Kremlin: Russia-China Arctic cooperation not aimed at anyone despite Pentagon concern

In this pool photograph distributed by the Russian state agency Sputnik, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin meets with Russian Accounts Chamber Chairman Boris Kovalchuk at the Kremlin in Moscow on July 23, 2024. (Vyacheslav Prokofyev
/ POOL /AFP via Getty Images)

The Kremlin on Tuesday said that Russia’s cooperation with China in the Arctic was not aimed against any other country and said U.S. criticism of such work was misplaced.

The Pentagon said in a report on Monday that it feared Moscow and China’s actions in the Arctic could impact regional stability, noting that Russia has reopened hundreds of Soviet-era military sites there while China is eyeing mineral resources and new shipping routes.

“Increasingly, the (People’s Republic of China) and Russia are collaborating in the Arctic across multiple instruments of national power,” the Pentagon’s report said.

“While significant areas of disagreement between the PRC and Russia remain, their growing alignment in the region is of concern, and (the Department of Defense) continues to monitor this cooperation,” it added.

The Kremlin, when asked about the Pentagon report, said on Tuesday that some its contents had a confrontational flavor, and that Russia’s cooperation with China aimed only to foster stability.

“The Arctic is also a strategic area for our country. Russia takes a responsible position and contributes to ensuring that the Arctic does not become a territory of discord and a territory of tension,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

“In this regard, Russian-Chinese cooperation in the Arctic zone can only contribute to an atmosphere of stability and predictability in the Arctic.

“Russian-Chinese cooperation is never directed against third countries or groups of third countries, but is aimed only at protecting the interests of these countries (Russia and China),” Peskov said.

Beijing and Moscow have been working together to develop Arctic shipping routes as Russia seeks to deliver more oil and gas to China amid Western sanctions.

Related stories from around the North: 

Canada : Canadian military says it has tracked, stopped China surveillance in Arctic waters, The Canadian Press

FinlandRussian cyber attacks, espionage pose growing threat to Finnish national security, Yle news

IcelandIceland authorizes U.S. submarine service visits, Eye on the Arct

Norway: Russian jamming disrupting GPS signals for Norwegian aviation almost daily, The Independent Barents Observer

RussiaAs NATO forces move north for exercise, Northern Fleet sails out frigates, The Independent Barents Observer

Sweden: Swedes must mentally prepare for war, says military top brass, Radio Sweden

United States: Growing cooperation between Russia and China in Arctic, Pentagon says, Eye on the Arctic

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