The Borneo Post

How Xi and Biden can broker peace in Ukraine

- By Graham Allison and Fred Hu

AT the dawn of the 20th century, as the Russo-Japanese War grew increasing­ly violent, the leader of a nation that had never played a role on the global stage stepped forward to become the peacemaker. After more than 100,000 Russian and Japanese soldiers died in the bloody battle of Mukden, Russia’s czar and Japan’s emperor were ready to respond to Theodore Roosevelt’s proposal. He invited each man to send a representa­tive to the United States to negotiate a peace treaty.

Could Chinese President Xi Jinping take a page from Roosevelt’s playbook to end the war in Ukraine? Many difference­s separate Roosevelt’s United States of 1905 and Xi’s China today. And historical analogues are not cookbook recipes that one can simply follow step-by-step to produce the desired result.

Nonetheles­s, similariti­es between these two leaders and opportunit­ies presented by history are instructiv­e. In the early 1900s, the United States was a rising power exercising its influence in the Western Hemisphere, but it had never taken center stage in internatio­nal affairs. Although Roosevelt had no personal relationsh­ip with either the emperor or czar, he was confident that he could deal with any leader as an equal. The United States had not yet become a major military power, but Roosevelt had plans to sail the American fleet around the world, including through the seas between Russia and Japan. And the United States was emerging as a major trading nation.

Today, history has dealt Xi a much stronger hand – if he were to decide to play it. First, China has much thicker relations with both Russia and Ukraine than the United States had with Russia and Japan a century ago. Given Xi’s personal standing with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, and the immense stakes involved for both, neither could refuse his invitation to go to Beijing. As the largest trading partner of both Moscow and Kyiv, China also has significan­t leverage it could use in trying to persuade each to compromise.

Second, China’s diplomatic position strengthen­s its hand as a mediator. In the aftermath of Russia’s invasion, China struggled to articulate its public position. On one hand, Russia’s attack violated the principles of sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity that Beijing considers pillars of its foreign policy. On the other hand, China has not wanted to alienate a nation with which Xi announced a ‘no limits’ partnershi­p. While awkward, this diplomatic positionin­g now gives Xi room to maneuver in brokering a deal.

China has strong incentives to end the war. The Russian invasion and ferocious USled Western response are upending the global economy. Supply-chain interrupti­ons and soaring energy prices are creating uncertaint­ies in financial markets that have caused leading forecaster­s to reduce their expectatio­ns for global growth this year by 0.8 percentage points – or US$700 billion. As the largest energy consumer and exporter of goods, China risks losing more from this disruption than anyone but the combatants. Having a vivid memory of the financial crisis of 2008 that almost became a second Great Depression, China’s leaders are rightly worried about risks to the global financial system. As Premier Li Keqiang acknowledg­ed recently, China’s economy faces an increasing­ly ‘grave’ external environmen­t.

A Chinese initiative for peace could also improve China’s global standing. The storm created by Putin’s brutal aggression, Ukraine’s courageous resistance and President Biden’s mobilisati­on of the West to try to make Russia a pariah are shaping geopolitic­s for the decade ahead. Having embraced Putin at a meeting just three weeks before the invasion, China has made itself a target for claims that it is just another Russia ‘with Chinese characteri­stics.’ To prevent Putin’s stink from rubbing off on Xi and his fellow Chinese, prudence would dictate a policy that goes beyond the current calls for an end to the fighting.

Undertakin­g such an initiative would require preparatio­n, and there are countless devils in the details. Should China act unilateral­ly or propose a joint venture with the United States? If these two rivals work together as peacemaker­s, that could help both understand the necessity for operationa­l cooperatio­n to reduce risks of future confrontat­ions, including over Taiwan. Deciding when the time is ripe for mediation also requires calculated judgment. But Russia’s announceme­nt of a pivot in its campaign, together with Zelensky’s recent signals that he is willing to make significan­t concession­s, suggests it may be soon.

As Roosevelt put it at the signing of the peace treaty between Russia and Japan: “It’s a mighty good thing for Russia and a mighty good thing for Japan.” If Xi can take the lead to make peace in Ukraine, it would certainly be a mighty good thing for the world. — The Washington Post

Graham Allison is the Douglas Dillon Professor of Government at Harvard Kennedy School and the author of ‘Destined for War: Can America and China Escape Thucydides’s Trap?’ Fred Hu is the founder and chair of Primavera Capital Group.

 ?? ?? Ukrainian soldiers sit on a armoured military vehicle in the city of Severodone­tsk, Donbas region, on April 7, amid Russia’s military invasion launched on Ukraine. Six weeks after invading its neighbour, Russia’s troops have withdrawn from Kyiv and Ukraine’s north and are focusing on the country’s southeast, where desperate attempts are under way to evacuate civilians. — AFP photo
Ukrainian soldiers sit on a armoured military vehicle in the city of Severodone­tsk, Donbas region, on April 7, amid Russia’s military invasion launched on Ukraine. Six weeks after invading its neighbour, Russia’s troops have withdrawn from Kyiv and Ukraine’s north and are focusing on the country’s southeast, where desperate attempts are under way to evacuate civilians. — AFP photo
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