Chattanooga Times Free Press

China says it has no intention to benefit from war in Ukraine

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BERLIN — China’s foreign minister said Tuesday that his country has no intention of benefiting from the war in Ukraine and hopes for further discussion­s on a peace plan Beijing proposed earlier this year.

Speaking after a meeting with his German counterpar­t in Berlin, Foreign Minister Qin Gang noted the recent talks the government in Beijing had with both Moscow and Kyiv, and said China’s special envoy for Europe was expected to visit Ukraine again soon.

“We won’t pour oil on the fire” of the war, Qin said, according to an official interprete­r.

Western countries have accused Beijing of providing political and material support to Russia since its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. The European Union is currently considerin­g imposing sanctions against companies that supply critical components to Russia’s arms industry.

Qin denied Chinese firms were doing so. He said China maintains “normal” trade relations with Russia, not mentioning a significan­t bump in China’s purchases of Russian crude oil at a major discount.

German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock urged China to use its clout to find a peaceful solution to the conflict but suggested that Beijing wasn’t doing enough yet.

“As a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, China can play a significan­t role in ending the war, if it decides to do so,” she told reporters in Berlin.

Baerbock welcomed recent statements by the Chinese government confirming the sovereignt­y of countries that once made up the Soviet Union, adding that the position must hold for Ukraine, too.

The German government is currently in the process of adjusting its policy toward China, with some in the three-party coalition government pushing for a tougher line toward Beijing.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz said in a speech to the European Parliament on Tuesday that he favors a “de-risking” rather than a “decoupling” of Germany’s economy from China.

The distinctio­n did not satisfy Qin, who suggested the German government’s eventually policy could hurt trade between the two countries.

“Normal economic change should not be politicize­d,” he said.

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