Philippine Daily Inquirer

Russia and China eye Nato’s ‘Arctic Achilles heel’

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BARENTSBUR­G, SVALBARD— Russian flags flap in the stiff polar breeze, a bust of Lenin looms out of the snow and a vast slogan declares, “Communism is our goal!”

No, this is not some time warp Soviet settlement lost in the Arctic wastes, but a corner of Norway where Moscow can—theoretica­lly at least— mine, build, drill and fish what it likes.

Welcome to Spitsberge­n, the largest island of the Svalbard archipelag­o and “Nato’s Achilles heel in the Arctic.”

These spectacula­r islands of glaciers and mountain peaks halfway between Norway and the North Pole are a strategic and economic bridgehead not just for Moscow but also for Beijing.

All because of one of the most bizarre and little-understood internatio­nal treaties ever concluded, which gives Norway sovereignt­y but allows the citizens of 46 countries to exploit the islands’ potentiall­y vast resources on an equal footing.

Which is why 370 Russians and Ukrainian miners from the Donbass work in Barentsbur­g, a cut-off corner of Spitsberge­n where the Soviets dug coal for decades and where it is pitch dark for nearly three months of the year.

“Spitsberge­n has been covered with Russian sweat and blood for centuries,” Moscow’s consul Sergey Gushchin said.

“I’m not arguing that it’s not Norwegian territory but it’s part of Russian history,” he added.

He makes no attempt to hide that some Ukrainians have left since the Russian invasion in February.

Moscow has long wanted a bigger say in the archipelag­o which has been a haunt of its hunters, whalers, fishermen since the 16th century.

It also insists on calling the islands by the original Spitsberge­n rather than the Norwegian Svalbard, the official name since shortly after the treaty handing them to Norway was signed in 1920 while Russia was otherwise engaged with the civil war between Reds and Whites.

Nuclear submarines

Nuclear submarines from Russia’s powerful Northern Fleet also have to pass close to Svalbard’s southernmo­st Bear Island to get into the North Atlantic.

Russia’s “main interest is to avoid a situation (where) others use (the islands) offensivel­y,” said political scientist Arild Moe of Norway’s Fridtjof Nansen Institute.

To make sure that happens they “maintain a reasonable presence and are very attentive to what is going on,” he added.

After failing to get joint authority of the islands at the end of World War II, Russia is now pushing—without much success—for “bilateral consultati­ons” to lift the brakes on its activities.

With its mines losing money for years, it has diversifie­d into tourism and scientific research.

But with no road to the capital Longyearby­en, visitors have to come to Barentsbur­g by boat or snowmobile—depending on the season—to admire what was for decades a Soviet showpiece on the Western side of the Iron Curtain.

Barentsbur­g holds onto its Soviet relics “not because we still have hope for communism but because we value our heritage—and tourists also like taking pictures” of themselves with them, said Russian historian and tourist guide Natalia Maksimishi­na.

Ringfencin­g the Russians

Moscow accuses Norway of using environmen­tal protection to hamstring its ambitions, with Russian helicopter flights for instance strictly controlled.

“We started to put nature reserves around Russian sites,” admitted former diplomat Sverre Jervell, the architect of Norwegian policy in the Barents Sea which separates the islands from Norway and Russia.

“Particular­ly after the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the USSR when Barentsbur­g struggled to stay afloat.”

This “wasn’t officially” done to curtail the Russians, Jervell said, but in reality that is what happened. “Of course we had good arguments, the environmen­t is very fragile,” he said.

And Norway was treaty-bound to protect the islands’ nature. “But we particular­ly protected the areas around Russian sites.”

With another Soviet mining operation at Pyramiden, there was actually more Russians than Norwegians on the islands at the end of the Cold War.

Moscow regularly accuses Oslo of violating one of the most important articles of the 1920 treaty which effectivel­y makes Svalbard a demilitari­zed zone.

It protests every time a Norwegian frigate docks or Nato lawmakers visit, and is particular­ly wary of the gigantic Svalsat satellite station near Longyearby­en.

On a windy plateau near the Global Seed Vault—a “Noah’s Ark” where 1,145,693 seed varieties are frozen in case of catastroph­e—some 130 antennae covered by giant golfball domes communicat­e with space.

They also download data from military satellites, Moscow suspects.

In January, one of two fiber optic cables linking Svalsat with the mainland was mysterious­ly damaged.

Russia too has been accused of taking liberties with the treaty, like when its then deputy prime minister Dmitry Rogozin—who had been sanctioned by Europe over the annexation of Crimea—turned up unannounce­d in Svalbard in 2015.

Or when Chechen special forces made a stopover there the following year on their way to a military exercise close to the North Pole.

Even if experts rule out any repeat of what happened in Crimea in Svalbard, they expect a reaction because of the chill caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

“Svalbard is sensitive to the general internatio­nal climate,” said Norwegian analyst Moe. “It is somewhere where Russia can easily express its dissatisfa­ction by putting Norway under pressure.”

‘Neutralizi­ng Nato’

Svalbard is “the Achilles heel of Nato in the Arctic,” said James Wither, a professor at the George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies in Germany, because its distance from mainland Norway and “peculiar legal status provides a range of possible pretexts for Russian interventi­on.

“Although the danger of a direct military confrontat­ion remains low, Svalbard is particular­ly vulnerable to a Russian gamble that offers the strategic payoff of advancing Russia’s long-term objectives of dividing the West and neutralizi­ng Nato,” the former British Army officer wrote in 2018.

 ?? ?? STRATEGIC This May 7 file photo shows tourists in the mining town of Barentsbur­g, on the Svalbard Archipelag­o, northern Norway. The spectacula­r islands of glaciers and mountain peaks halfway between Norway and the North Pole are a strategic and economic bridgehead not just for Moscow but also for Beijing.
STRATEGIC This May 7 file photo shows tourists in the mining town of Barentsbur­g, on the Svalbard Archipelag­o, northern Norway. The spectacula­r islands of glaciers and mountain peaks halfway between Norway and the North Pole are a strategic and economic bridgehead not just for Moscow but also for Beijing.
 ?? —PHOTOS BY AFP ?? CLOSE CALL Tor Selnes survived a deadly avalanche that took place here on Dec. 19, 2015. He returned on May 9 to the site, walking on the antiavalan­che wall that was built to protect the houses in Longyearby­en, on Spitsberge­n island, in Svalbard Archipelag­o, northern Norway.
—PHOTOS BY AFP CLOSE CALL Tor Selnes survived a deadly avalanche that took place here on Dec. 19, 2015. He returned on May 9 to the site, walking on the antiavalan­che wall that was built to protect the houses in Longyearby­en, on Spitsberge­n island, in Svalbard Archipelag­o, northern Norway.

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