Washington – As U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken heads to Vietnam, he should negotiate a diplomatic wrestle through which Vietnam and China are competing for the best to develop oil and fuel reserves off Vietnam’s coast within the South China Sea.
Blinken’s go to follows a name between U.S. President Joe Biden and the chief of Vietnam’s ruling Communist Party, Nguyen Phu Trong, on March 29, when the 2 leaders agreed to develop the bilateral relationship.
This 12 months marks the tenth anniversary of the U.S.-Vietnam Comprehensive Partnership. The two international locations have been discussing learn how to advance their ties to the subsequent degree – a strategic partnership. Vietnam has complete strategic partnerships with Moscow and Beijing.
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The conflicting pursuits dealing with Hanoi – navigating a traditionally fraught relationship with China, bilateral ties with like-minded Russia, and warming relations with the U.S., an enemy defeated lower than 50 years in the past – might check Vietnam’s “three NO’s” overseas coverage – no alignment with any international locations in opposition to a 3rd nation, no navy alliance with any nation, no overseas navy base in its territory.
Russia’s state-controlled oil firm Zarubezhneft and fuel large Gazprom, working with a subsidiary of PetroVietnam, the nation’s state-owned fossil gas firm, function a fuel discipline in Vietnam’s South China Sea unique financial zone (EEZ), in keeping with the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a assume tank in Washington.
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Chinese coast guard ships have sailed into the areas operated by Russian companies in Vietnam’s EEZ about 40 occasions since January 2022, in keeping with vessel-tracking information from Vietnamese analysis group South China Sea Chronicle Initiative (SCSCI), an impartial nonprofit, in keeping with Reuters.
The most up-to-date incident was on March 27, days after Russian President Vladimir and his counterpart Xi Jinping met to reaffirm their “no-limits friendship.” Moscow has turn out to be more and more reliant on Beijing to interrupt isolation and sanctions imposed by the West over its struggle in Ukraine.
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Colin Koh, a analysis fellow of maritime safety points on the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies at Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University, advised VOA Vietnamese that he believes Putin introduced up the incidents involving the Chinese coast guard vessels within the South China Sea to Xi as a result of working with Vietnam on power drilling is in Russia’s curiosity.
Koh expressed doubt that Moscow would surrender its power partnership with Vietnam, as Beijing desires. Hanoi is “by far [Russia’s] most steadfast, most longstanding friend in Southeast Asia,” he wrote in a March 29 e-mail to VOA Vietnamese.
“Will Moscow want to risk pushing Hanoi to the embrace of the West? … And more broadly, does Russia really want to risk being seen as not only an unreliable partner by Vietnam, but also seen as playing second fiddle to China?” he mentioned within the e-mail.
It could be an enormous blow to Vietnam, particularly in weapons procurement, if Moscow aligned with Beijing’s place within the South China Sea, in keeping with Koh.
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“Even though Vietnam has in recent years diversified beyond Russia for military technologies, the key ‘big ticket’ military equipment are still Russian in origin,” he mentioned, itemizing an array of navy {hardware} – essential battle tanks, multirole fight plane, floor combatants, submarines and missile programs.
“Therefore, dissociating with Russia doesn’t serve Vietnam’s long-term interest, considering that fully replacing Russian systems in its arsenal will take a long time and is prohibitively costly,” mentioned Koh.
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Striking a steadiness
However, Hanoi ought to strike an equilibrium between Russia and the West and shouldn’t be seen by Moscow as leaning an excessive amount of towards the West over the struggle in Ukraine, Koh mentioned.
“It does help that its current position on the war in Ukraine has at least been accepted by Russia,” he mentioned.
In the power sector, Hanoi can look to Western firms to take over oil and fuel tasks within the South China Sea if Moscow withdraws, mentioned Koh, who cautioned that any potential alternative should be keen to imagine the chance of stress from China.
In 2018, Spain’s Repsol suspended its power prospecting off Vietnam within the South China Sea after Hanoi succumbed to a 12 months of Chinese stress, Reuters reported. The firm might have misplaced as much as $200 million, in keeping with The Diplomat.
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Ha Hoang Hop, Associate Senior Fellow of ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore and chairman of the VietKnow assume tank in Hanoi, advised VOA Vietnamese that Beijing couldn’t drive Moscow to withdraw from the power partnership with Vietnam.
He famous that between 2017 and 2019, Bejing “piled pressure on Moscow” however Russia responded every time by making “it very clear that the projects were in the waters completely under Vietnam’s jurisdiction, so Beijing was not in a position to interfere,” he advised VOA Vietnamese in a telephone interview.
Hop mentioned, “There’s no way Russia compromises its energy projects with Vietnam in the South China Sea despite Beijing’s pressure” on condition that the oil and fuel tasks there “are also Russian interests.”

