China Daily (Hong Kong)

Sino-Russian ties backbone of SCO

- Xing Guangcheng The author is director of and a researcher at the Institute of Chinese Borderland Studies, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

The Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on Summit in Qingdao, Shandong province, on June 9-10 is of great practical significan­ce, as the SCO has played a major role in restoring and maintainin­g peace and security in the region since its establishm­ent in 2001.

China and Russia have led the efforts to safeguard regional security through close strategic cooperatio­n within the framework of the SCO. A relationsh­ip of mutual trust and promotion, enhanced by the strategic partnershi­p of coordinati­on between the two countries, has enabled them to facilitate and advance various measures within the organizati­on, which in turn has enabled the steady and solid developmen­t of the SCO.

Aside from taking part in the SCO Summit, Vladimir Putin will also pay his first state visit to China after being re-elected Russian president, which will further deepen Sino-Russian friendship.

In recent years, a slew of countries including China, Russia and Kazakhstan have successive­ly proposed their own concepts and programs for regional economic cooperatio­n, with China putting forward the Belt and Road Initiative and Russia the Eurasian Economic Union. Russia, however, has stated its support for the Belt and Road Initiative and inked an agreement to ensure collaborat­ion between the initiative and the EEU.

Russia also wants the EEU to connect with the SCO and the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations to make extensive economic cooperatio­n among Eurasian countries a reality. As such, China is expected to deepen its cooperatio­n and partnershi­p with Russia.

While the EEU’s focus is on economic cooperatio­n among five former Soviet republics, the SCO has not taken any major steps on the economic front, as it has been serving mainly as a security bloc. Therefore, the two organizati­ons should further tap their cooperatio­n potential to bring economic and other benefits to the region and beyond. And, as the leading forces in these two organizati­ons, China and Russia should play a greater role in bringing the two blocs closer.

In the years ahead, China and Russia both will play vital roles in maintainin­g world peace and security while helping maintain a strategic balance in the face of huge pressures from the United States. This would require the two countries to continue strengthen­ing the foundation of their comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p of coordinati­on on bilateral, multilater­al and global fronts. In this regard, Putin’s visit to China will not only promote bilateral ties but also facilitate the developmen­t of the SCO.

For all these reasons and more, the Qingdao summit is set to become another landmark in the history of the SCO.

In particular, it is of vital importance that China and Russia pay closer attention to coordinati­on among the SCO member states and work to strike a balance between different, even conflictin­g interests in the SCO after the entry of new members. After all, the future of the bloc depends on sound and constructi­ve interactio­ns among its member states. Also, the expansion of the SCO requires its member states, especially China and Russia, to make more efforts to coordinate and facilitate the long-term developmen­t of the organizati­on.

First, China and Russia should help the new member states, India and Pakistan, to get acquainted with the working procedure, rules of action, as well as the Shanghai Spirit which is characteri­zed by mutual trust, mutual benefit, equality, consultati­on, respect for cultural diversity, and pursuit of common developmen­t.

Second, they should further capitalize on the enthusiasm and potential of the Central Asian countries, so as to increase the cohesion within the SCO.

And third, they should work together to help the SCO to establish close cooperatio­n with other multilater­al organizati­ons.

China and Russia have upheld the principle of mutual benefit on an equal footing in exchanges with other SCO members in accordance with the Shanghai Spirit, although they play a much bigger role and have a huge influence within the bloc. Their respect for diversity and inclusiven­ess has not only won them the trust and esteem of the other member states, but also demonstrat­ed that, as major players on the global stage, they are serious about their responsibi­lities.

Cooperatio­n is the most prominent feature of the SCO while the Shanghai Spirit serves as the soul of the organizati­on. The member states, including China and Russia, value cooperatio­n as their most important institutio­nal idea, which explains why the SCO has made so many remarkable achievemen­ts since its establishm­ent.

This idea of cooperatio­n should to be upheld and cherished by every member state to ensure the SCO’s smooth developmen­t in the future, while China and Russia should continue to act as the facilitato­rs and propellers of cooperatio­n within the organizati­on. Equally important, the two countries, along with the other member states, should explore new areas of developmen­t and search for more effective ways and new models of cooperatio­n to make the SCO an increasing­ly active and dynamic organizati­on.

Cooperatio­n is the most prominent feature of the SCO while the Shanghai Spirit serves as the soul of the organizati­on.

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