PRESIDENT Xi Jinping hailed China and Russia’s “unyielding” ties in talks with Vladimir Putin, as the pair met to underscore their alliance days after Donald Trump’s own visit to Beijing.
The two countries’ ties have deepened since Moscow’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, as Russia has become increasingly dependent on China, its main oil customer.
Putin was received by Xi outside Beijing’s opulent Great Hall of the People yesterday in much the same fashion as Trump last week, complete with chanting children and military fanfare.
But the language was much warmer, with Xi telling the Russian leader Beijing and Moscow have “continuously deepened our political mutual trust and strategic coordination with a resilience that remains unyielding”, according to Chinese state media.
During opening talks, both were quick to laud their countries’ special ties as they extended their treaty of “friendly cooperation”.
Putin, quoting a Chinese phrase, told Xi: “A day apart feels like three autumns,” adding that relations had reached an “unprecedentedly high level” despite “unfavourable external factors”, Russian media footage showed.
In an apparent swipe at the United States, Xi warned of “unilateral and hegemonic countercurrents running rampant” in the world.
In contrast to Trump’s visit last week, which yielded little in the way of immediate concrete announcements, Putin and Xi signed a slew of deals yesterday on trade, media and energy.
The two leaders were scheduled to have tea later, at which “the most important issues” such as Ukraine, Iran and relations with the United States would be discussed, Kremlin foreign policy aide Yuri Ushakov told Russian state media on Monday.
Beneath the camaraderie, Putin is now perceived by many to be the junior partner in the relationship.
The Russian leader has been weakened by four years of the Ukraine conflict, with his country’s economy shrinking in the first quarter of the year as factors such as wartime spending, labour shortages and sanctions take their toll.
Analysts believed Putin would use his visit to push for progress on the “Power of Siberia 2”, a major natural gas pipeline running from Russia to China through Mongolia – a land alternative to crude imported by sea from the Middle East.
But Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Russian media that while the two sides had reached a “basic understanding” – including on “the route and how it will be built” – there was no “clear timeline” and “there are still some details to be worked out”.
The US-Israel conflict in Iran has hampered crude and gas flows from the Middle East, giving an opportunity for Putin to offer Russian energy sources as an alternative.
“Russia and China are actively cooperating in the energy sector... We are, of course, ready to continue reliably supplying all these types of fuel to the rapidly growing Chinese market,” Putin said yesterday.
His priorities may differ from China’s, which wants the Middle East conflict concluded as soon as possible.
Underlining that, Xi told Putin that “a comprehensive ceasefire is of utmost urgency, resuming hostilities is even more inadvisable and maintaining negotiations is particularly important”. — AFP
