The Borneo Post (Sabah)

China-Moscow ties up stakes for Biden

-

PARIS: China’s support for Russia in the standoff over Ukraine upends the strategic calculus for US President Joe Biden, who must now contend with a second front in a geopolitic­al fight whose ramificati­ons could be felt worldwide.

By jointly lashing out Friday at Washington’s alleged destabilis­ing policies in both Eastern Europe and the AsiaPacifi­c region, Beijing and Moscow indicated that sanctions alone would not deter their bids to play larger roles on the global stage.

Appearing publicly as the Beijing Olympics opened, Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Chinese counterpar­t Xi Jinping showed an “enhanced commitment to make the world safe for authoritar­ianism, in particular in former socialist countries,” said Steve Tsang, a political scientist at the SOAS University of London.

And for Xi, taking a public stand on Ukraine demonstrat­es

“his shared interest with Putin to challenge the US-dominated world order”, Tsang told AFP.

Official Chinese media outlets have been playing up the frequent encounters between Xi and Putin since Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea, which saw the Russian leader largely blackliste­d by the West.

China’s Global Times noted recently that “besides the official meetings, the two also shared some close moments like enjoying vodka, caviar and Russian ice cream and celebratin­g each other’s birthdays”.

“We know that both Russia and China value sovereignt­y above anything else, so alliance is still too strong of a word,” said Anton Barbashin, an analyst at the Riddle think-tank in

Glasgow, Scotland.

“But we are definitely going to see more coordinate­d action in internatio­nal relations, maybe simultaneo­us campaigns in Europe and Asia, as well as deepening economic ties between Moscow and Beijing,” he told AFP.

‘Opportunit­y costs’

And the Ukraine crisis gives Xi a chance to riposte indirectly to Biden’s avowed focus of containing China’s ambitions in the Asia-Pacific, as evidenced by the recent US-Australia defence pact and nuclear submarines deal.

“It increases Russia’s relative importance for China – Xi couldn’t have provoked Biden nor Europe this openly,” said Pascal Ausseur, a former French navy admiral and director of the Mediterran­ean Foundation of Strategic Studies.

“And Putin showed Xi that he knows how to take geopolitic­al and military risks, which Beijing must have appreciate­d,” he said.

Putin is using the threat to invade Ukraine to demand a halt to Nato expansion and what it calls “Cold War” ideologies, and now has Beijing’s explicit support in the showdown.

“Don’t forget that Barack Obama told Putin that Russia was only a regional power

– he wants to show that Russia plays a central role, and he’s succeeding,” Ausseur said.

The payoff for China, meanwhile, could be in its own backyard: More US troops focussing on Ukraine and other Eastern European nations means less military weight to compete with Beijing in the Pacific.

The US response to Moscow on any Ukraine invasion, for example, could weigh heavily on any Chinese move to take control of Taiwan, whose independen­ce Washington has signalled it would defend.

“US strategies designed to deter or overextend Russia should not inadverten­tly overextend the United States by imposing high opportunit­y costs,” the RAND Corp analyst Stephanie Pezard wrote in a recent analysis.

Both Russia and China would also seize on any apparent US backdown over Ukraine to portray Washington as an unreliable partner, a potent argument as both countries look to spread their global influence, in particular in Africa.

“If the United States chooses retrenchme­nt rather than its traditiona­l global leadership role, both Russia and China could try to fill the void,” Pezard said.

Experts also agreed that time is on Putin’s side, as he left Moscow to meet with Xi in Beijing ahead of the opening of the of the Winter Olympic Games – which Biden and other Western leaders pointedly snubbed.

“Putin should be able to get Xi to commit to support Russia should the Ukraine situation end up with Russia being sanctioned – but probably on the understand­ing that Putin will not spoil Xi’s Winter Games” by invading Ukraine during the competitio­ns, Tsang said.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin (left) and Chinese President Xi Jinping pose for a photograph during their meeting in Beijing.
— AFP photo Russian President Vladimir Putin (left) and Chinese President Xi Jinping pose for a photograph during their meeting in Beijing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia