
among the five most hostile and unfriendly countries toward
Russia, second only to Georgia (62 percent). Only 3 percent
put Japan and China on the list of most hostile and
unfriendly countries. Even fewer respondents (1 percent)
considered North Korea in a negative light. An
overwhelming majority (78 percent) of the respondents
showed favorable attitudes toward Japan (see Table 7).31
Russians’ interest in co-operation with Japan relates
overwhelmingly to technological and economic aspects,
although there is also interest in bilateral co-operation in
the energy sector and development of Eastern Siberia and
the Russian Far East, as well as in the role of bilateral co-
operation in maintaining political balance in Asia-Pacific.
While a majority (55 percent) of respondents in the Levada
survey saw the need to conclude a peace treaty with Japan
(see Table 8), an overwhelming majority of 82 percent was
opposed to territorial concessions to Japan (see Table 9).
The Role of the Russian Far East
If Russia is to expand its economic ties with East Asian countries, its Far Eastern territories will be an essential link.32 In
this context, the Russia Far East represents both an opportunity and a burden for Moscow. It presents an opportunity
because it is geographically adjacent to the dynamic East Asian economies and can and does serve as an entry point for
capital, technology, services and labor from the neighboring countries. During the Soviet period,
however, Moscow failed to develop the necessary
infrastructure in the Far East to take advantage of these
complementarities. Although post-Soviet Russia appears
interested in engaging China, Japan, South Korea and the
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US in economic co-operation based on market principles, its
unpredictable behavior in international transactions, such
as in the offshore oil and gas development in Sakhalin, has
frustrated international business partners. The numerous
pipeline projects in Eastern Siberia and the Far East have
also suffered from a lack of consistency and
stability in Moscow’s economic strategy in relation to potential partners in development projects in those territories.33
There are real and potential opportunities as well as
liabilities that Russia’s Far East represents for Moscow.34
The most obvious advantage the region enjoys is its
abundant natural resources, which puts it in a
complementary position vis-à-vis the resource-hungry
economies of East Asia. Second, the region’s geographical
proximity to East Asia offers Russian exporters an
advantage over exporters in distant
locations. The export of value-added products in Russia stands a good chance of improving the nation’s balance of trade
relative to the East Asian economies if the exports are of high quality and price-competitive. Third, the Russian Far East
needs large investment capital for its industrial modernization and infrastructure development, and Asia’s high savings
and capital accumulation might be exploited if the investment climate in the Far Eastern region were substantially
improved. Fourth, as with investment capital, the vast array of
quality technologies available in East Asia can offer
substantial assistance with the industrial modernization of
the Russian Far East. Fifth, the Russian Far East stands to
benefit from a well-managed import of cheap Chinese labor,
particularly in those sectors where labor shortages are
almost chronic including agriculture, construction and
services.
Arguably the largest disadvantage that the Russian Far East has is its small and declining population, which saps the
vitality of the region’s economy in terms of economic output and the consumer market. After peaking at around 8 million
in the late 1980s, the region’s population slid to less than 7 million in 2010, with further declines expected going
forward.35 Second, the abundance of natural resources in the region is also a source of weakness to the extent that
Moscow defines the Far East’s role almost exclusively as a source of raw materials for domestic use or for export. That
limits infrastructure development to projects that relate directly to the exploration and development of those resources
to the neglect of modern industrial and social needs. A related problem is the harm the development of natural resources
has done and continues to do to the region’s natural environment and the health of the local populations.36 Fourth, the
transportation, communication and other basic infrastructure of the region needs substantial improvement if it is to
support the level of economic activity and population growth required to sustain a viable future in the context of the
growing economic competition in East Asia. However, there is very little indigenous investment capital in the region, a
fifth major disadvantage the Russian Far East suffers. This means the region must continue to depend on “subsidies”
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from Moscow and investment from foreign sources. Sixth, the distance from Russia’s center — Moscow — has been an
obvious disadvantage for the Russian Far East in that the sheer geographical distance has kept transportation costs quite
high. Foreign investment in infrastructure development in the region would lighten the burden on Moscow but large-
scale investment is not likely unless and until Moscow shows an unequivocal commitment to the economic development
and modernization of the region and Russia proves itself to be a reliable supplier of raw materials exports to foreign
partners. Seventh, and finally, the interests and priorities of the center and the periphery are often at odds with each
other. For example, the strategic partnership between Moscow and Beijing has not been translated into a stable
relationship between the Russian Far East and China’s northeastern provinces. The visible gap in infrastructure
development between the Chinese and Russian sides of the Far Eastern border has been a sour spot in cross-border
relations, and many residents of the Far Eastern communities continue to harbor anti-immigrant sentiments even
though border management has improved substantially since the mid-1990s.37
Does Moscow have the political will and commitment to invest the necessary financial resources to promote the
advantages and reduce the disadvantages of its Far East? What is required is a major reorientation of Russia’s priorities
toward its territories there. Will Moscow translate its recent public pronouncements about major investment in modern
infrastructure ahead of the 2012 APEC summit into a sustained development program long after the photo opportunities
at the meeting are over? It is reported that the event might attract $100 billion in investment to the Russian Far East and
that spending on summit-related activities has already boosted the region’s economy.38 The question remains, however,
whether Moscow will sustain such investment far beyond the summit or whether the investment is simply a shot in the
arm with only short-term and limited benefit to the region.39 Skeptics who have watched Moscow’s numerous past plans
for the region’s development and modernization evaporate may well be justified in their continuing doubts. On the other
hand, will the neighboring countries, namely China, Japan and South Korea, commit public funds into the infrastructure
development required even to realize the existing pipeline projects in Eastern Siberia and the Far East? For this to
happen, Moscow must be fully committed to develop and deliver the promised oil and natural gas supplies to its East
Asian neighbors. Unfortunately, there are as many international skeptics as there are domestic doubters in this regard.
Russia and Regional Integration in East Asia
Russia has been expanding its participation in multilateral frameworks for international co-operation in East Asia since
the 1990s. In Northeast Asia, Russia has been a participant in the Six-Party talks over the problem of North Korea’s
nuclear program. However, Moscow’s influence in the multilateral talks is limited, particularly in comparison with that
of the other parties to the forum. It has exercised its influence through co-ordination with Beijing on the way to deal with
North Korea’s nuclear and missile development and military provocations, consistently arguing against sanctions against
Pyongyang. Although Russia assumed the chairmanship of the task force under the Six-Party framework to discuss
multilateral security architecture beyond the Six-Party talks, North Korea quit the multilateral talks in 2009 and no
progress has been made on the establishment of a longer-term security framework.40
Russia’s engagement with multilateral institutions in Southeast Asia has lagged behind other major regional powers like
China and Japan.41 This is largely due to Russia’s limited economic ties with Southeast Asia and also because of
Moscow’s loss of sustained interest in the region in the aftermath of the Cold War. During the Cold War, Russia viewed
Southeast Asia as a theater of ideological rivalry with Beijing and was deeply engaged in the region, particularly through
its support of Vietnam. The end of the Cold War and the Sino-Russian rapprochement ended Russia’s active engagement
in this part of Asia. It took nearly a decade before Moscow began to undertake diplomatic efforts to regain its influence in
Southeast Asia. Russia joined the ASEAN Regional Forum (ARF) in 1994. In 1996, Russia became an ASEAN dialogue
partner and in 2004 Moscow signed the Treaty on Amity and Co-operation. Moscow recognized the growing importance
of Southeast Asia and made serious efforts to develop diplomatic and economic ties with ASEAN countries, particularly
Vietnam, Malaysia and Indonesia, and has been holding annual summit meetings with ASEAN since 2005. Furthermore,
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on Oct. 11-13, 2010, Russia joined the ASEAN Defense Ministers’ meeting for the first time, along with China, the US,
Japan, South Korea, India, Australia and New Zealand. Also in October 2010 Russia, together with Australia and New
Zealand, took part in the Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM), a multilateral forum designed to deepen the relationship
between Asia and Europe through dialogue on political, security, economic, and educational-cultural issues. Most
recently, in November 2011, Russia and the US joined the EAS for the first time.
Finally, 14 regional governments in the Russian Far East are members of the little known Association of Northeast Asia
Regional Governments, which was formally established in 1996. The association includes the Republic of Buryatia,
Republic of Sakha, Primorsky Territory, Khabarovsk Territory, Amur Region,
Irkutsk Region, Kamchatka Region, Sakhalin Region,
Zabaikalsky Territory, Krasnoyarsk, Tomsk Region,
Republic of Tyva, Altai Territory, Magadan Region and their
counterparts in China, Japan, North Korea, South Korea
and Mongolia. The association members meet every other
year to discuss regional-level co-operation. It has
subcommittees on economy and trade, the environment,
cross-border issues, tourism, mineral resources
development, women and children, education and cultural
exchange, disaster prevention, science and technology,
oceans and fisheries, and energy and climate change
issues.42
What are the implications of the above developments for
Russia’s place in regional integration in East Asia?
Integration may proceed along economic, political,
security and social-cultural dimensions, but in this region integration has progressed primarily in the economic sphere.
Russia’s economic links to the region are underdeveloped and the nation’s impact on the rest of the regional economies
is limited. Thus, Russia remains a marginal factor in regional integration in East Asia.
How about APEC and Russia’s role in it? Since Russia joined in 1998, the multilateral dialogue forum has played a
diminished role in regional and global trade liberalization against the unmistakable trends toward bilateral and
minilateral free trade agreements (FTAs). Furthermore, the major trading powers in the region do not see Russia as a
particularly attractive partner for bilateral FTAs or economic partnership agreements (EPAs). Can Russia change these
trends? Given its limited economic ties to the region, prospects are rather limited. More than anything Russia can do,
regional and global trends are likely to be set by the commitment (or lack of commitment) on the part of the world’s
major trading powers including China, Japan, the US and the EU, to re-invigorate the World Trade Organization as the
institution for global trade liberalization.
The upcoming APEC Summit in Vladivostok will be significant not so much for what Russia will contribute to the
dialogue as what its hosting of the regional summit will do for the economy of the Russian Far East. Indeed, this is what
Russia wants to achieve. As APEC Chair in 2012, Russia hopes to “promote the domestic economy organic integration
[sic] into the system of economic ties in the Asia-Pacific Region (APR) in the interests of modernization- and innovation-
driven economic development, primarily in Siberia and the Russian Far East.”43
In East Asia, regional political integration remains a long-term possibility at best, and an uncertain prospect at worst.
Historical legacies, multiple sovereignty disputes and major-power rivalries are likely to drive Russia and other main
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actors to continue to favor the unilateral and bilateral approaches they have pursued in dealing with sensitive political
issues. The regional powers are not likely to surrender their sovereignty to an EU-like supranational authority in the
foreseeable future. There are also serious doubts about the prospect of the Six-Party talks resolving the North Korean
nuclear crisis. Even though Moscow has been advocating a peaceful resolution to the crisis and development of a
permanent regional security architecture in post-crisis Northeast Asia, its influence in realizing these goals is very
limited. The future of the North Korean nuclear crisis will depend, first and foremost, on US policy — whether
Washington will be willing to commit itself unequivocally to a non-military resolution of the problem and also recognize
the current regime in Pyongyang in return for the denuclearization of North Korea — and whether Pyongyang will accept
these terms and fully implement its non-nuclear pledge in a verifiable manner. The post-crisis security environment in
Northeast Asia will depend on the strategic interests and priorities of the US and China, more than on Russian interests
or capabilities.
Given Russia’s essential cultural distance from most East Asian societies and the perennial search for national identity
among the Russian elite, the ambivalence toward becoming a full-fledged member of an East Asian Community and
sharing a common identity with its Asian neighbors is hardly a surprise.
In the economic sphere, energy offers Russia the most promising avenue toward closer economic relations with its
regional neighbors, but it remains to be seen how the strategic value of energy resources, which Russia will surely want
to exploit, can be integrated functionally with the market forces that have driven and continue to drive integration in
East Asia. Because of its strategic importance to Russia’s economic future, energy will be used as Moscow’s instrument of
diplomacy, adding to the realist characteristic of Russia’s engagement with other regional powers, which will also see
energy security as a core national interest. Moreover, there is no framework for integrating the energy policies of the
region. Instead, the major energy importing countries — China, Japan and South Korea — are operating in the global
energy market, although the political instability in the Middle East does present opportunities for Russia as a supplier of
oil and natural gas to these economic powers.
In conclusion, if Russia is to develop its ties with its Asian neighbors more deeply, it needs to engage more actively in the
growing multilateralism, demonstrate a firm commitment to the development of the Russian Far East as a “bridge to
East Asia,” and undertake major modernization efforts in the domestic economy. Then and only then will Russia be able
to take full advantage of the mounting integrative forces in East Asia and also contribute to the further development of
market-driven regional integration aided by regional institutional mechanisms. A further emphasis on the development
of its already formidable military power, unless accompanied by stepped-up investment in the civilian sector of its
economy, will keep Russia as a “distant neighbor” in East Asia, not only in terms of civilization but also politically and
economically.
Tsuneo Akaha is Professor of International Policy Studies and Director of the Center for East AsianStudies at the Monterey Institute of International Studies, Monterey, California.
NOTES1 The view of Russia as a “distant neighbor” is particularly acute among the Japanese. See Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, Jonathan
Haslam and Andrew C. Kuchins, eds., Russia and Japan: An Unresolved Dilemma between Distant Neighbors (Berkeley:
University of California, 1993).
2 Hiroshi Kimura and Shigeki Hakamada, eds., Ajia ni sekkinsuru Roshia (Russia Moving Closer to Asia), (Sapporo:
Slavic Research Center, Hokkaido Daigaku Shuppankai, 2007).
3 Sebastian Strangio, “As Asia Rises and Europe Declines, Russia Invests Its Hopes in Its Far East,” The Atlantic, Oct. 27,
2011, www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2011/10/as-asia- rises-and-europe-declines-russia-invests-its-hopes-
in-its-far-east/247353/ (accessed May 20, 2012).
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4 www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0872964.html (accessed May 15, 2009).
5 For Western analyses of Russia’s energy diplomacy, see A. Jaffe and R. Manning, ”Russia, Energy, and the West,”
Survival, Vol. 43, No. 2 (2001), pp. 133-152; Edward L. Morse and James Richard, “The Battle for Energy Dominance,”
Foreign Affairs, Vol. 81, No. 2 (March-April 2002), pp. 16-31; Lyle Goldstein and Vitaly Kozyrev, “China, Japan, and the
Scramble for Siberia,” Survival, Vol. 48, No. 1 (2006), pp. 163-178. See also Shoichi Itoh, “Russia’s Energy Diplomacy
toward the Asia-Pacific: Is Moscow’s Ambition Dashed?” in Energy and Environment in Slavic Eurasia: Toward the
Establishment of the Network of Environmental Studies in the Pan-Okhotsk Region (Sapporo: Slavic Research Center,
Hokkaido University, 2008) pp. 33-65; Shoichi Itoh, “Chu-Ro enerugi kyoryoku kankei” (Sino-Russian Energy Co-
operation), in Hiroshi Kimura and Shigeki Hakamada, eds., Ajia ni sekkinsuru Roshia (Russia Moving Closer to Asia)
(Sapporo: Slavic Research Center, Hokkaido Daigaku Shuppankai, 2007) pp. 98-117; Tadashi Sugimoto, “Roshia no
enerugi shigen to gaiko” (Russia’s Energy Resources and Diplomacy), in Shinji Yokote, ed., Higashi Ajia no Roshia
(Russia in East Asia) (Tokyo: Keio Gijuku Daigaku Shuppankai, 2004) pp. 225-253; Hongchan Chun, “Russia’s Energy
Diplomacy toward Europe and Northeast Asia: A Comparative Study,” Asia Europe Journal, Vol. 7, No. 2 (2009), pp.
327-343.
6 SIPRI Military Expenditure Database, http://milexdata.sipri.org/result.php4 (accessed June 18, 2012).
7 For balanced analyses of Russia’s relations with China, see “Russia-China Relations Lose Momentum,” Oxford
Analytica, April 23, 2009, www.oxan.com/display.aspx?ItemID=DB150651 (accessed November 6, 2009); Richard
Weitz, China-Russia Security Relations: Strategic Parallelism without Partnership or Passion? (Carlisle, Pennsylvania:
Strategic Studies Institute, US Army War College, 2008); Natasha Kuhrt, Russia’s Policy towards China and Japan: The
El’tsin and Putin Periods (London: Routledge, 2007); Akihiro Iwashita, “9.11 jiken igo no Chu-Ro kankei” (Sino-Russian
Relations since the 9/11 Incidents), in Hiroaki Matsui, ed., 9.11 jiken igo no Roshia gaiko no shin tenkai (Post-9/11
Evolution of Russian Diplomacy) (Tokyo: Nihon Kokusaimondai Kenkyujo, 2003), pp. 207-230.
8 Weitz, op. cit.
9 Itoh, “Russia’s Energy Diplomacy...” See also Peter Rutland, “Roshia no Ajia ni okeru yakuwari” (Russia’s Role in Asia),
in Kimura and Hakamada, eds., Ajia ni sekkinsuru Roshia, pp. 31-48.
10 Elizabeth Wishnick, “Migration and Economic Security: Chinese Labor Migration in the Russian Far East,” in Tsuneo
Akaha and Anna Vassilieva, eds., Crossing National Borders: Human Migration Issues in Northeast Asia (Tokyo: UNU
Press, 2005), pp. 68-92.
11 See Kim Iskyan, “Selling off Siberia: Why China Should Purchase the Russian Far East,” posted July 28, 2003,
www.slate.com/id/2086157/ (accessed November 13, 2009).
12 Bobo Lo, “A Partnership of Convenience,” New York Times, June 7, 2012, www.nytimes.com/2012/06/08/opinion/
a-partnership-of-convenience.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all (accessed June 8, 2012).
13 Valeri O. Kistanov, “Higashi Ajia shokoku to Roshia no keizai kankei” (Economic Relations between East Asian
Countries and Russia), in Yokote, ed., Higashi Ajia no Roshia, pp. 203-224, particularly pp. 209-214.
14 For recent analyses of the Russo-Japanese territorial dispute, see Akihiro Iwashita, Hoppo ryodo: 4 demo 0 demo, 2
demo naku (The Northern Territories Problem: Neither 4 Nor 0, or 2), Tokyo: Chuko Shinsho, 2005; Akihiro Iwashita,
Kokkyo: Dare ga kono sen wo hiitanoka (National Borders: Who Drew Them?) (Sapporo: Hokkaido Daigaku
Shuppankai, 2006); Hiroshi Kimura, “Hoppo ryodo henkan ni ojinu Roshia” (Russia Refusing to Return the Northern
Territories), in Kimura, Gendai roshia kokkaron: Puchin gata gaiko towa nanika (The Contemporary Russian State:
What Is a Putinesque Diplomacy?) (Tokyo: Chuokoron Shinsha, 2009), pp. 263-293. For earlier analyses, see Hiroshi
Kimura, Japanese-Russian Relations under Gorbachev and Yeltsin (Armonk, New York: M.E. Sharpe, 2000); Tsuyoshi
Hasegawa, The Northern Territories Dispute and Russo-Japanese Relations, 2 volumes (Berkeley: University of
California, 1998); James E. Goodby, Vladimir I. Ivanov and Nobuo Shimotomai, eds., ‘Northern Territories’ and Beyond:
Russian, Japanese, and American Perspectives (Westport, Connecticut: Praeger, 1995); Vladimir I. Ivanov and Karla S.
Smith, eds., Japan and Russia in Northeast Asia: Partners in the 21st Century (Westport, Connecticut: Praeger, 1999.
15 Yomiuri Online, December 14, 2010, www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/business/T101213003043.htm (accessed December 15,
2010).
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16 Iwashita, op. cit..
17 For a similar assessment, see Hiroshi Kimura, “Roshia no Chosen hanto seisaku” (Russia’s Policy in the Korean
Peninsula), in Kimura and Hakamada, eds., Ajia ni sekkinsuru Roshia, pp. 212-244.
18 For a discussion of Russia’s relations with ASEAN, see Kato Mihoko, “Russia’s Multilateral Diplomacy in the Process
of Asia-Pacific Regional Integration: The Significance of ASEAN for Russia,” in Iwashita Akihiro, ed., Eager Eyes Fixed
on Eurasia: Russia and Its Eastern Edge, 21st Century COE Program Slavic Eurasian Studies, No. 16-2 (Sapporo: Slavic
Research Center, Hokkaido University, 2007).
19 “Speech by Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Igor Ivanov at the Session of the Russia-ASEAN Postministerial
Conference, Phnon Penh, June 19, 2003,” The Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Russian Federation, no. 1441-19-06-2003
June 19, 2003, www.mid.ru/brp_4.nsf/e78a48070f128a7b43256999005bcbb3/273f45b5e07cbd4943256d4c0027aac7?
20 http://en.rian.ru/analysis/20101007/160866120.html.
21 Hong Kong’s intra-regional trade represented 15 percent of the region’s total trade in 2005.
22 These statistics are calculated from data in International Monetary Fund, Direction of Trade Statistics Yearbook
2006.
23 International Monetary Fund, Direction of Trade Statistics Yearbook 2006.
24 These statistics are calculated from data in International Monetary Fund, Direction of Trade Statistics Yearbook
2006.
25 www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0872964.html (accessed May 10, 2009).
26 See, for example, Goldstein and Kozyrev; Shoichi Itoh, “Russia’s Energy Policy Towards Asia: Opportunities and
Uncertainties,” in Christopher Len and Alvin Chew, eds., Energy and Security Co-operation in Asia: Challenges and
Prospects (Stockholm: Institute for Security and Development Policy), 2009, pp.143-165.
27 Dmitry Medvedev, “Go, Russia,” President of Russia website, http://eng.kremlin.ru/speeches/
2009/09/10/1534_type 104017_221527.shtml (accessed Nov. 13, 2009).
28 Ibid.
29 The Levada Center English website is at www.levada.ru/eng/.
30 Russian Public Opinion, 2009, Moscow Levada Analytical Center, 2009, p. 160,
www.levada.ru/sites/en.d7154.agava.net/files/Levada2009Eng.pdf.
31 Ibid., p. 167.
32 For an earlier exploration of this topic, see Tsuneo Akaha, ed., Politics and Economics in the Russian Far East:
Changing Ties with Asia-Pacific, London: Routledge, 1997.
33 See, for example, Itoh, “Russia’s Energy Diplomacy...”
34 For a fuller study of the Russian Far East’s advantages and disadvantages, see Tsuneo Akaha, “The Russian Far East
as a Factor in Northeast Asia,” Peace Forum (Kyung Hee University, Korea), No. 25 (Winter 1997/98), pp. 91-108; Pavel
Minakir, Kunio Okada, and Tsuneo Akaha, “Economic Challenge in the Russian Far East,” in Akaha, ed., Politics and
Economics in the Russian Far East: Changing Ties with Asia-Pacific (London: Routledge, 1997), pp. 49-69.
35 Vladivostok News, Issue No. 560, Special Reports, March 15, 2007,
http://vn.vladnews.ru/issue560/Special_reports/Russias_Far_East_population_continues_to_dwindle (accessed Nov.
6, 2009).
36 For a comprehensive survey of the natural resource base of the region and its environmental and developmental
implications, see Josh Newell, The Russian Far East: A Reference Guide for Conservation and Development, 2nd ed.
(McKinleyville, California, Daniel & Daniel, 2004).
37 See Victor Larin, “Chinese in the Russian Far East,” and Wishnick, “Migration and Economic Security,” in Akaha and
Vassilieva, eds., Crossing National Borders, pp. 47-67 and pp. 68-92, respectively.
38 “Russia’s Far East Seizes the Moment Ahead of APEC,” Russia Today, http://russiatoday.com/Business/2009-10-
12/russias-far-east-apec.html (accessed Nov. 6, 2009).
39 Author interviews with several academic researchers in Vladivostok, September 2011, revealed their views are mixed
and tempered. While some individuals are enthusiastic about the ongoing infrastructure development and expect that
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Moscow’s investment in physical infrastructure, such as airport, roads, bridges, and harbor facilities in and around
Vladivostok, will have both short- and longer-term benefits for the region’s economic development and expanded ties
with economic partners in the neighboring countries, more individuals are skeptical about the longer-term impact, with
some even expressing concern about the skewed distribution of benefits as well as the environmental impact of the large-
scale constructions projects in the area.
40 For a recent analysis on Russia’s role and interests, see Stephen Blank, “Russia and the Six-Party Process,” in
Tomorrow’s Northeast Asia, Joint US-Korea Academic Studies, Vol. 21 (Washington, D.C.: Korea Economic Institute,
2011), pp. 207-226.
41 For a succinct analysis of Russia’s presence in Southeast Asia since the end of the Cold War, see Leszek Buszynski,
“Roshia to Tonan Ajia” (Russia and Southeast Asia), in Kimura and Hakamada, eds., Ajia ni sekkinsuru Roshia, pp. 245-
268.
42 The association’s website is at www.neargov.org/app/ index.jsp?lang=en.
43 “APEC-2012 Priorities,” www.apec2012.ru/docs/about/ priorities.html (accessed June 10, 2012).
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