South China Morning Post

CHINA BOOSTING RUSSIA’S WAR EFFORT, U.S. CLAIMS

Moscow is receiving drone technology, satellite imagery and machine tools, aiding its biggest military build-up since Soviet era, American officials say

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China is backing Russia’s war effort in Ukraine by helping Moscow in its biggest military build-up since the Soviet era, providing drone and missile technology, satellite imagery and machine tools, senior US officials have said.

However, the Chinese embassy in the US said it had not provided weaponry to any party, adding that it was “not a producer of or party involved in the Ukraine crisis”.

The officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said US President Joe Biden raised the issue with President Xi Jinping in their recent phone call and that it is a topic of discussion with US allies in Europe and around the world.

One official said Chinese materials were filing critical gaps in Russia’s defence production cycle and helping Moscow undertake its “most ambitious defence expansion since the Soviet era and on a faster timeline than we believed possible early on in this conflict”.

“Our view is that one of the most game-changing moves available to us at this time to support Ukraine is to persuade [China] to stop helping Russia reconstitu­te its military industrial base. Russia would struggle to sustain its war effort without PRC input,” the official said.

A Chinese embassy spokesman said that normal trade between China and Russia should not be interfered with or restricted. “We urge the US side to refrain from disparagin­g and scapegoati­ng the normal relationsh­ip between China and Russia,” Liu Pengyu said.

Some of the informatio­n provided by the US officials in a small briefing with reporters was based on declassifi­ed intelligen­ce. They sketched a wide array of ways China is helping Russia’s two-year war against Ukraine without providing lethal aid.

Biden has been pressuring Republican­s who control the US House of Representa­tives to approve a major infusion of funding for providing weapons to Ukraine as it struggles to fend off the Russians.

The US and its allies have also been more blunt about confrontin­g Chinese aggression in the South China Sea and against self-ruled Taiwan.

Beijing complained about what it viewed as anti-China rhetoric emanating from Biden’s talks last week with the leaders of Japan and the Philippine­s, prompting a denial from the White House.

The Russians were likely to have used machine tool imports from China to increase ballistic missile production, the officials said. They cited Dalian Machine Tool Group, one of China’s leading machine tool manufactur­ers, as one company supplying Russia.

In 2023, 90 per cent of Russia’s microelect­ronics imports came from China, which Russia had used to produce missiles, tanks and aircraft, the officials said.

They said Chinese companies such as Wuhan Global Sensor Technology Co, Wuhan Tongsheng Technology Co and Hikvision were providing Chinese optical components for use in Russian systems, including tanks and armoured vehicles.

In addition, Russia had received military optics for tanks and armoured vehicles that Chinese firms iRay Technology and North China Research Institute of Electro-Optics manufactur­ed, they said.

The officials also said China had provided Russia with drone engines and turbojet engines for cruise missiles, and that Chinese and Russian entities had been working to jointly produce drones inside Russia.

Chinese firms were likely to be providing Russia with nitrocellu­lose to make propellant­s for weapons, helping Russia rapidly expand its capacity to make key munitions, they added.

The US officials also said China was helping Russia improve its satellite and other space-based capabiliti­es, increasing the Russian threat across Europe.

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