China says it’s seeking role in Ukraine peace settlement
The foreign minister of China, which has provided strong
political backing for Russia in its invasion of Ukraine, said Tuesday his
country wants to play a role in ending the conflict.
Qin Gang told participants at a security conference in
Beijing that China was concerned the almost yearlong war could escalate further
and spin “out of control.”
China would continue to urge peace talks and provide
“Chinese wisdom” to bring about a political settlement, he said.
“At the same time, we urge relevant countries to immediately
stop adding fuel to the fire, stop shifting blames to China, and stop hyping up
the discourse of Ukraine today, Taiwan tomorrow,” Qin said in an apparent reference
to military support provided to Ukraine by the United States and its allies, as
well as concerns that China is preparing to make good on its threats to use
force to assert its claim over Taiwan, a self-governing island democracy.
China has refused to condemn Russia’s invasion or atrocities
against Ukrainian civilians and strongly criticized Western economic sanctions
against Moscow. In deference to Moscow, it has yet to describe the conflict as
an invasion.
China and Russia have aligned their foreign policies to
oppose the U.S. and, weeks before the Ukraine invasion, their leaders declared
a partnership with “no limits.” China also says Russia was provoked into using
military force by NATO’s eastward expansion.
Despite that, Qin reiterated China’s claim that it has
“always taken an objective and impartial stance based on the merits of the
issue.”
“China is deeply worried about the escalation of the
situation and even the possibility of it going out of control,” Qin said. He
said Chinese President Xi Jinping had put forward proposals that have “played a
responsible and constructive role in easing the situation and de-escalating the
crisis,” without offering any details or evidence.
“We will continue to
promote peace talks, provide Chinese wisdom for the political settlement of the
Ukraine crisis, and work with the international community to promote dialogue
and consultation to address the concerns of all parties and seek common
security,” Qin said.
China has opposed criticism of Russia at the United Nations,
while insisting that the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all nations
be respected, a position that underpins its claim to Taiwan, which separated
from the mainland amid civil war more than 70 years ago.
Russian President Vladimir Putin could meet with the Chinese
Communist Party’s foreign policy chief Wang Yi in Moscow, the Kremlin said
Monday.
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov hailed Russia-China ties
as “multidimensional and allied in nature.”
That statement coincided with U.S. President Joe Biden’s
unannounced visit to Ukraine on Monday to meet with President Volodymyr
Zelenskyy and show support for Kyiv days ahead of the one-year anniversary of
Russia’s invasion.
Wang’s trip to Russia follows talks Saturday with U.S.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken on the sidelines of an international security
conference in Munich. Blinken said he reiterated to Wang that any Chinese
material support for the Russian armed forces would trigger a strong response
from Washington. Thus far, the U.S. says there are no indications that China is
doing so, although its close economic ties with Russia have offered a lifeline
to Putin’s regime.
Russia, in turn, has offered strong support for China and
held a series of joint military drills amid tensions with the U.S. over Taiwan,
trade, human rights and Chinese territorial claims in the South China Sea.
China’s Foreign Ministry issued a lengthy statement Tuesday
outlining Xi’s “Global Security Initiative,” which aims to “eliminate the root
causes of international conflicts, improve global security governance,
encourage joint international efforts to bring more stability and certainty to
a volatile and changing era, and promote durable peace and development in the
world.”
In its only reference to Russia’s invasion, it said the
initiative would “support political settlement of hotspot issues such as the
Ukraine crisis through dialogue and negotiation.”
At a daily briefing, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang
Wenbin criticized military aid provided to Ukraine by the U.S. and its allies,
saying that “the U.S. claims to maintain peace, but actually it is making money
from the crisis.”
“There are enough facts to show the true nature of the U.S.
as a source of trouble rather than a defender of peace for the world,” Wang
said.
The U.S. has committed about $113 billion in aid to Ukraine
since last year, while European allies have committed tens of billions of dollars
more and welcomed millions of Ukrainian refugees who have fled the conflict.
Such aid is funded by U.S. and other foreign taxpayers, with Ukraine under no
obligation to provide repayment as it seeks to withstand renewed Russian
attempts to regain territory it had earlier conquered.
Wang also defended China’s “comprehensive strategic
partnership” with Russia as “based on non-alignment, non-confrontation and
non-targeting of third parties, which is within the sovereignty of two
independent countries.”
Wang gave no details on Wang Yi’s visit to Moscow, but
called it “an opportunity to work with Russia to jointly promote steady
progress of bilateral relations in the direction determined by the two leaders,
safeguard each other’s legitimate rights and interests and contribute
positively to world peace.”