Russian Navy Commander-in-Chief, Admiral Aleksandr Moiseev.
The
Arctic has moved from cooperation and interaction to the opposite, a region of
possible future conflict, said Russia’s navy chief Aleksandr Moiseev.
Thomas NilsenAdmiral Aleksandr Moiseev knows the Arctic well. He
sailed ballistic missile submarines under the ice-cap in the 1990s and served
as chief of the Northern Fleet for a five-year period until he in March this
year was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Russian navy.
This week, the high-ranking Admiral spoke at the Arctic forum conference in St. Petersburg, an bi-annual venue where
Russian officials for years have highlighted that there are no questions in the
Arctic that need military solutions.
“In addition to political and economic measures to
contain Russia in the Arctic, unfriendly states are increasing their military
presence in the region,” Moiseev said, pointing the re-establishing of the U.S.
Second Fleet tasked for operations across the North Atlantic.
NATO’s Joint Command Norfolk is another concern for
Admiral Moiseev, who said the Arctic now has become “an operation zone with
permanent presence of troops” of NATO.
The navy commander did not mention that is was Russia
that after 2012 started to rearm the Arctic with new military bases and
airfields at Franz Josef Land, Novaya Zemlya, and a massive buildup of the Northern Fleet along the Kola Peninsula.
“Today, the Arctic is one of the key regions where the
confrontation of the world’s leading states is unfolding,” Moiseev said during
the panel debate in St. Petersburg according to state-controlled information
agency TASS.
“The military-political situation in the region is
characterised by an increase in conflict potential associated with the
intensification of rivalry between leading states for access to the resources
of the Arctic Ocean, as well as the establishment of control over strategic sea
and air communications.”
Again, the only nation that has questioned the freedom
of navigation in Arctic waters is Russia, who wants to limit other nations
ability to sail the international recognised waters of the Northern Sea Route.
Aleksandr Moiseev added that tensions are increasing
also because the collective West puts hinder to Russia’s economic activity in
the region.
The Admiral could have noted that economical sanctions
targeting Russia’s Arctic exploration first came after the country launched its
war on Ukraine and annexed Crimea in 2014. He didn’t.
Simultaneously as the navy commander talked security
of Russia’s north, his compatriots in Severomorsk on the Barents Sea coast
launched a training exercise to combat unmanned boat, drones and other robotic
systems.
During the drill, methods of defending the naval bases
and organising counteractions were practiced, including the use of advanced
electronic warfare systems, the Northern Fleet press service informed.
Moiseev, who before 2019 was commander of the Black
Sea fleet, has first hand knowledge of how Ukrainian forces have sunken
multiple of his warships off the coast of Sevastopol and Novorossiysk.
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