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Ukrainian tanks train in the Chernigiv region on September 8 amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Photo: AFP
Opinion
Robert Patman
Robert Patman

Helping Ukraine defeat Russia is best way for New Zealand to counter Chinese clout in Indo-Pacific

  • China and India remain important partners of Russia, and show no signs of reducing military and economic ties despite the Ukraine war
  • New Zealand should remain clear-eyed about the connections between its strategic interests in the Indo-Pacific and its support for defeating Russian expansionism
The debate in New Zealand over whether to join “pillar two” of the Aukus security alliance threatens to overshadow a more important foreign policy challenge: how the country’s allies in the Indo-Pacific region are responding to the Ukraine war.

Aukus seems to be based on the assumption it will deter or counter China’s assertiveness in the Indo-Pacific. But it is unclear whether this arrangement would advance the core national interests of New Zealand.

While New Zealand’s “stability, security and prosperity” depend critically – in the words of a recent government document – on an international rules-based order, it is also plain that China is not the sole or even most serious threat to this arrangement.

Meanwhile, the capitals of the Indo-Pacific region have been closely monitoring the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Most supported last year’s United Nations resolution condemning Vladimir Putin’s “special military operation” (Laos and Vietnam abstained).

But only Singapore, a close US ally, imposed sanctions on Russia. And generally, the Asean nations’ statements on the invasion have not directly criticised Moscow. This is related to the considerable unease in Asia over the disruption and price shocks for global commodities caused by the Ukraine conflict.

A combine harvests wheat at a field near Kivshovata village, Kyiv region, in July. For many Southeast Asian states, the war has led to soaring prices for food and energy. Photo: AFP

Indo-Pacific interests

For Indonesia and many other Southeast Asian states, the war has led to soaring prices for food and energy, and a more polarised diplomatic environment.

Indonesia is the second-largest market for Ukrainian wheat and the fourth-largest for Russian chemical fertiliser, which is needed to grow local rice. Overall, Asean countries are major wheat importers, accounting for 15 per cent of global imports.

At the same time, many Indo-Pacific states are conscious that regional heavyweights China and India remain important partners of Moscow.

China has abstained on crucial UN resolutions condemning Russian actions in Ukraine. Beijing has repeatedly placed the blame for the conflict on Nato and the United States purportedly fuelling the conflict.

China has also massively expanded trade with Russia since the start of the invasion. This bilateral trade will exceed US$200 billion in 2023, a jump of US$70 billion since 2021. Russian energy shipments to China are projected to increase by more than 40 per cent this year.

(From left) Russia’s President Vladimir Putin, India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi and China’s President Xi Jinping in 2019. File photo: Sputnik/Kremlin via Reuters

China, India and Russia

Military ties between China and Russia continue to deepen, with several joint exercises having taken place since the start of the Ukraine invasion. Beijing has quietly supplied military-related technology to Russia, and reportedly supplied components to Iran in 2023 for use in drones being sold to Russia.

While Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been more overtly critical than China’s Xi Jinping of the Ukraine invasion, he continues to emphasise close diplomatic and military ties with Moscow.

India has also abstained on key UN resolutions criticising the invasion. And while tensions between India and China have increased, the Indian government shows no signs of reducing its dependence on spare parts and technical support for the many Russian weapons platforms used by the Indian military.

Further, trade turnover has risen by over 300 per cent since the invasion, including a tenfold increase in discounted Russian oil bought by India.

Japan-India drills complicate China’s calculus for Indo-Pacific, analysts say

Finally, Indo-Pacific nations will have other concerns about the response of the US and wider international community to the Russian invasion. In particular, they might question the West’s staying power.

The Biden administration has directed more than US$75 billion in financial and military assistance in support, Nato has further expanded its membership, and a range of comprehensive and collective sanctions have targeted the Russian economy.

But the US has also tried not to directly “provoke” the Putin regime while supporting Ukraine’s sovereignty.

There are international supporters of Ukraine who champion a “land for peace” deal with Russia, too. And it remains possible that a new Republican administration in Washington in 2024 might abandon the current military commitment.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky and New Zealand’s Prime Minister Chris Hipkins shake hands at the Nato Summit in Vilnius, Lithuania in July. Photo: Ukrainian Presidential Press Service via Reuters

Supporting Ukraine to counter China

Given the circumstances, New Zealand should remain clear-eyed about the connections between its strategic interests in the Indo-Pacific and its support for defeating Russian expansionism.

To date, New Zealand has contributed more than NZ$70 million (US$41.3 million) in humanitarian and military aid to Ukraine. But this looks pretty modest in light of the possible fallout for the Indo-Pacific region if Putin wins any sort of victory.

Especially so, considering Ukraine is a liberal democracy that gave up its nuclear weapons in 1994 (in return for Russian recognition of its sovereignty and territorial integrity), and which shares New Zealand’s goal of reforming the UN Security Council.

Indeed, the best way for New Zealand to contribute to countering Chinese assertiveness in the Indo-Pacific would be to significantly increase its military support for Ukraine.

If Russia is defeated or forced to withdraw, it will be a serious blow to Xi’s leadership and complicate any plans he might have for annexing Taiwan. This would go some way towards bolstering the rules-based order in the Indo-Pacific that is so clearly in New Zealand’s interests.

Robert G. Patman is Professor of International Relations at the University of Otago in New Zealand. This article was first published on The Conversation.
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