The core example I would give you is in the context of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. We shut it all down with the Russians, and there were policies that we instituted, and that the United States and our allies instituted, basically to shut all this down. The issue for me is why we shut all this down, although, the Coast Guard forum is still in place, and that's important, not least of all given our limited resources and the American limited resources in the Arctic relative to the Russian capabilities, which we might need as the Arctic opens up further.
That's the problem. We neglected this. We allowed that conflict in eastern Europe to colour everything we did. I understand the politics of all this, but there is still an important need for us to engage them.
For example, in the scientific world, in terms of climate change and permafrost warning, their scientists have important information that we need to know about, and we need to exchange with them. However, under the current situation, we're not doing that. That's really problematic for us. You have to ask yourself, at the end of the day, where the Arctic sits relative to the areas of confrontation or conflict we have with the Russians or even with the Chinese. They're really not in the Arctic.
The Arctic should be understood as a zone of co-operation because we all have common interests in the Arctic. If we don't do this, then what the Arctic potentially becomes, unintentionally, is a spark, which is a road we don't want to go down. It requires bold leadership, and unfortunately, we have had no bold leadership, for over a decade, on how to manage this.