7 Dec, 2021
China is unlikely to wade into the simmering conflict between
Russia and Ukraine as fears grow of a Russian invasion and the
possibility of US troop involvement, observers said.
Russia has sent an estimated 100,000 troops to the borderwith
Ukraine, raising tensions between the two countries to their highest
level since 2015, when Moscow annexed the Crimean peninsula. Officials
in Washington had said the US would move in troops at the request of
“eastern flank allies” but other options, including sanctions and
support for the Ukrainian military were preferred.
Feng Yujun, director of the Centre
for Russian and Central Asian studies at Fudan University, said
Russia’s troop deployment was a message from Moscow to the US to stop
Ukraine from joining Nato. Ukraine has pushed to join the Western security alliance but Russia is strongly opposed to Nato expansion. Feng also said the US might not want to raise the security temperature in Europe because its energy was focused elsewhere.
“The
US is spending its main resources on the Indo-Pacific region against
China, so it doesn’t want to create another [complicated situation] in
Europe,” he said.
Beijing has sought to improve ties with both Moscow and Kyiv. China
and Russia have clearly strengthened political, economic and military
relations in the last decade, with each country committing to defend the
other against pressure from the United States. In late June, the two
countries consolidated ties by renewing a 20-year-old friendship treaty. And
Chinese President Xi Jinping praised the China-Russia relationship as a
“model example of a new type of international relations” that added
“positive energy” to the world.
At the same time, Ukrainian
President Volodymyr Zelensky has described his country as a possible
“bridge to Europe” for Chinese business.
Ukraine has
reached agreements with China to build airports, roads and railways, and
thanked China for deliveries of Chinese Covid-19 vaccines. It
has also stayed silent about China’s alleged human rights abuses,
withdrawing its signature from international demands that China allow
independent observers into the country’s Xinjiang region to investigate
reports of persecution of Uygurs and other Muslim minorities. The allegations of human rights abuses in Xinjiang have concerned many European nations, and prompted sanctions and countersanctions on both sides. China denies the claims.
Wang
Yiwei, an international relations expert from Renmin University in
Beijing, said the tension on the Russia-Ukraine border was more an
internal European issue and China was unlikely to weigh in.
“The
Ukraine crisis is more an European issue that relates to the power play
between Russia and several other European nations,” Wang said.
“Another
constraint is China’s interests in Europe, as Beijing is seeking to
engage and build up a positive relationship with Europe. Beijing’s ties
with Kyiv are fairly good, making Beijing unlikely to side with Moscow.”
Liu
Weidong, an international relations researcher from the Chinese Academy
of Social Sciences, said China would not intervene in the Ukraine
crisis because it did not have the will or the military capacity to do
so.
“I don’t think China could militarily support Russia if
Moscow carried out military actions against Kyiv, and China doesn’t want
to do so at all as such an action goes against China’s diplomatic
principle of non-interference,” Liu said.
“Siding
with either Moscow or Kyiv would ultimately end up hurting Beijing’s
interests, so Beijing will only call for a humanitarian approach to
resolve issues in an international arena like the United Nations.”
Liu
also said Biden’s warning that the US might send troops to Ukraine
sounded more like empty rhetoric rather than a solid promise, as the US
public would not support any military action that undermined its
interests.