Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese leader Xi Jinping met Friday on the sidelines of the Beijing Winter Olympics Friday, a show of solidarity and shared grievance calibrated to challenge the U.S.-led world order amid a tense diplomatic standoff on Ukraine.
Their lengthy joint statement to mark the occasion was a unified blast at the United States — and some of the major impasses between Russia and the West playing out now with Ukraine.
They expressed opposition to NATO enlargement and called out “actors representing but the minority on the international scale” who “continue to advocate unilateral approaches to addressing international issues.”
President Biden’s absence from the spectacle, having ordered a diplomatic boycott in protest of Beijing’s human rights abuses, underscored the not-so-subtle subtext of Friday’s Olympic event: the renewed division of the world, at the moment at least, into just two superpower camps, China and Russia versus the United States and allies.
Xi, who has not met another foreign leader in person in almost two years amid the pandemic, said China and Russia “firmly support each other in safeguarding their core interests,” according to a summary of the meeting by China’s state news agency Xinhua.
Adding deeds to the words, Putin announced a deal to supply China with more gas via a new pipeline.
Putin’s starring role at Xi’s Olympics comes as Russia faces foreign censure over its military buildup around Ukraine and as China bristles through the partial diplomatic boycott of the Games.
The joint statement gave China the opportunity to provide some diplomatic cover to Russia’s regional mobilization, by framing it in broader terms as part of a response to U.S. global policies rather than as Russian expansionism.
Their statement mentioned shared positions on a range of issues of concern to one or both countries, from NATO to Taiwan to Japan’s handling water from Fukushima’s nuclear plant disaster site. It touted each country’s status as a “world power” and ruminated — at length — on the true meaning of democracy and human rights.
“Russia and China stand against attempts by external forces to undermine security and stability in their common adjacent regions,” the statement said, and “intend to counter interference by outside forces in the internal affairs of sovereign countries under any pretext.”
Just hours before their meeting, the United States warned China against helping Russia dodge potential sanctions related to the crisis in Ukraine.
Washington and its allies “have an array of tools” that can be deployed against “foreign companies, including those in China” that attempt to evade potential punitive measures against Russia, State Department spokesman Ned Price told reporters Thursday. He declined to offer specifics, but Western officials have floated penalties on Russian financial institutions, curbs on U.S. technology exports and personal sanctions against Kremlin leaders and their associates.
Analysts noted that Chinese support could embolden the Kremlin. The last time China hosted the Olympics, in the summer of 2008, Russia invaded Georgia as Putin watched that event’s Opening Ceremonies in Beijing.
China and Russia have grown closer in the years since. Beijing is frustrated by Western criticism of its human rights abuses against ethnic minorities and its aggressive stance on Taiwan, while Moscow has justified its massing of troops near Ukraine by citing the expansion of NATO into what Putin sees as Russia’s traditional sphere of influence.
Still, the relationship between China and Russia is not without internal tensions. A crisis in Ukraine that triggers Western sanctions on Russia could make Moscow more dependent on China. At the same time, China has commercial ties with Ukraine. Additional Russian moves in Ukraine could prompt coordinated action from the U.S. and allies — not necessarily good for Beijing.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki, speaking later in the day at a briefing, sought to remind China that “a destabilizing conflict in Europe would impact China’s interests all over the world, and certainly China should know that.”
Fresh in the news was the U.S. claim of a potential fabricated attack video that officials said Moscow was considering that could be used as a pretext for an invasion. The video could include “graphic scenes of a staged false explosion with corpses,” the Biden administration warned. Russian intelligence is intimately involved in the efforts, according to a senior Biden administration official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity under rules set by the administration.
Russian officials denied the alleged false-flag operation. “We are not surprised by the new ‘creative’ scenario,” the Russian Embassy in Washington said in a statement that also referenced the flawed intelligence presented by the George W. Bush administration in the run-up to the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq.
Price, the State Department spokesman, said the Biden administration called out the purported video plan publicly to prevent Russia from using it as a pretext to attack Ukraine.
Jeong reported from Seoul. Rauhala reported from Brussels. Robyn Dixon and Mary Ilyushina in Moscow, David L. Stern in Kyiv, Lily Kuo in Taipei, Eva Dou in Washington, Amy Cheng in Seoul and Rick Noack in Paris contributed to this report.