The Boston Globe

Xi, Putin stress ‘deepening’ connection

Beijing outlines vision of a new global order

- By David Pierson and Anatoly Kurmanaev

The leaders of China and Russia hailed each other as “old” and “dear” friends. They took swipes at the United States and depicted themselves as building a “fairer, multipolar world.” And they marveled at their countries’ “deepening” trust.

China’s top leader, Xi Jinping, used a Beijing-led conference of leaders from mostly developing countries on Wednesday to showcase his ambitions to reshape the global order, as the world grapples with a war in Ukraine and a crisis in Gaza. He cast his country as an alternativ­e to the leadership of the United States. And he gave a prominent role to President Vladimir Putin of Russia, underscori­ng how central their relationsh­ip is to Xi’s vision.

The event, the Belt and Road Forum, is centered on China’s signature foreign policy initiative, which aims to expand Beijing’s influence abroad with infrastruc­ture projects. Putin was treated as the guest of honor and often pictured by Xi’s side. The two leaders also met for three hours in Beijing on Wednesday.

While Putin and Xi huddled, President Biden landed in Israel on a visit aimed at preventing the war between Israel and Hamas from spreading. Although Xi did not publicly remark on the war, Putin, at a news briefing, blamed the United States for increasing tensions in the Middle East by sending warships to the region. He said that such regional conflicts were “shared threats that only strengthen Russo-Chinese relations.”

In Putin, Xi has a like-minded partner driven by shared grievances toward the West who is willing to push back against what they both perceive as American hegemony. Xi sought to tout China as a force for stability in the world, with Putin alongside him — never mind that Russia upended European security when he launched an invasion of Ukraine 21 months ago.

“Ideologica­l confrontat­ion, geopolitic­al rivalry, and bloc politics are not a choice for us,” Xi said in a speech at the opening of the forum at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.

“What we stand against are unilateral sanctions, economic coercion and decoupling, and supply chain disruption,” Xi said, clearly referring to efforts by the United States and its Western allies to pressure China. Washington and Beijing are engaged in an intense rivalry over trade, technology, and the status of Taiwan, and China has protested bans imposed by the United States on exports of semiconduc­tors to China.

Xi’s friendly display with Putin at the Beijing forum reaffirms a partnershi­p, not long ago hailed by the leaders as having “no limits,” that has contribute­d to the splinterin­g of countries into opposing blocs. Putin, at the start of his meeting with Xi on the sidelines of the conference, said that China and Russia needed to coordinate their foreign policies more closely, given what he called the “current difficult conditions.”

The conference was virtually absent of European Union countries, largely because of the divisivene­ss of Russia’s war in Ukraine. Prime Minister Viktor Orban of Hungary, an authoritar­ian-leaning friend of Putin and Xi, was the only EU leader to attend.

Represente­d instead were nearly 150 developing nations. China has disbursed close to $1 trillion through the Belt and Road initiative, largely in loans, to build power plants, seaports, and other infrastruc­ture across Asia, Africa, and Latin America, but some countries are finding their debt obligation­s onerous.

As for Putin, his trip has yet to yield any new economic deals with China. But it has already brought diplomatic dividends for him, allowing the Russian leader to present himself as a global power broker despite Western efforts to isolate him. He also met with other Asian leaders in Beijing.

“The forum has clearly shown that Russia remains a massive country with massive resources, and that they are very far from isolation,” said Artem Lukin, an internatio­nal relations professor at Far Eastern Federal University, in Vladivosto­k, Russia. “Asia, and the Global South in general, are clearly showing that the war in Ukraine is not their concern, and that they are more interested in doing business with Russia.”

At the same time, Putin also sought to signal his geopolitic­al autonomy from China, his country’s more powerful neighbor. He outlined Russia’s own grandiose infrastruc­ture plans in the region and called for foreign investment, without stating plans to join China’s existing projects. Later on Wednesday, he called the two visions “complement­ary.”

The question of how far China and Russia’s alignment extends has come into focus in the question of how the world should respond to the humanitari­an crisis in Gaza, which is becoming another wedge between Washington and Beijing.

China and Russia have avoided condemning Hamas for its attack on Israel this month. They have criticized Israeli airstrikes in Gaza and called for a revival of talks for a Palestinia­n state.

For China, its criticism of Israel reflects its rising assertiven­ess and desire to curry favor with countries in the Middle East, analysts say.

 ?? LOUISE DELMOTTE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin shook hands during a conference in Beijing.
LOUISE DELMOTTE/ASSOCIATED PRESS Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin shook hands during a conference in Beijing.

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