http://csis.org/publication/russias-asia-pivot-confrontation-or-cooperation
Russia’s Asia Pivot: Confrontation or Cooperation?
Feb 2, 2015
Recent tensions between Russia and the West highlight Russia’s
growing ties with Asia, particularly China. Before the Ukraine crisis,
this pivot to Asia had more to do with Moscow’s assessment that Asia
will be the major source of future economic growth. Russia seeks Asian,
especially Chinese, investment to open up new sources of oil and gas,
which will in turn allow it to play a larger role in regional security
and diplomacy. Economic ties are the basis for the deepening
Sino-Russian partnership, while Beijing has also provided important
diplomatic support as the West has sought Russia’s isolation. Yet to
avoid excessive dependence on China, Russia has worked to cultivate
relations with other Asian powers, especially India, Vietnam, and Japan.
This interest in harnessing Asian economic growth gives Moscow and
Washington a common interest in regional stability, but one that is
unlikely to be fully realized as long as bilateral relations remain
focused on Europe and Eurasia.
Especially since the United States and Europe imposed sanctions on
Russia over the annexation of Crimea, Moscow has emphasized the shift
of its political and economic priorities to Asia. The crisis has
spawned a narrative in some quarters that
Russia is turning to China
to compensate for its growing isolation from the West. Many Western
analysts see the development of this Sino-Russian partnership as the
first step toward the
emergence of a new revisionist axis aiming to challenge the West’s economic and geopolitical dominance.
http://csis.org/publication/russias-asia-pivot-confrontation-or-cooperation
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