America Is Losing the Arctic to Russia

America Is Losing the Arctic to Russia

For years since the end of the Cold War, Washington has ignored the Arctic, allowing for its strategic rivals to slowly but surely gobble up larger and larger amounts of the region.

 

President-Elect Donald J. Trump’s recent comments about his apparent desire to “purchase” Greenland and possibly Canada have sparked a firestorm throughout the world. While these comments may have been simple negotiation tactics to secure better trade deals (especially from Canada), the fact of the matter is that Trump has highlighted a real geopolitical crisis unfolding for the United States in its own proverbial backyard of the Arctic. 

 

Go back to 2008, when Barack Obama was on his historic rise to the White House. Back then, Russia was in the geopolitical hotseat as they had invaded their neighbor of Georgia, which had been seeking to become closer to the United States, the European Union (EU), and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). 

After nearly a decade of ignoring Russia’s silent conquest of the Arctic, the Americans are finally awake, and have announced that they would be taking the vital first steps toward restoring US primacy in the Arctic. That first step was to purchase new icebreakers. America has not built a new icebreaker for more than 25 years. Compare that with Russia’s growing fleet of icebreakers, operated by Rosatomflot, a subsidiary of the Russian state nuclear company. In 2022, the Russian government signed a contract with the Russian firm to purchase a sixth-and-seventh nuclear-powered pair of icebreakers.

Indeed, High North News reported in 2023 that the new Polar Security Cutter that had been under construction by Bollinger Mississippi Shipbuilding had been delayed until 2027—meaning that now the Coast Guard will not get its militarized icebreaker until the 2030s. The new American icebreaker had been scheduled for an initial build date in 2021 and an ultimate deployment in the first half of 2024.

Icebreakers form a crucial component for any nation seeking to operate in the Arctic. These great ships allow for the country or corporation using them to create open pathways through the ice that other ships, such as warships or merchant vessels, can then use. Without these systems, human operations in the High North would be impossible. The Americans are losing the Arctic to the Russians.