Russia-China
Ties Enter ‘New Era’ as Xi Meets Putin in Moscow
Xi signs an agreement with
Russian president Vladimir Putin cementing their ‘no limits’ partnership, days
after the latter was issued an international arrest warrant.
China’s President Xi Jinping
has said he signed an agreement with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin
bringing their ties into a “new era” of cooperation, as the two leaders called
for “responsible dialogue” to resolve the Ukraine crisis.
“We signed a statement on
deepening the strategic partnership and bilateral ties which are entering a new
era,” Xi said following talks with Putin in the Kremlin on Tuesday.
He added that China and
Russia should work more closely to push forward greater “practical
cooperation”.
In turn, Putin said “all
agreements have been reached” and that economic cooperation between Moscow and
Beijing was a “priority” for Russia.
The Chinese leader visited
Moscow days after the International Criminal Court (ICC) issued an arrest warrant for
Putin for crimes committed in the neighbouring country,
where Russian forces have made little progress in recent months despite
suffering heavy losses.
The talks were intended to
cement the “no limits”
partnership the two leaders announced last
February, less than three weeks before Russia invaded Ukraine.
On the conflict, the Chinese
leader said Beijing was “guided by the principles of the United Nations … and
promote a peaceful settlement” of fighting in Ukraine.
“We are always for peace and
dialogue,” he added.
A joint statement
A joint statement included
familiar accusations against the West – that Washington was undermining global
stability and NATO was barging into the Asia-Pacific region.
Putin said a Chinese proposal to
end the conflict could be used as the basis of a peace
settlement, but that the West and Kyiv were not yet ready.
“We believe that many of the
provisions of the peace plan put forward by China are consonant with Russian
approaches and can be taken as the basis for a peaceful settlement when they
are ready for that in the West and Kyiv. However, so far
we see no such readiness from their side,” Putin said.
China’s proposal – a 12-point
paper calling for de-escalation and eventual ceasefire in Ukraine – lacked
details on how to end the war.
The United States has been
dismissive of the plan, given Beijing’s refusal to condemn Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine, and has said a ceasefire would lock in Russian territorial gains and
give Putin’s army more time to regroup.
Responding to the meeting,
the White House said China’s position was not impartial, and urged Beijing to
pressure Russia to withdraw from Ukraine’s sovereign territory to end the war.
After the meeting with Xi,
Putin accused Western powers of fighting “to the last Ukrainian” and praised
the growing trade, energy and political ties between China and Russia.
Describing his talks with
Putin as “open and friendly”, Xi reiterated China’s “neutral position” on
Ukraine and called for dialogue.
Kyiv had welcomed China’s
diplomatic involvement but said Russia must pull its troops out of Ukraine and
underscore the importance of Ukraine’s territorial integrity.
Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Tuesday said Kyiv had suggested to China that Beijing
join a Ukrainian peace formula to end Russia’s war in Ukraine, but that it was
still waiting for an answer.
Gas, Internet
The agreement also pushed
forward the planned Power of Siberia 2 pipeline, which would deliver 50 billion
cubic metres (bcm) of natural gas per year from
Russia to China via Mongolia.
Putin said Moscow was ready
to increase oil exports to Beijing after Russia, China and Mongolia had
completed all agreements on a planned pipeline to ship Russian gas.
The pipeline has gained
urgency as Moscow seeks to replace Europe as its major gas customer.
Russia’s news agency, TASS,
reported that the two leaders also discussed the internet and agreed that they
stand “against militarization of information and communication technologies and
support multilateral, equal and transparent management of the Internet”.
“[They] support creation of
a multilateral, equal and transparent global management system of the Internet
with the support of sovereignty and security of all countries in this sphere,”
TASS quoted the agreement as saying.
‘Unlimited possibilities’
At a state dinner following
the talks, Putin toasted the “prosperity” of the Russian and Chinese peoples.
“I am sure that
Russian-Chinese cooperation has truly unlimited possibilities and prospects,”
he said.
Xi’s state visit was a major
boost to Putin as he squares off against what he sees as a hostile West bent on
inflicting a “strategic defeat” on Russia.
Samuel Ramani, the associate
fellow at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), told Al Jazeera that
while Tuesday’s agreement was not an alliance, it was “very clear that China
and Russia are coordinating on a variety of fronts.”
The meeting between Xi and
Putin coincided with a rare, unannounced visit to Kyiv by the Japanese prime
minister that underscored Tokyo’s support for Ukraine in its fight against
Russia’s invasion.
Zelenskyy posted footage of
him greeting Japan’s Fumio Kishida, whom the Ukrainian leader called “a truly
powerful defender of the international order and a long time friend of Ukraine”.