by Pepe Escobar, posted with the author’s permission and widely cross-posted
Sixty-eight countries gathered on Russia’s far eastern coast to listen to Moscow’s economic and political vision for the Asia-Pacific
The Eastern Economic Forum (EEF) in Vladivostok is one of the indispensable annual milestones for keeping up not only with the complex development process of the Russian Far East but major plays for Eurasia integration.
Mirroring an immensely turbulent 2022, the current theme in Vladivostok is ‘On the Path to a Multipolar World.’ Russian President Vladimir Putin himself, in a short message to business and government participants from 68 nations, set the stage:
“The obsolete unipolar model is being replaced by a new world order based on the fundamental principles of justice and equality, as well as the recognition of the right of each state and people to their own sovereign path of development. Powerful political and economic centers are taking shape right here in the Asia-Pacific region, acting as a driving force in this irreversible process.”
In his speech to the EEF plenary session, Ukraine was barely mentioned. Putin’s response when asked about it: “Is this country part of Asia-Pacific?”
The speech was largely structured as a serious message to the collective west, as well as to what top analyst Sergey Karaganov calls the “global majority.” Among several takeaways, these may be the most relevant:
- Russia as a sovereign state will defend its interests.
- Western sanctions ‘fever’ is threatening the world – and economic crises are not going away after the pandemic.
- The entire system of international relations has changed. There is an attempt to maintain world order by changing the rules.
- Sanctions on Russia are closing down businesses in Europe. Russia is coping with economic and tech aggression from the west.
- Inflation is breaking records in developed countries. Russia is looking at around 12 percent.
- Russia has played its part in grain exports leaving Ukraine, but most shipments went to EU nations and not developing countries.
- The “welfare of the ‘Golden Billion’ is being ignored.”
- The west is in no position to dictate energy prices to Russia.
- Ruble and yuan will be used for gas payments.
- The role of Asia-Pacific has significantly increased.
In a nutshell: Asia is the new epicenter of technological progress and productivity.
No more an ‘object of colonization’
Taking place only two weeks before another essential annual gathering – the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit in Samarkand – it is no wonder some of the top discussions at the EEF revolve around the increasing economic interpolation between the SCO and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).
This theme is as crucial as the development of the Russian Arctic: at 41 percent of total territory, that’s the largest resource base in the federation, spread out over nine regions, and encompassing the largest Special Economic Zone (SEZ) on the planet, linked to the free port of Vladivostok. The Arctic is being developed via several strategically important projects processing mineral, energy, water and biological natural resources.
So it’s perfectly fitting that Austria’s former foreign minister Karin Kneissel, self-described as “a passionate historian,” quipped about her fascination at how Russia and its Asian partners are tackling the development of the Northern Sea Route: “One of my favorite expressions is that airlines and pipelines are moving east. And I keep saying this for twenty years.”
Amidst a wealth of roundtables exploring everything from the power of territory, supply chains and global education to “the three whales” (science, nature, human), arguably the top discussion this Tuesday at the forum was centered on the role of the SCO.
Apart from the current full members – Russia, China, India, Pakistan, four Central Asians (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan), plus the recent accession of Iran – no less than 11 further nations want to join, from observer Afghanistan to dialogue partner Turkey.
Grigory Logvinov, the SCO’s deputy secretary general, stressed how the economic, political and scientific potential of players comprising “the center of gravity” for Asia – over a quarter of the world’s GDP, 50 percent of the world’s population – has not been fully harvested yet.
Kirill Barsky, from the Moscow State Institute of International Relations, explained how the SCO is actually the model of multipolarity, according to its charter, compared to the backdrop of “destructive processes” launched by the west.
And that leads to the economic agenda in the Eurasian integration progress, with the Russian-led Eurasia Economic Union (EAEU) configured as the SCO’s most important partner.
Barsky identifies the SCO as “the core Eurasian structure, forming the agenda of Greater Eurasia within a network of partnership organizations.” That’s where the importance of the cooperation with ASEAN comes in.
Barsky could not but evoke Mackinder, Spykman and Brzezinski – who regarded Eurasia “as an object to be acted upon the wishes of western states, confined within the continent, away from the ocean shores, so the western world could dominate in a global confrontation of land and sea. The SCO as it developed can triumph over these negative concepts.”
And here we hit a notion widely shared from Tehran to Vladivostok:
Eurasia no longer as “an object of colonization by ‘civilized Europe’ but again an agent of global policy.”
‘India wants a 21st Asian century’
Sun Zuangnzhi from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) elaborated on China’s interest in the SCO. He focused on achievements: In the 21 years since its founding, a mechanism to establish security between China, Russia and Central Asian states evolved into “multi-tiered, multi-sector cooperation mechanisms.”
Instead of “turning into a political instrument,” the SCO should capitalize on its role of dialogue forum for states with a difficult history of conflicts – “interactions are sometimes difficult” – and focus on economic cooperation “on health, energy, food security, reduction of poverty.”
Rashid Alimov, a former SCO secretary general, now a professor at the Taihe Institute, stressed the “high expectations” from Central Asian nations, the core of the organization. The original idea remains – based on the indivisibility of security on a trans-regional level in Eurasia.
Well, we all know how the US and NATO reacted when Russia late last year proposed a serious dialogue on “indivisibility of security.”
As Central Asia does not have an outlet to the sea, it is inevitable, as Alimov stressed, that Uzbekistan’s foreign policy privileges involvement in accelerated intra-SCO trade. Russia and China may be the leading investors, and now “Iran also plays an important role. Over 1,200 Iranian companies are working in Central Asia.”
Connectivity, once again, must increase: “The World Bank rates Central Asia as one of the least connected economies in the world.”
Sergey Storchak of Russian bank VEB explained the workings of the “SCO interbank consortium.” Partners have used “a credit line from the Bank of China” and want to sign a deal with Uzbekistan. The SCO interbank consortium will be led by the Indians on a rotation basis – and they want to step up its game. At the upcoming summit in Samarkand, Storchak expects a road map for the transition towards the use of national currencies in regional trade.
Kumar Rajan from the School of International Studies of the Jawaharlal Nehru University articulated the Indian position. He went straight to the point: “India wants a 21st Asian century. Close cooperation between India and China is necessary. They can make the Asian century happen.”
Rajan remarked how India does not see the SCO as an alliance, but committed to the development and political stability of Eurasia.
He made the crucial point about connectivity revolving around India “working with Russia and Central Asia with the INSTC” – the International North South Transportation Corridor, and one of its key hubs, the Chabahar port in Iran: “India does not have direct physical connectivity with Central Asia. The INSTC has the participation of an Iranian shipping line with 300 vessels, connecting to Mumbai. President Putin, in the [recent] Caspian meeting, referred directly to the INSTC.”
Crucially, India not only supports the Russian concept of Greater Eurasia Partnership but is engaged in setting up a free trade agreement with the EAEU: Prime Minister Narendra Modi, incidentally, came to the Vladivostok forum last year.
In all of the above nuanced interventions, some themes are constant. After the Afghanistan disaster and the end of the US occupation there, the stabilizing role of the SCO cannot be overstated enough. An ambitious road map for cooperation is a must – probably to be approved at the Samarkand summit. All players will be gradually changing to trade in bilateral currencies. And creation of transit corridors is leading to the progressive integration of national transit systems.
Let there be light
A key roundtable on the ‘Gateway to a Multipolar World’ expanded on the SCO role, outlining how most Asian nations are “friendly” or “benevolently neutral” when it comes to Russia after the start of the Special Military Operation (SMO) in Ukraine.
So the possibilities for expanding cooperation across Eurasia remain practically unlimited. Complementarity of economies is the main factor. That would lead, among other developments, to the Russian Far East, as a multipolar hub, turning into “Russia’s gateway to Asia” by the 2030s.
Wang Wen from the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies stressed the need for Russia to rediscover China – finding “mutual trust in the middle level and elites level”. At the same time, there’s a sort of global rush to join BRICS, from Saudi Arabia and Iran to Afghanistan and Argentina:
“That means a new civilization model for emerging economies like China and Argentina because they want to rise up peacefully (…) I think we are in the new civilization age.”
B. K. Sharma from the United Service Institution of India got back to Spykman pigeonholing the nation as a rimland state. Not anymore: India now has multiple strategies, from connecting to Central Asia to the ‘Act East’ policy. Overall, it’s an outreach to Eurasia, as India “is not competitive and needs to diversify to get better access to Eurasia, with logistical help from Russia.“
Sharma stresses how India takes SCO, BRICS and RICs very seriously while seeing Russia playing “an important role in the Indian Ocean.” He nuances the Indo-Pacific outlook: India does not want Quad as a military alliance, privileging instead “interdependence and complementarity between India, Russia and China.”
All of these discussions interconnect with the two overarching themes in several Vladivostok roundtables: energy and the development of the Arctic’s natural resources.
Pavel Sorokin, Russian First Deputy Minister of Energy, dismissed the notion of a storm or typhoon in the energy markets: “It’s a far cry from a natural process. It’s a man-made situation.” The Russian economy, in contrast, is seen by most analysts as slowly but surely designing its Arctic/Asian cooperation future – including, for instance, the creation of a sophisticated trans-shipment infrastructure for Liquified Natural Gas (LNG).
Energy Minister Nikolay Shulginov made sure that Russia will actually increase its gas production, considering the rise of LNG deliveries and the construction of Power of Siberia-2 to China: “We will not merely scale up the pipeline capacity but we will also expand LNG production: it has mobility and excellent purchases on the global market.”
On the Northern Sea Route, the emphasis is on building a powerful, modern icebreaker fleet – including nuclear. Gadzhimagomed Guseynov, First Deputy Minister for the Development of the Far East and the Arctic, is adamant: “What Russia has to do is to make the Northern Sea Route a sustainable and important transit route.”
There is a long-term plan up to 2035 to create infrastructure for safe shipping navigation, following an ‘Arctic best practices’ of learning step by step. NOVATEK, according to its deputy chairman Evgeniy Ambrosov, has been conducting no less than a revolution in terms of Arctic navigation and shipbuilding in the last few years.
Kniessel, the former Austrian minister, recalled that she always missed the larger geopolitical picture in her discussions when she was active in European politics (she now lives in Lebanon): “I wrote about the passing of the torch from Atlanticism to the Pacific. Airlines, pipelines and waterways are moving East. The Far East is actually Pacific Russia.”
Whatever Atlanticists may think of it, the last word for the moment might belong to Vitaly Markelov, from the board of directors of Gazprom: Russia is ready for winter. There will be warmth and light everywhere.”
My junior high school world history teacher, (whose name eludes me now) had a tracheotomy and spoke through a little hole in his throat into a microphone off of a little stereo so when he showed film strips, he couldn’t stand up in class.
His voice was deep and gruff like Tom Waits or Louis Armstrong. We called him ‘Froggie’ (A Courtin’ He Did Go) and he scared us a little. Because of him, his love of history and of Russia too, I’ve never forgotten about Vladivostok, where it is, what their products were in the 60s, let alone Novosibirsk. I’m among the last generation of Americans that know where these places are and how to pronounce their names. I’m thankful for that and I’m grateful to hear them roll off Pepe’s tongue and pen.
What a marvelous future some are in for. I’d love to live in any of the countries mentioned. The opportunity boggles the mind. The inbred Jeds that run my country are still factoring the closer the kin the deeper in route and it shows. What dummies. Thanks Pepe and Andrei for another episode of “That Darned Pepe”.
Parabéns meu amigo ,um abraço aqui do Brasil.
Espero sinceramente que o Seu país encontre um caminho digno para esse novo mundo que se forma , que mais americanos aprendam sobre a cultura de outros países ,pois assim não poderão ser manipulados pela elite que destroem sua nação.
machine translation:
Congratulations my friend, a hug from Brazil.
I sincerely hope that your country finds a worthy path to this new world that is forming, that more Americans learn about the culture of other countries, so they can not be manipulated by the elite that destroy their nation.
I have followed your comments and analysis ever since 2014 and I appreciate the logic and clarity in describing the efforts of many nations to overcome the abusive power center based in North America. As time passes, the efforts you describe are a source of humanization for a vast sector of our planet. Your analysis are always centered on the development of rivers of peaceful power through commerce and positive international relations; thus creating and spreading hope for a better future. Thanks
Another brilliant summary. Thanks again Pepe.
Indeed, a critical mass has well & truly now been reached.
To expel the US/UK & their financial & military proxies from Afro-Eurasia (& hopefully LatAm) may take another 20 – 30 years but the momentum is full steam ahead.
The ‘collective West’ is reduced to only playing a spoiler role … and to think what could have been.
Well, when teachers are being struck off for not referring to transexuals as ‘they’, you know the west is on its last legs.
US & poodles are having great difficulty with the new non-Hollywood script, Ukraine proves this fact.
Should they continue with their belligerence a US passport won’t get you into many countries outside of Europe, even as a tourist.
In American academic writing, when there is an ambiguous gender reference, it has now become acceptable to use 3rd person ‘they’ instead of the awkward ‘he or she’ or ‘he and she’. Otherwise, I don’t follow your transexual pronouns at all. Do serious transexuals prefer ‘it’ or some other pronoun not yet invented? I always assumed that if a boy thinks he is a girl, then the new ‘she’ refers to herself as she and vice versa.
Absolutely true it is that all The West has left is to act as The Spoiler.
They have nothing to match China’s OBR massive infrastructure project for cheap world trade and all that Washington can offer countries is regional divisiveness, dressed up as security and thus armaments sales.
This recalls the first major civilizational error of Washington’s Masters of The Universe – directing domestic manufacturing to China, in the belief that China would adhere to US diktats. The Chinese had other ideas.
The second civilizational error was the now failed US-NATO-UK Ukrainian Proxy War to weaken Russia and overthrow the government, opening the country to Western pillaging. Just did not work out.
Examined in some detail here . . . https://les7eb.substack.com
Time is moving faster. I think we will have a Berlin wall moment. Come spring we will be living in another world.
The near future is Asian, the far future is African
Mutual Aid co-operatives such as Eurasia Economic Union (EAEU) & Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) should have as axioms of their constitutions:
1 prohibition of a governance function – they can’t direct any of their members – and
2 provision of administrative functions only through those arrangements commissioned by all their members. Should administration under- or overreach itself, it is to be decommissioned and reformed or its mandate or executives changed.
Not observing these constraints is what turned the Federation of the United States of America, the former Soviet Union, and the European Union into politically diseased entities.
A problem with this sort of commercial mutual aid society is that it must admit to membership states whose sovereignty morally stinks – internal governance of malignancy, corruption, or self-harm. But the governance prohibition rule prevents it doing anything about it – it’s none of its business.
Let’s skip the formalities and call it for what it should really be called . . . Vladstock!
Ex-Austrian FM Karin Kneissl to RT: There is more freedom of speech in Lebanon than in Europe
https://www.rt.com/shows/rt-interview/560184-karin-kneissl-eu-cancellation/
Frau Kneissl’s unforgivable crime was dancing with V.Putin at her wedding. She was cancelled and death threats forced exile from Austria to Lebanon.
Not known if she is on the Ukraine Peacemaker Myrotvorets or the ( https://archive.ph/50otS from https://cpd.gov.ua/reports/ )
Speakers promoting narratives consonant with Russian propaganda
From Ukraine’s Center for Countering Disinformation (CCD).
Acting head of CCD, Shapovalov, charged that people who deliberately spread disinformation are “information terrorists,” subject to be tried as “war criminals.”
Far too many acronyms. Difficult to keep it all straight. If the East wants to compete and surpass the West, it must be simplified. The West has NATO (military wing) and the US/EU (political/economic wing).
All the current acronyms should be scrapped, and one single Eastern economic union needs to be created, and one single Eastern military alliance should be created.
This is how the East will set itself up for success. Otherwise, it’s all just hot air and more acronyms that mean nothing.
The US likes the KISS principle :
Keep It Simple, Stupid.
To which Einstein quipped : “Keep it simple, but not too simple”.
I’m with Einstein on this!
Parabéns ilustre Sr. Pepe
Divulgo sempre o seu trabalho! Excelente!
Temos que nos manter conectados com as mudanças, não apenas para tomar ciência mas pela grande oportunidade de sempre aprendermos quando estamos abertos a novas estratégias de empreendorismo!
Eu me interessei pelas palestras do segundo dia da Eastern Economic Fórum (EEF) pois abordavam sustentabilidade e meio ambiente.
————
Google-translate from mod:
Illustrious Congratulations Mr. Pepe
I always publicize your work! Great!
We have to stay connected with the changes, not just to become aware but for the great opportunity to always learn when we are open to new entrepreneurship strategies!
I was interested in the lectures of the second day of Eastern Economic Forum (EEF) because they addressed sustainability and environment.
They had no immediate translation into Portuguese.
My English is little.
I hope you later publish videos with translations to Portuguese!
Always grateful!
Não tinham tradução imediata para português.
My english is little.
Espero que, posteriormente, publiquem videos com traduções para português!
Sempre agradecida!
——————
Google-translate from mod:
Illustrious Congratulations Mr. Pepe
I always publicize your work! Great!
We have to stay connected with the changes, not just to become aware but for the great opportunity to always learn when we are open to new entrepreneurship strategies!
I was interested in the lectures of the second day of Eastern Economic Forum (EEF) because they addressed sustainability and environment.
They had no immediate translation into Portuguese.
My English is little.
I hope you later publish videos with translations to Portuguese!
Always grateful!
I enjoy reading his articles but he offers little to no analysis other than the end is near for the US Empire…how near….2 to 3 decades? Next month? If current US leadership wasn’t of the 1980s Soviet model plus the woke cultural revolution then they would have a chance to stop this collapse. Once the US pulls back who protects the shipping lanes…from the US?
By 2035 China will be in a full demographic crisis along with Russia. The leaders of this movement have this decade to succeed. 2035 and beyond is too far out.
The US can and will lose its Empire but it still retains a healthy demography and better resource profile then the rest of the world minus Russia.
India, if it can modernize (avoid neoliberalism), is the real winner.
If it were not for cheap labor mass immigration across the Mexican border, the US population would be shrinking.
The US is set to loose a fair chunk of its population from the clot shot effects if Deagals prediction is anything to go by. That will play merry hell with demographics.
The US is not an ethnic group. Americans are able to assimilate different ethnic groups. Latin American immigration into the United States will still benefit the US’ demographic profile.
The Covid shots and death of despair will cause a drop but that is a chunk of the adult population. Latin Americans typically have more children and they are what matters when discussing demographic changes.
Michael Hudson talks about a clash of economic systems. The US is a FIRE Oligarchy but IF the US oligarchs are defeated then the US is still in position to be a globally dominant power.
I do not see how the demography of the BRICs are never discussed.
India does not want Quad as a military alliance, privileging instead “interdependence and complementarity between India, Russia and China.”
Whoa. That’s not what Modi was supposed to do. Modi confiscated cash across India. He’s a New World Order guy. But he’s pro-India, and anyone pro-India needs to be pro-Russia, and if you’re pro-Russia then Russia needs you to be pro-China, and so the whole rebel alliance against empire is in place.
look for the Zionist empire to start throwing rocks in Kashmir, along the Pakistan/India border, maybe ukronazing mujahadeen in Kashmir via ISI. Monsanto Modi has powerful western backers and may owe them his career, although his loyalties seem to lie with India. I don’t know if he can walk away from Israel that easily. But if he can- awesome. Remember how a few years(months) ago India wouldn’t get with the Belt-Road Initiative because China? That changed fast, for the better.
“Remember how a few years(months) ago India wouldn’t get with the Belt-Road Initiative because China? That changed fast, for the better.”
I guess watching Europe swallowing the suicide pill was a factor.
India is perhaps the lynch pin in the whole multipolar apparatus. With India on board the majority of the.worlds population is locked in. Without it, not so much.
@Quetzalcoatl
However, India works as a US henchman in South Asia. They have been interfering in all the regional countries.
I don’t know how you people can expect a multipolar world with bullies. Good luck with that.