Last week, leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations led by Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. visited Kazan, Russia, to celebrate 35 years of ASEAN-Russia relations and 30 years of dialogue cooperation.
Russian President Vladimir Putin welcomed the leaders of Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Vietnam to Russia’s fifth largest city where they signed a joint statement promoting a “just multipolar world as guided by international law and the principles of the UN Charter.” Under normal circumstances, the summit would have gone unnoticed. After all, ASEAN and Russian leaders have met in the past — most recently in 2016 in Sochi, Russia. However, within the context of the global energy crisis caused by the U.S.-Israel war against Iran, the Russia-ASEAN summit this time around was geostrategically significant. For decades, Moscow has sought to deepen engagement with Asian partners in its own “turn to the East”— essentially the Kremlin’s “pivot to Asia”— strategy to reduce its dependence on Europe. Especially as relations with the West deteriorated over the Ukraine war, Russia has made Asia the centerpiece of its long-term strategy to sustain economic growth, expand energy exports, and reinforce its vision of a multipolar world order.
Russia’s economic relationship with ASEAN has expanded steadily over the past decade but remains modest compared to the bloc’s ties with China and the United States. Bilateral trade has grown from roughly $17-18 billion in 2015 to approximately $30 billion in 2025, an increase of about 70 percent, driven largely by Russia’s post-2022 pivot toward Asian markets following Western sanctions. Moscow’s exports to ASEAN are concentrated in commodities — including crude oil, petroleum products, coal, fertilizers, wheat, and metals — while ASEAN exports electronics, machinery, consumer goods, rubber, and palm oil. Although Russia has increased energy sales to Southeast Asia, particularly through trading hubs such as Singapore and via discounted crude and refined petroleum products to countries including Vietnam, Myanmar, Malaysia, and Indonesia, ASEAN accounts for only a small share of Russia's overall oil exports, with China and India still purchasing roughly four-fifths of Russian crude. By comparison, China-ASEAN trade exceeded $1 trillion in 2025, making China ASEAN’s largest trading partner, while U.S.-ASEAN goods trade reached approximately $580 billion, underscoring that Russia’s commercial footprint in Southeast Asia remains relatively limited. Nonetheless, the Kremlin’s economic engagement with ASEAN is on an upward trajectory, fueled by growing energy cooperation, expanded use of local-currency settlement mechanisms, and Moscow’s broader strategic effort to deepen economic ties across the Indo-Pacific.
“It is a strategic partnership that serves as an essential stabilizing factor in the Asia-Pacific amidst geopolitical turbulence,” Putin argued at the summit, and the two sides made good on that rhetoric. Indeed, ASEAN and Russia adopted a Joint Statement on Energy Cooperation that commits them to deeper collaboration on LNG, natural gas, renewable energy, hydrogen, nuclear power, and broader energy-transition initiatives. The agreement reflects Southeast Asia’s growing demand for energy security and Russia’s efforts to expand energy ties with Asian partners amid continued Western sanctions. While no ASEAN state publicly pledged to increase imports of Russian oil or other commodities at the Kazan summit, leaders adopted an energy cooperation framework that expands collaboration in the future.
The reality is that Southeast Asia is strategically ripe for Russian engagement right now. The region has been particularly hard hit by the global energy crisis since Trump began his Iran war and Tehran responded by closing the Strait of Hormuz. Most notably, shortly after the conflict began, the Philippines became the first and only nation to declare a national energy emergency because of its overdependence on oil from the Strait of Hormuz and limited strategic reserves. Other ASEAN nations, such as Thailand and Vietnam, have also been extremely vulnerable to supply chain disruptions, prompting the Philippines, as ASEAN chair, to use last month’s ASEAN Summit in Cebu to push for a regional oil-sharing framework and closer coordination on energy security.
While India received a dedicated waiver from the Trump administration to purchase Russian oil during the energy crisis, several energy-vulnerable ASEAN states — including the Philippines, Indonesia, and potentially Brunei — were among the likely beneficiaries of broader U.S. sanctions waivers that temporarily permitted them to purchase Russian oil already at sea. Washington, however, never publicly identified any ASEAN country as receiving an exemption. And because the Trump administration refused to offer its direct and specific support to hard-hit Southeast Asian countries, the vacuum naturally enabled the Kremlin to more easily engage on the issue at Kazan. Last week, the Trump administration complicated the matter further by quietly allowing all waivers to end, thereby reimposing sanctions on Russian oil for consumers, including Southeast Asia. Trump signaled he would do this at the G7 summit because, in his words , “the oil is now flowing.” But the U.S.-Iran deal remains fragile, the opening of the Strait of Hormuz is too, and Trump is still threatening resumed military strikes. For Southeast Asia, Russia by comparison looks far more predictable and stable, even if its oil remains under sanction; in other words, it might be worth the risk. That said, no ASEAN member is likely to violate American sanctions on Russia — at least not for now. But there are other critical products that are not under sanction from Russia, namely fertilizer, which individual states may decide to import, giving Moscow more leverage in the region. Putin also delivered an immediate goodwill gesture to Manila by ordering the release and repatriation of 24 Filipinos who had been detained in Siberia for roughly nine months after Marcos raised the issue during their bilateral meeting in Kazan. The episode could bolster Russia’s image across Southeast Asia as a pragmatic partner capable of delivering tangible results through leader-to-leader diplomacy. In a region where personal relationships and executive authority often carry significant weight, Putin’s intervention may resonate particularly well among governments that value strong centralized leadership.
Trump is also engaging in transactionalism in Southeast Asia and worldwide, but typically the results benefit him, his family, the Trump organization, or the United States — and not the partner nation. Putin’s intervention, meanwhile, produced a tangible concession for Manila rather than Moscow. That distinction could resonate in parts of Southeast Asia, particularly among more authoritarian governments that value personal diplomacy and judge partnerships primarily by what they deliver.
None of this means Russia is poised to replace the United States in Southeast Asia. To be sure, the Kremlin’s strategic opening in Southeast Asia remains modest, but it is real. Moscow lacks the economic resources, investment capacity, and security presence necessary to compete with Washington or Beijing across the region. Yet great power influence is often gained at the margins, especially during moments of crisis. By contributing to a global energy shock, offering only limited relief to vulnerable Southeast Asian states, and then abruptly reimposing sanctions on Russian oil, the Trump administration has created conditions that allow the Kremlin to present itself as a useful and responsive partner. If Washington wants to maintain its strategic position in Southeast Asia, it will need to do more than compete with China. It will also need to avoid handing Russia opportunities that it could not have created on its own.