China Daily

Initiative taken to seek consensus on dousing fire of conflict in Ukraine

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There has been little sign of the conflict in Ukraine coming to an end. It has now entered its third year and some Western government­s are seemingly intent on prolonging it for as long as possible, even though the belligeren­t parties are locked in a bloody war of attrition in which neither side is gaining a significan­t advantage. There are also signs of growing public discontent at the money being spent by the United States and its European allies to support Ukraine’s military capabiliti­es as the money could be better used at home to support livelihood­s and well-being.

French President Emmanuel Macron warned of the possibilit­y of putting Western boots on the ground in Ukraine in order to prevent a Russian victory at a meeting of European leaders in Paris on Monday, putting the spotlight on how some Western leaders have been intent on reinforcin­g Kyiv’s resolve to fight rather than seeking ways to bring an end to the conflict. With both the battlefiel­ds in Ukraine and Western aid to the country now gridlocked, Macron’s words should help focus minds on now being the time to give peace a chance.

China certainly thinks it is an opportune moment to make renewed efforts to end the conflict. On Wednesday, Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Mao Ning announced that starting from March 2, Li Hui, China’s special envoy on Eurasian affairs, will travel to Russia, the European Union headquarte­rs, Poland, Ukraine, Germany and France on a diplomatic mission to push for a political settlement to the Ukraine crisis. This new diplomatic initiative demonstrat­es China’s commitment to in-depth communicat­ions among the key stakeholde­rs involved to resolve the conflict.

China is not party to the Ukraine conflict; it is impartial, having friendly relations with both the belligeren­ts. It issued a position paper on Feb 24 last year, making clear its stance and elaboratin­g on the political pathway it proposed to reach a settlement to the crisis. It also sent a special envoy to Europe to conduct the first round of shuttle diplomacy last May to solicit the views of different parties to see if there was any common ground on which a foothold could be found for a negotiated end to the conflict.

The Ukraine crisis has caused a huge loss of life and much suffering. It has also had wider ramificati­ons, doing incalculab­le damage to the European economy, disrupting internatio­nal supply chains, and has threatened the very fabric of regional peace and stability.

The most pressing priority is to stop the hostilitie­s, launch peace talks and restore stability on the continent. Countries should give China’s diplomatic initiative their full support. The death toll in Ukraine should trouble the conscience of all with any vestige of humanity. De-escalation of the fighting should be the primary goal to save lives and create favorable conditions for meaningful negotiatio­ns.

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