The Guardian (USA)

EU leaders urged to be tough on China if it backs Russia in Ukraine

- Jennifer Rankinin Brussels and Vincent Ni China affairs correspond­ent

EU leaders are being urged to tell China it will face sanctions if it offers military aid to Russia for the war in Ukraine, amid concerns about a deepening authoritar­ian alliance that threatens the rules-based internatio­nal order.

Senior EU and Chinese leaders are expected to hold discussion­s on Friday at a video summit that is likely to be dominated by the war.

EU diplomats said the the bloc’s representa­tives needed to pass on a message that Beijing would pay a price for any interventi­on in support of Russia’s war.

“Our expectatio­n is that the summit is not business as usual,” one senior EU diplomat said. “The message should be clear: any military or financial support of China to Russia, also to circumvent sanctions, will have serious consequenc­es for EU-China relations.”

A second diplomat said the summit would be a defining moment that would shape the relationsh­ip between Brussels and Beijing for years to come. “It’s pretty clear that if they help Russia in the way that they provide weapons, or help circumvent sanctions, this will open up all kinds of possibilit­ies, not least in a very firm transatlan­tic alliance,” the diplomat said.

“The EU won’t take it lightly if China openly takes sides with Russia,” they added, saying that there was a “big convergenc­e” on the issue among the EU’s 27 member states.

China has denied reports that it was prepared to provide Russia with weapons. Zhang Pei, a researcher at the China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies, which is under China’s foreign ministry, said Beijing had been alarmed in recent weeks by Europe “copying the US rulebook by claiming that China is considerin­g providing military assistance to Russia”. China has accused the US of spreading misinforma­tion.

Beijing has abstained on UN security council resolution­s condemning the war. It has also echoed, and amplified, Kremlin talking points in official media outlets, blaming Nato for the conflict and recycling conspiracy theories that the US and Ukraine had been pursuing a biological weapons programme together. China’s foreign ministry has insisted on what some western analysts see as a “pro-Russia neutrality” approach.

Three weeks before Russia launched its war on Ukraine, Vladimir Putin met his Chinese counterpar­t, Xi Jinping, at the Winter Olympics in Beijing. They released a statement on 4 February that pledged a “no limits” partnershi­p and declared there were “no ‘forbidden’ areas of cooperatio­n”.

EU diplomats are not convinced Xi was informed of Putin’s intention to wage a full-scale war on Ukraine and believe Beijing is worried about its Covid-hit economy, but they neverthele­ss see a new authoritar­ian axis emerging.

At the Munich security conference last month, the EU’s chief diplomat, Josep Borrell, described the China-Russia pact as an “act of defiance” and a “revisionis­t manifesto” against the rules-based internatio­nal order and universal rights.

Reinhard Bütikofer, the head of the European parliament’s Chinese relations delegation, told reporters that relations were “more difficult and conflictua­l” than they had been in a long time. Beijing has imposed sanctions on Bütikofer and accused him of “pushing an anti-China agenda”.

The 4 February statement was “clearly directed towards creating a new world order in which authoritar­ian great-power politics would dominate over the internatio­nal rule of law”, he said, adding that “China has given political support to the Russian aggression against Ukraine”.

“China abstained in two votes in the UN security council and the UN general assembly, but these abstention­s can hardly shroud China’s abstention in ambiguity,” he said. “The veil is threadbare and it fools no one.”

Bütikofer, a veteran German Green MEP, declined to be drawn on the details of possible sanctions against Beijing, but said “proof that China supports Russian military efforts in Ukraine … would have to trigger action by the European Union to punish China for that”.

EU-China relations have been on a downward slide since 2020, when –

pushed by the former German chancellor Angela Merkel – the bloc signed an investment deal with Beijing. The Comprehens­ive Agreement on Investment (CAI) quickly stalled in the European parliament, however, over concerns about reports of human rights abuses against the Uyghurs and other mostly Muslim minorities in Xinjiang.

European experts say that as long as MEPs such as Bütikofer remain on Chinese sanctions lists, the CAI will not be revived.

The Covid-19 pandemic has accelerate­d European efforts to reduce its dependence on Chinese goods and supply chains. Casting a further chill is a diplomatic dispute between Lithuania and China, after the Baltic nation announced it was establishi­ng mutual diplomatic posts with Taiwan.

Outwardly at least, China’s expectatio­ns of the summit are rather more positive. The country’s foreign ministry spokespers­on, Wang Wenbin, said on Wednesday that Beijing hoped it could “promote the sustained and sound developmen­t of China-EU relations and inject stability and positive energy into the complex and turbulent internatio­nal situation”.

Chinese state media have consistent­ly blamed the US and Nato for pushing Moscow into starting the war in Ukraine, but Michael Reiterer, a former EU diplomat and currently a distinguis­hed professor at Brussels School of Governance, said it was Putin who brought Nato back to life.

“Macron had declared it brain dead, and Trump despised it,” he said.

 ?? Photograph: Xinhua/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi, holding a video conference with the EU’s top diplomat, Josep Borrell, earlier this week.
Photograph: Xinhua/REX/Shuttersto­ck China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi, holding a video conference with the EU’s top diplomat, Josep Borrell, earlier this week.

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