Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin pose for a group photo during the G20 summit in Osaka, Japan, on June 28, 2019. Image: Asia Times Files / AFP via Getty / Dominique Jacovides

For the Kremlin, its “partner of no limits”, China, isn’t doing enough to aid Russia’s war against Ukraine. So, Russia has signed a peace treaty with North Korea, hoping to pressure China into backing Moscow’s war effort further.

Meanwhile, the West sees China as far too helpful to Russia. The sentiment in the West was best captured on July 10, 2024, during a summit in Washington DC.

Heads of state and governments of NATO countries jointly proclaimed that China is a “decisive enabler” of Russia’s war against the Ukraine, and also called on China “to cease all material and political support to Russia’s war effort.”

To the West, China’s aid, though short of actual weapons supply, is more than enough to fuel Russia’s war machine. This in turn poses a security threat to Europe.

But NATO’s message and Russia’s implicit code to China seem to indicate one thing: Beijing’s fence-sitting days are numbered, and it needs to choose a side. Unfortunately for Russia, China may be forced to pick the West.

Signs that China is already pivoting to the West have started to appear. Speculation was rife in late 2023 that China’s panda diplomacy (where it gifts the lease of the bears to foreign zoos) was on the way out amid worsening ties with the West.

But in mid-2024, Beijing sent more pandas to Spain and Vienna, as well as the US tech center of California. President Xi Jinping also went on state visits to the US, Europe, Australia and New Zealand to mend ties with the West.

Beijing’s Russian headache

China knows that the war has had catastrophic consequences for both Russia and Ukraine. Estimates indicate that Putin’s conflict in Ukraine could cost Russia US$1.3 trillion and at least 315,000 in troop casualties. So, win or lose, the post-war damage to Russia would be immense.

This is bad news for China. Not only will it have a weakened ally but the West could then have a free hand to consolidate its resources in dealing with the “Chinese threat.”

This concern isn’t unfounded. After all, a substantial portion of Americans view China as the greatest enemy of the US, and China is sometimes characterized as a member of an “axis of evil” alongside Russia, Iran and North Korea.

So, the Chinese government needs to hedge itself against becoming the “target of all arrows” (众矢之的), as the famous Chinese saying goes, resulting from Russia losing the war in Ukraine. Reviving panda diplomacy and sending China’s leaders on state visits then become tools to mend ties with the west, and serve as insurance policies.

But NATO’s criticism of China in July 2024, which echoes a similar statement by US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken in late April 2024, suggests that these soft power initiatives are insufficient to appease the West.

China needs to press Russia to sue for peace with Ukraine. With this, Russia gets to preserve its national strength, while China could concentrate efforts on being the world leader in AI and healing its ailing economy.

Economic performance

For months, China has been reeling from a real estate crisis, a volatile stock market, a massive 288% debt-to-GDP ratio, as well as high youth unemployment.

And recently, Chinese government bond prices soared from increasing demand, suggesting that investors are seeking safer investment alternatives as confidence in the Chinese economy remains low.

But a battered economy isn’t the only problem the Chinese government faces. It has traditionally employed economic performance to legitimize its rule. So given the poor economic climate, Beijing needs to jump-start its ailing economy to maintain power.

However, there is one major flaw with Beijing’s economic growth strategy: it centers around exports, which rely heavily on Western demand. While China has increased its exports to various regions across the world, almost 30% of its exports in 2023 were meant for the US and the EU.

As it stands, cracks are surfacing in Beijing’s export plans. In May 2024, the US raised tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles (EV) to 100%. The European Union followed suit by raising its own Chinese electric vehicle tariff from 17.4% to 37.6%, which comes on top of an existing 10% duty imposed on all Chinese electric vehicles coming into Europe.

But things may get worse for China’s economy depending on what it does with Russia. A day after NATO’s proclamation, US President Joe Biden announced that China’s continuous support of Russia will bear dire economic consequences for the Asian superpower.

He added that “some of our European friends are going to be curtailing their investment in China”, alluding to what China might face if its support for Russia continues.

For its own sake, China is hoping that the war ends with a peace settlement that favors Russia. Failing this, China’s sense of self-preservation will put its partnership of no limits with the Kremlin to the test.

After all, as the quote widely attributed to the 19th-century British prime minister Lord Palmerston goes, “There are no permanent enemies, and no permanent friends, only permanent interests.”

Chee Meng Tan is Assistant Professor of Business Economics, University of Nottingham

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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17 Comments

  1. Complete BS propaganda,
    your CHINESE names shows CLEARLY you know NOTHING about China🤣🤣
    BTW, China tells the US & West to Fxxk Off

  2. Sheer fantasy. China knows the US cannot be trusted, and never deal with China as an equal.

  3. Another lack of common sense article. As I said before, who will be next if Russia is down? Next, does China wants to side with the West who are hundred of miles away and abandon her neighbour who she shares a vast boundary with, and has nuclear weapons?

    If the author is playing chess, his thinking is that, his opponent will make moves that he wants him to move, and he will win eventually. Well, if China is relying on exports then the West (especially EU) doesn’t want to have access to an emerging economy with 1.3 billion market? If EU doesn’t rely on China for growth then they can access the US market. Good luck with that.

    Having said the above, I worry about the standard of the students that were/are being taught by the author.

  4. Lots of nonsense. First of all, there’s no way that Russia loses the war. It has already gained all the territory it sought. Secondly, China is not going to ally with the US and EU, with both not only economic rivals, but emerging enemies.

  5. This article is the most ridiculous piece of wishful thinking and misinformation I have seen for years. I don’t know what CM Tan was smoking but to say China will join the West that have invaded and colonized and oppressed her for centuries is silly. BRICS and SCO and the Global South are the future, not the colonists of the past.

  6. all this trash comes from only one source ‘the conversation’ and every writer is based out of some two bit university in the UK

    the crappier the university the more the bluster

  7. wishful thinking post – china is economically, industrially, militarily [except for the no of nukes], diplomatically, financially etc etc the most powerful country in the world now and it doesnt have to pick a side – and if anything its the US that needs to pick a side between cooperating or not with china just to survive the self-inflicted, coming economic, social and financial carnage – moreover only fools believe russia has some nefarious design on europe but it would be fair that europe has been extremely threatening, aggressive and hostile towards russia …

  8. Are you kidding me? China is the world’s largest economy. Biden wants to destroy that. If Russia falls, China will be next.

  9. There is simply NO WAY IN HELL that China will allow Western (read US) pressure to force it to throw Russia under the bus. NO WAY!

  10. BS. India did not pick a side; what do you say? Russia is nearer and has the natural resources and market for China.

  11. If China will finally change side be shure Putin will be more then ready for it. Putin can be many things but he is a cold thinker.
    He plays always the long game and NEVER trust anybody.
    A real Macchiavelli kind of guy….

  12. It is stupid to think China will abandon Russia for the west. China will walk its own path, it is strong enough to do that. If China want to do business with Russia, the west will just need to accept it, simple as that. If the west want to cut ties with China over this, then the west will see what China whole support to Russia will look like.

  13. Why is Asia Times publishing this? If Russia loses that will be the end of everything. Putin has promised nuclear Armageddon if Russia is defeated. Ukraine must be defeated and Russia objectives attained; demilitarization, denazification and neutralization of Ukraine. China will never abandon Russia, BRICS+ and SCO, that is just Western willful ignorance and arrogance. China prioritizes its security concerns over its economy. No more humiliation.