RUSSIA SHEDS NO TEARS OVER PEACE TREATY WITH JAPAN
Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 2 Issue: 193
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As Russia has failed to secure any significant economic commitments from Tokyo,
notably on the Japan-bound Pacific oil pipeline route, the Kremlin is losing
interest in resolving a long-standing territorial dispute any time soon.Russia
appears to have ruled out any compromise over the Kuril Islands, a dispute dating to
the last days of World War II, as the federal government in Moscow has decided to
increase funding for this territory.
On October 13, the Russian government approved a blueprint to develop the Kuril
Islands through 2015. Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov reportedly told the cabinet
meeting that the Kuril Islands remain Russia’s “strategic outpost.” Fradkov also
suggested investment to develop the infrastructure and fishing industry there.
Vladimir Yakovlev, minister of regional development, warned the meeting that “tense”
social and economic conditions in the Kurils could eventually undermine Russian
national security. He suggested raising funding in order to improve the situation.
Subsequently, the government pledged to invest more than 15 billion rubles ($526
million) in the Kurils in the next decade. For 2006, the government promised to
allocate 2.5 billion rubles ($88 million), up roughly six fold from some 400 million
($14 million) this year.
Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov strongly backed plans to raise funding to
develop the Kuril Islands. He suggested that the Russian Defense Ministry should
have a right to control the development of the local infrastructure, because more
than half of the islands’ current residents are Russian military personnel and their
dependents (Itar-Tass, RIA-Novosti, October 13).
With these announcements, Moscow has demonstrated its intention to take care of the
Kurils on its own. However, an earlier government blueprint for the Kurils Islands,
approved back in 1993, failed to bring planned results. Economic Development and
Trade Minister German Gref conceded that only 40 out of the planned 153 projects
have been completed. The Kuril economy was supposed to grow nearly threefold, but
the actual growth rate was limited to 20 percent within the past decade.
Nonetheless, one Russian top official bluntly told Tokyo to forget about the Kurils.
Last August, President Vladimir Putin’s special envoy in the Far East, Konstantin
Pulikovsky, declared, “Russia does not have any problem regarding the Kuril
Islands.” Relations between Russia and Japan are good enough even without a peace
treaty, he said. In the meantime, the Kuril Islands are set to become “a beautiful
corner of a prosperous Russia,” Pulikovsky said.
Since earlier this year, Russian officials have advocated plans to give the Kurils a
much needed development boost. Moreover, in June 2005 Nikolai Patrushev, head of the
Federal Security Service (FSB), the agency in charge of the country’s border-guard
forces, traveled to Sakhalin region and the South Kuril Islands to inspect border
facilities. In an apparent symbolic gesture, local serviceman reportedly erected a
Russian Orthodox cross and chapel on the Kunashir shore, a site that can be seen
from Hokkaido. The message was clear: the Japanese should forget about the “Northern
Territories.”
A search for compromise seemed feasible just last spring, when Japanese sources
floated a possible compromise. Instead of a 50-50 split of the total area, perhaps
there could be a 37-63 arrangement, with the smaller part going to Japan. Russian
academics have also been exploring compromise solutions. Vasily Mikheyev, head of
the Institute of Far Eastern Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences, suggested a
sort of trade-off: Japan should take two islands instead of four it currently claims
and sign a peace treaty with Russia in exchange for Russian support of Japan’s bid
for a permanent place at the UN Security Council. By now, these ideas have seemingly
dropped into irrelevance.
Last year, Russia indicated that a major energy deal with Tokyo was possible. In
December Prime Minister Fradkov approved the Japan-bound Taishet-Nakhodka pipeline
over another route through China. But then the Kremlin appeared upset by Japan’s
stubborn stance on the territorial dispute and Tokyo’s reluctance to commit any
funding for the Pacific pipeline. Subsequently, Russia revealed plans to build a
branch oil pipeline to China first, instead of giving priority to linking the
pipeline to its Pacific coast as sought by Japan.
Moscow also announced that it no longer needed Japanese investment in the pipeline
project. According to Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Yakovenko, “Russia
is not making the building of the oil pipeline contingent on its relations with
Japan. We have sufficient resources to build this oil pipeline independently.”
Responding to a question about a peace treaty with Japan, Yakovenko said it would
not be signed during Russian President Vladimir Putin’s upcoming visit to Japan. He
said, “negotiations are in progress,” but due to differences in positions, “they are
not moving very quickly” (Izvestiya, RIA-Novosti, October 5). As Moscow has been
upset by Tokyo’s obduracy, China now appears poised to replace Japan as the main
beneficiary of a trans-Siberian oil pipeline.