David Fields
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2010–14 Collapse of cooperation and return to confrontation
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This chapter’s starts with the context of attempted US/UK political resets in the relationship between Russia and the West. The resets could not, however, hide the reality of the deep political divisions between the two sides nor that these resets were ultimately doomed to failure as manifested Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014. Nevertheless naval cooperation did continue and a high profile visit by the head of the Russian Navy in 2012, Admiral Chirkov, mirrored the effort being made at the political level to improve the relationship. Attempts were made to reinvigorate some of the ideas from earlier periods of cooperation, including establishing communication links between the Royal Navy’s operational HQ at Northwood and the Northern Fleet. Admiral Yevmonov, then head of the Russian Navy, was the deputy commander of the Northern Fleet at the time and was supportive of such initiatives. Author David Fields’ private meeting with Yevmenov is captured and as such marked the last ‘friendly’ cooperation meeting between the two navies before the annexation of Crimea. The immediate diplomatic aftermath of the annexation is discussed and the mistaken decision to suspend military dialogue with Russia. The chapter concludes with a brief overview that between 2014 and 2022 prior to the full-scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia, some military dialogue took place within the maritime context but it was extremely limited and ultimately collapsed. Russia and the West had returned to confrontation.

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The Royal and Russian Navies

Cooperation, Competition and Confrontation

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