In Part I of this series the author explored how the Arctic has re-emerged as a key missile-warning and defense corridor, defined by its geostrategic characteristics and the changing military postures of the United States and Russia. He further observed mounting strategic pressures, including Russian modernization and the growing Sino-Russian partnership, that challenge existing early warning and response architectures. This second installment, also originally published by Pacific Forum and republished with permission, builds on that foundation by exploring the growing interconnection between developments in the Arctic and the security environment of the Indo-Pacific.
Russia’s increasingly frequent missile activities in the Arctic erode US national security – not only in terms of expanding capabilities, but also in terms of the performance of existing early warning and response architectures. New systems, such as hypersonic delivery platforms, reduce detection time and make incoming threats harder to predict, challenging legacy radar and interception systems.
Concurrently, Russia’s broader modernization efforts, ranging from undersea delivery systems to counterspace capabilities to dual-use platforms, increase the range and ambiguity of potential avenues of attack.
These developments threaten the reliability of present missile detection and interception systems, especially in the Arctic, where geographic and climatic conditions already degrade monitoring and response. This creates a more constrained and uncertain decision space with implications for US homeland defense and extended deterrence in the Indo-Pacific.
Commercial jets flying over the Arctic on polar routes can cross over missile launches, hampering Alaska’s ability to conduct missile warning and interception operations. Alaska is a vital node in the United States’ homeland missile warning architecture and allows for reinforcement of Indo-Pacific operations. Degraded Arctic detection and interception capacity may slow and diminish confidence in strategic warning across both theaters.
In a major contingency, an adversary could launch coordinated saturation attacks to deplete homeland-level and regional-level missile-defense resources simultaneously, compelling the United States to deploy limited interception assets across multiple theaters of operations.
Meanwhile, the accelerating Sino-Russian partnership is increasingly tying the Arctic to Indo-Pacific security and deepening Russia’s military footprint. International sanctions on Russia and China’s growing economic investment and dual-use logistical activities in the High North have moved bilateral cooperation from episodic coordination to a more sustained strategic partnership. With Chinese capital and infrastructure and Russia’s advantages in Arctic access and sea control, especially along the Northern Sea Route, a more sustained pattern of joint activity has emerged.
The increased Sino-Russian coordination enhances ISR (intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance), regional access and operational flexibility in the Arctic. Combined, these developments improve Russia’s ability to apply military pressure on North America from polar directions and enable China to conduct operations in the High North. The resulting improved cross-theater coordination complicates US defense planning and improves bilateral deterrence.
This cooperation is modifying the Arctic security structure in three ways.
First, it expands the operational footprint of a non-Arctic state – China – into the Arctic theater, adding opportunities for geopolitical influence beyond China’s immediate focus on the Pacific theater.
Second, the joint air and naval patrols, ISR cooperation and dual-use scientific activities are augmenting the two countries’ interoperability and domain awareness, serving as force multipliers of their joint capacity to monitor and contest cross-domain adversarial activities.
Third, these developments are strongly correlated to deterrence enhancement as a result. The Sino-Russo coordination improves the sensing, regional access capacity in the Arctic theater, which further strengthens their capacity in homeland-directed operations across polar routes and complementary pressures on US and allied forces in the Indo-Pacific.
As a result, Arctic security has become increasingly connected to Indo-Pacific competition, requiring U.S. planners to consider both theaters as strategically interconnected rather than separate operational environments.
Indo-Pacific linkage and interconnected risks
Though geographically distant from the Arctic, China, a self-proclaimed “near-Arctic state” (近北极国家), has increasingly linked the region to broader strategic dynamics in the Indo-Pacific. China’s investments in dual-use scientific research, infrastructure, Arctic scientific expeditions, icebreaker deployments and dual-use logistical activities have expanded its footprint in the High North, in line with broader geoeconomic and strategic goals.
The growing engagement of non-Arctic actors suggests that the Arctic is moving from a perception as a region primarily associated with North Atlantic security to one increasingly associated with global strategic competition.
China’s growing Arctic footprint is a concern not only for the High North but also because the United States’ missile warning architecture, strategic force posture and allied defense planning increasingly converge across the Arctic and the Indo-Pacific. Developments in one theater are increasingly affecting deterrence calculations in the other.
Thus, the Arctic’s security and Indo-Pacific deterrence should no longer be viewed as separate strategic theaters.
Additionally, the expiration of the New START Treaty and China’s rapid nuclear buildup are increasing strategic uncertainty in the Arctic. With fewer restrictions on the size and makeup of the nuclear arsenals of the United States and Russia and with China’s nuclear forces continuing to grow, the importance of the region for missile defense, strategic warning and electronic warfare is likely to increase.
These developments could lead to further militarization of the Arctic and increase the need for confidence-building measures and devoted crisis management frameworks.
A multilateral Arctic governance framework
The spread of multinational military infrastructure, dual-use technologies, and missile-related activities in the Arctic makes a multilateral governance framework designed to promote communication, transparency and crisis management ever more important.
The US and allies should seek to expand coordinated early warning interoperability based on intelligence sharing and rapid crisis response. These capabilities are all aimed at improving Arctic domain awareness and the effectiveness of crisis communication.
In particular, mechanisms of crisis communication at the leadership level (for example, from military to military) are critical to avoid uncontrolled escalation from militarization. Additionally, stakeholders should continue efforts to improve detection capacity for target identification, prioritize categories, and ensure accurate interception of incoming threats.
As missile warning timelines compress and Arctic military activity intensifies, the region is becoming increasingly relevant to crisis stability and nuclear deterrence management in the Indo-Pacific. The United States and its allies should therefore treat Arctic missile-warning infrastructure and Indo-Pacific deterrence planning as linked rather than geographically isolated theaters.
First, the United States and Canada should continue to modernize the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD)’s early warning architecture and expand opportunities for trusted partners to contribute to Arctic domain awareness through intelligence sharing, data integration, and technical cooperation.
Second, Indo-Pacific allies, including Japan and South Korea, can improve early warning resilience without permanent forward deployment in the Arctic. Both are well-positioned to contribute advanced ISR capabilities, sensor integration, and data-processing technologies, particularly in space-based monitoring and missile tracking.
Third, a multilateral framework, which centers real-time intelligence sharing and coordination, is critical for de-escalation and collective security during a crisis. Such an initiative remains politically feasible and executable, given the existing partnership structure among the United States, Canada, and allies in the Indo-Pacific.
Fourth, stakeholders should develop direct and secure crisis communication channels to reduce the risks associated with dual-capable systems and compressed decision timelines. Together, these measures would strengthen Arctic domain awareness and reinforce deterrence stability in both the Arctic and Indo-Pacific theaters.
Emerson Tsui (Emersonatsui@outlook.com) is a Washington, D.C.–based China and Indo-Pacific security analyst whose research focuses on Taiwan security, cross-Strait deterrence and PRC strategic affairs.







