Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Xi urges talks, opposes sanctions
Chinese leader refuses to criticize Russia for Ukraine war
BEIJING — Chinese leader Xi Jinping on Thursday said his government supports talks to resolve international disputes and opposes “wanton use” of sanctions.
Xi’s remarks confirm that China is sticking to its stance of refusing to criticize Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Beijing has refused to call the conflict an invasion and said Russia was provoked by NATO’s expansion.
Despite that, Xi said China remains “committed to respecting the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all countries” and non-interference in their internal affairs.
“We stay committed to peacefully resolving differences and disputes between countries through dialogue and consultation, support all efforts conducive to the peaceful settlement of crises, reject double standards, and oppose the wanton use of unilateral sanctions and long- arm jurisdiction,” Xi said in a televised address to an international forum.
China has abstained or voted with Russia on recent proposals brought before the United Nations, and China’s state- controlled media have amplified Russian claims about Ukraine staging attacks and producing biological weapons with U.S. cooperation.
Xi met with Putin in Beijing less than a month before Russia launched its Feb. 24 invasion, with the two sides issuing a joint statement affirming their “no limits” relationship.
China has maintained its support for Moscow despite multiple allegations of war crimes committed by Russian troops and says it maintains normal economic ties between the countries despite the imposition of economic sanctions by other nations.
China is also believed to be studying the Ukraine crisis for how it might later affect its policy toward Taiwan, the self- governing island democracy China claims as its own territory.
U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin on Wednesday spoke with his Chinese counterpart for the first time since becoming Pentagon chief more than a year ago, breaking a communications impasse that American officials saw as increasingly dangerous.
Austin, who calls China the U.S. military’s leading long- term challenge even if recent focus has been on Russia, requested the telephone conversation with Gen. Wei Fenghe after months of failed efforts to speak with Gen. Xu Qiliang, the highest ranking uniformed officer in the Communist Party military structure.
At a daily briefing Thursday, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said China has “always opposed unilateral sanctions and long- arm jurisdiction that lack a basis in international law and are not authorized by the ( United Nations) Security Council.”
“Sanctions are not the right way to de- escalate tensions, end wars or avoid casualties, but will only exacerbate conflicts, increase spillover and make the world pay more,” Wang said.