
The Saint Petersburg International Economic Forum is advancing in a new integration through economic corridors. Photo: The Cradle.

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The Saint Petersburg International Economic Forum is advancing in a new integration through economic corridors. Photo: The Cradle.
By Pepe Escobar â Jun 18, 2022
In St. Petersburg, the world’s new powers gather to upend the US-concocted ârules-based orderâ and reconnect the globe their way.
The St. Petersburg International Economic Forum has been configured for years now as absolutely essential to understand the evolving dynamics and the trials and tribulations of Eurasia integration.
St. Petersburg in 2022 is even more crucial as it directly connects to three simultaneous developments I had previously outlined, in no particular order:
First, the coming of the new G8âfour BRICS nations (Brazil, Russia, India, China), plus Iran, Indonesia, Turkey and Mexico, whose GDP per purchasing parity power (PPP) already dwarfs the old, western-dominated G8.
Second, the Chinese Three Rings strategy of developing geoeconomic relations with its neighbors and partners.
Third, the development of BRICS+, or extended BRICS, including some members of the new G8, to be discussed at the upcoming summit in China.
There was hardly any doubt President Putin would be the star of St. Petersburg 2022, delivering a sharp, detailed speech to the plenary session.
Among the highlights, Putin smashed the illusions of the so-called “golden billion” who live in the industrialized west (only 12% of the global population) and the âirresponsible macroeconomic policies of the G7 countries.â
The Russian president noted how âEU losses due to sanctions against Russiaâ could exceed $400 billion per year, and that Europeâs high energy pricesâsomething that actually started âin the third quarter of last yearââare due to âblindly believing in renewable sources.â
He also duly dismissed the westâs “Putin price hike” propaganda, saying the food and energy crisis is linked to misguided western economic policies, i.e., âRussian grain and fertilizers are being sanctionedâ to the detriment of the west.
In a nutshell: the west misjudged Russiaâs sovereignty when sanctioning it, and now is paying a very heavy price.
Chinese President Xi Jinping, addressing the forum by video, sent a message to the whole Global South. He evoked âtrue multilateralism,â insisting that emerging markets must have âa say in global economic management,â and called for âimproved North-South and South-South dialogue.â
It was up to Kazakh President Tokayev, the ruler of a deeply strategic partner of both Russia and China, to deliver the punch line in person: Eurasia integration should progress hand in hand with Chinaâs Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). Here it is, full circle.
Building a long-term strategy âin weeksâ
St. Petersburg offered several engrossing discussions on key themes and sub-themes of Eurasia integration, such as business within the scope of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO); aspects of the Russia-China strategic partnership; whatâs ahead for the BRICS; and prospects for the Russian financial sector.
One of the most important discussions was focused on the increasing interaction between the Eurasia Economic Union (EAEU) and ASEAN, a key example of what the Chinese would define as “South-South cooperation.”
And that connected to the still long and winding road leading to deeper integration of the EAEU itself.
This implies steps towards more self-sufficient economic development for members; establishing the priorities for import substitution; harnessing all the transport and logistical potential; developing trans-Eurasian corporations; and imprinting the EAEU âbrandâ in a new system of global economic relations.
Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexey Overchuk was particularly sharp on the pressing matters at hand: implementing a full free trade customs and economic unionâplus a unified payment systemâwith simplified direct settlements using the Mir payment card to reach new markets in South-East Asia, Africa and the Persian Gulf.
In a new era defined by Russian business circles as âthe game with no rulesââdebunking the US-coined ârules-based international orderââanother relevant discussion, featuring key Putin adviser Maxim Oreshkin, focused on what should be the priorities for big business and the financial sector in connection to the stateâs economic and foreign policy.
The consensus is that the current “rules” have been written by the west. Russia could only connect to existing mechanisms, underpinned by international law and institutions. But then the west tried to âsqueeze us outâ and even âto cancel Russia.â So itâs time to âreplace the no-rules rules.â Thatâs a key theme underlying the concept of “sovereignty” developed by Putin in his plenary address.
In another important discussion chaired by the CEO of western-sanctioned Sberbank Herman Gref, there was much hand-wringing about the fact that the Russian âevolutionary leap forward towards 2030â should have happened sooner. Now a âlong-term strategy has to be built in weeks,â with supply chains breaking down all across the spectrum.
A question was posed to the audienceâthe crème de la crème of Russiaâs business community: what would you recommend, increased trade with the east, or redirecting the structure of the Russian economy? A whopping 72% voted for the latter.
So now we come to the crunch, as all these themes interact when we look at what happened only a few days before St. Petersburg.
The Russia-Iran-India corridor
A key node of the International North South Transportation Corridor (INTSC) is now in play, linking northwest Russia to the Persian Gulf via the Caspian Sea and Iran. The transportation time between St. Petersburg and Indian ports is 25 days.
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This logistical corridor with multimodal transportation carries an enormous geopolitical significance for two BRICs members and a prospective member of the new G8 because it opens a key alternative route to the usual cargo trail from Asia to Europe via the Suez canal.
The International North South Transportation Corridor (INSTC)The INSTC corridor is a classic South-South integration project: a 7,200-km-long multimodal network of ship, rail, and road routes interlinking India, Afghanistan, Central Asia, Iran, Azerbaijan, and Russia all the way to Finland in the Baltic Sea.
Technically, picture a set of containers going overland from St. Petersburg to Astrakhan. Then the cargo sails via the Caspian to the Iranian port of Bandar Anzeli. Then itâs transported overland to the port of Bandar Abbas. And then overseas to Nava Sheva, the largest seaport in India. The key operator is Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines (the IRISL group), which has branches in both Russia and India.
And that brings us to what wars from now will be fought about: transportation corridorsâand not territorial conquest.
Beijingâs fast-paced BRI is seen as an existential threat to the “rules-based international order.” It develops along six overland corridors across Eurasia, plus the Maritime Silk Road from the South China Sea, and the Indian Ocean, all the way to Europe.
One of the key targets of NATOâs proxy war in Ukraine is to interrupt BRI corridors across Russia. The Empire will go all out to interrupt not only BRI but also INSTC nodes. Afghanistan under US occupation was prevented from become a node for either BRI or INSTC.
With full access to the Sea of Azovânow a âRussian lakeââand arguably the whole Black Sea coastline further on down the road, Moscow will hugely increase its sea trading prospects (Putin: âThe Black Sea was historically Russian territoryâ).
For the past two decades, energy corridors have been heavily politicized and are at the center of unforgiving global pipeline competitionsâfrom BTC and South Stream to Nord Stream 1 and 2, and the never-ending soap operas, the Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India (TAPI) and Iran-Pakistan-India (IPI) gas pipelines.
Then thereâs the Northern Sea Route alongside the Russian coastline all the way to the Barents Sea. China and India are very much focused on the Northern Sea Route, not by accident also discussed in detail in St. Petersburg.
The contrast between the St. Petersburg debates on a possible re-wiring of our worldâand the Three Stooges Taking a Train to Nowhere to tell a mediocre Ukrainian comedian to calm down and negotiate his surrender (as confirmed by German intelligence)âcould not be starker.
Almost imperceptiblyâjust as it re-incorporated Crimea and entered the Syrian theaterâRussia as a military-energy superpower now shows it is potentially capable of driving a great deal of the industrialized west back into the Stone Age. The western elites are just helpless. If only they could ride a corridor on the Eurasian high-speed train, they might learn something.
(The Cradle)

Pepe Escobar is a Brazilian journalist. He writes a column â The Roving Eye â for Asia Times Online, and works as an analyst for RT, Sputnik News, and Press TV. In addition, he previously worked for Al Jazeera.