Waterloo Region Record

Russia winning race to dominate Arctic

- Robbie Gramer Foreign Policy

The commandant of the U.S. Coast Guard issued a stark warning on Wednesday that Russia was leagues ahead of Washington in the Arctic. And while the warming Arctic opens up, the United States could be caught flat-footed while other geopolitic­al rivals swiftly step in.

Paul Zukunft, commandant of the U.S. Coast Guard, warned Russia was building up a huge military and industrial presence in the region while the United States dawdled. Russia is showing “I’m here first, and everyone else, you’re going to be playing catchup for a generation to catch up to me first,” said Zukunft in remarks before the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies. “They’ve made a strategic statement,” he said.

Take icebreaker­s, specialize­d ships that can punch through thick Arctic ice and ensure access to sea lanes for both commercial and military ships. Russia has 40, while the United States has only two in service today, and only one really available for the Arctic.

As Arctic ice recedes, it’s opening access to a rich bed of natural resources other countries like Russia and China are hungrily eyeing: An estimated 30 per cent of the world’s untapped gas reserves, 13 per cent of the oil reserves, and $1 trillion in minerals. The United States will struggle to keep other geopolitic­al rivals from filling the void without a proper Arctic footprint, Zukunft warned.

The Polar Star, the last remaining U.S. heavy icebreaker built in the 1970s, is well past its prime. “Having only one heavy icebreaker … it is the one aspect I lose sleep over,” he said. Zukunft is pushing for funding from Congress to build six new icebreaker­s by 2023, high aims given the Coast Guard’s rocky start in the federal budget process.

He even said a new icebreaker fleet could need “offensive and defense armed capability” to hedge against any sort of showdown with Russia. But that’s all in the distant future, and if the Polar Star breaks down there’s little left in the U.S. inventory to take its place.

And Russia isn’t only bulking up its Arctic footprint for nefarious geopolitic­al gains against its former Cold War rival. “Their buildup makes economic sense. It’s a key region for Russia’s economy, 20 per cent of its GDP comes out of the Arctic,” Nordenman told Foreign Policy.

Still, Zukunft is worried if things go south in the high north, Russia will have a big leg up on the United States.

“If you look at this Arctic game of chess, they’ve got us at checkmate right at the very beginning,” he said.

 ?? DMITRY KOZLOV, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Soldiers of the Arctic motorized rifle brigade of Russia’s Northern Fleet stand near APCs during military exercise in Alakyrtti, Murmansk region.
DMITRY KOZLOV, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Soldiers of the Arctic motorized rifle brigade of Russia’s Northern Fleet stand near APCs during military exercise in Alakyrtti, Murmansk region.

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