Miami Herald

Xi’s embrace of Putin dents his chances of playing peacemaker on Ukraine

-

Chinese President Xi Jinping will deliver a strong message of support for Vladimir Putin with his three-day visit to Moscow this week, even as he pitches Beijing’s proposals for brokering an end to the Russian leader’s war in Ukraine.

Xi’s trip marks his most ambitious effort yet to weigh into Europe’s bloodiest conflict since the Second World War, and will be followed by his first conversati­on with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy since Putin’s February 2022 invasion. It comes on the heels of China’s successful efforts to help Iran and Saudi Arabia patch up years of discord.

But while Xi’s “rock solid” backing of Putin ensures a warm welcome in Moscow on his first trip abroad since securing a third term as president, it also makes him a harder sell as an honest broker to mediate an end to the war. Both Moscow and Kyiv have been cool to China’s vague peace proposals, which Ukraine’s allies in the U.S. and Europe dismissed outright.

“Both sides are in ‘let’s give war a chance’ mode,” said Alexander Gabuev, director of the Carnegie Russia-Eurasia Center. “Now is not the right time for diplomacy.”

Putin made a surprise trip to occupied Mariupol, the Ukrainian city largely destroyed by a monthslong Russian siege, according to a Kremlin statement Sunday and video released on state television. Ukraine is preparing an offensive with new weapons provided by its allies, while Russia is digging in for a long fight, hoping to outlast Kyiv and its supporters. Each side blames the other for being unwilling to talk.

Still, Xi’s Moscow visit is a chance to tout his image as a global “statesman” and challenge U.S. global dominance, defying Washington’s efforts to isolate Putin, who’s hosted only a few other leaders since the war began. The trip comes as tensions between Washington and Beijing have spiked.

The U.S. on Friday again denounced China’s

Ukraine plan as biased toward Russia, calling on Xi to reach out to Zelenskyy directly.

For Putin, Xi’s arrival is an opportunit­y to tighten what’s become his most important internatio­nal relationsh­ip, with one-onone talks and an “informal” dinner planned.

Trade between the neighbors has surged amid the unpreceden­ted sanctions the U.S. and its allies imposed on Russia over the invasion. Over that period, China has bought more than $65 billion in Russian energy, providing a key source of cash for the Kremlin, as well as vital supplies of technology and other goods. Russia expects trade volume to jump to $200 billion this year from roughly $185 billion in 2022.

“Trade with China is now absolutely vital for Russia,” said Janis Kluge, an analyst of the Russian economy with the German Institute for Internatio­nal and Security Affairs in Berlin. “Economic relations were always asymmetric, but since the start of the war the asymmetry has turned into a dependency.”

But while the Kremlin said the two leaders will discuss energy and the arms trade, there’s no sign major new deals are in the works. The U.S. has warned China against providing lethal aid to Russia, which has also been a major weapons supplier to Beijing.

Even if the timing is off, Xi’s push will give him the chance to portray China as seeking peace while the U.S. and its allies discuss sending more arms to Ukraine. That message is likely to resonate with much of the non-aligned world, which is reeling from the surge in global food costs triggered by the war.

“I doubt that China believes that the peace plan has any real viability in the near term,” said Joseph Torigian, an assistant professor at the American University.

 ?? SERGEI BOBYLYOV TNS ?? Chinese President Xi Jinping will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow for three days beginning Monday.
SERGEI BOBYLYOV TNS Chinese President Xi Jinping will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow for three days beginning Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States