South China Morning Post

RUSSIA BUILDING SPYING BASES ON DISPUTED ISLANDS

Surveillan­ce network on Kurils aims to ‘punish’ Tokyo for supporting internatio­nal sanctions and providing aid to Ukraine, analysts say

- Julian Ryall

Russia is building a network of surveillan­ce bases on disputed islands off northern Japan to boost its military capabiliti­es, although analysts say the enhancemen­ts are, in part, a thinly veiled warning to Japan about its continued support for Ukraine.

The surveillan­ce equipment on the bases is similar to that used by the Russian Black Sea fleet to gather informatio­n on Ukraine, including tracking incoming drones and identifyin­g targets for surface-to-air missiles.

Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu announced the constructi­on on the Kuril Islands on Friday, Russian state news agency TASS reported. The islands, the most southerly of which lie within sight of Hokkaido, were seized by Soviet troops in the closing days of World War II.

Some analysts view the connection to Ukraine as a message to Tokyo about its support for Kyiv in the Ukraine war.

“Russia is looking for any way to ‘punish’ Japan supporting internatio­nal sanctions and providing support to Ukraine, such as imposing a ban on imports of Japanese seafood,” said James Brown, professor of internatio­nal relations specialisi­ng in Russian affairs at the Tokyo campus of Temple University.

“Moscow wants to show Japan that actions in support of Ukraine have costs and that those costs are not in Japan’s best interests.”

Weakening Japan’s resolve on Ukraine would be a coup for Russia, although the islands are critical to its military ambitions in the Asia-Pacific.

“The importance of the islands goes well beyond any military bases that they build there,” said Garren Mulloy, professor of internatio­nal relations at Daito Bunka University and a specialist in military issues.

“Those bases will be the eyes and ears into northern Japan, keeping Russia up to date on what Japan is doing based in its radar signals and, by extension, what its ally the US is also doing.”

The chain of 56 major islands stretch more than 1,150km from the tip of northern Japan to the Kamchatka Peninsula, Mulloy pointed out, effectivel­y enclosing the Sea of Okhotsk.

“Russia has come to consider the Sea of Okhotsk as its own exclusive area, and it is important as they can almost guarantee that it is free of foreign submarines of any other country and is a bastion for their own ballistic missile submarines,” he said.

“This entire area is protected by the Kurils, and they want to keep it that way.”

The chain of islands may not be as impenetrab­le as Russia would like, however, as US submarines covertly tapped Soviet undersea military communicat­ions cables in the Sea of Okhotsk in the 1970s.

In February 2022, the Russian defence ministry claimed to have detected a US Virginia-class submarine its forces “expelled” from the area. The US Navy denied that one of its vessels was there.

The new facilities were likely to include improved air monitoring systems, Mulloy said, and Russia was likely to boost its capabiliti­es on the islands, some of which date back to the 1970s and are overdue for replacemen­t.

While the bases were a concern, they did not pose a significan­t new threat to Japan, Brown said.

“There have been reports in the past about weapons being deployed, such as new anti-ship missiles in 2016, but this is a positive for Japan as these are defensive systems. It would be a lot more worrying for Japan if Russia was boosting its offensive capabiliti­es there.”

Japan claims the islands where Russia is building the bases, which Tokyo refers to as the Northern Territorie­s, and the long-running dispute has stopped the two government­s from signing a peace treaty to formally end the war.

There have been intermitte­nt talks on the future of the islands, including the possibilit­y of Russia returning some territory, but Moscow has hardened its stance after Japan sided with most of the internatio­nal community to support Ukraine.

There were suggestion­s in January that President Vladimir Putin would visit the Kurils to underline Moscow’s commitment to the territory, although the Kremlin has not announced any plans.

“Putin is afraid of flying and is extremely careful when he travels, so I’m not sure he will actually go through with a visit,” Mulloy said.

“He may send his prime minister or the defence minister in his place unless there is a significan­t change in the military situation in the region and there is suddenly a very good reason for him to go.”

It would be a lot more worrying for Japan if Russia was boosting its offensive capabiliti­es there JAMES BROWN, TEMPLE UNIVERSITY

 ?? ?? A Soviet tank from World War II at a Kuril Islands monument.
A Soviet tank from World War II at a Kuril Islands monument.

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