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Politics : Foreign Policy Discussion Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: roto who wrote (15784)5/15/2024 6:14:41 PM
From: roto  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15991
 
collusion.. what/ where's next?

Interview: Join hands for future success of Russia-China partnership, says Putin
Source: Xinhua
Editor: huaxia
2024-05-15 06:01:00



MOSCOW, May 15 (Xinhua) -- On the eve of his two-day state visit to China, which starts on Thursday, Russian President Vladimir Putin stated in a written interview with Xinhua that Russia and China are promoting the prosperity of both nations through expanded equal and mutually beneficial cooperation in economic and cultural fields.

In the interview, Putin emphasized that the coordination of foreign policies between the two countries is propelling the establishment of a fair multipolar world order, which underpins the future success of the Russia-China comprehensive strategic partnership of coordination for the new era.

Putin highlighted that contemporary Russia-China relations transcend ideology and are a strategic choice made independently by the two countries regardless of the political situation. This choice is grounded in the extensive common interests, deep mutual trust, strong public support, and the genuine friendship between the peoples of the two countries. Both nations are jointly committed to safeguarding sovereignty, territorial integrity, and security.

"In a broader sense, we are working to contribute to the development and prosperity of Russia and China by enhancing equal, mutually beneficial economic and humanitarian cooperation, and strengthen foreign policy coordination in the interests of building a just multipolar world order. All this is the key to a future success of our comprehensive strategic partnership of coordination for the new era," said Putin.

He noted that the partnership between Russia and China is always based on equality and mutual trust, mutual respect for sovereignty, and consideration of each other's interests. President Xi Jinping, a wise and visionary leader, plays a special and prominent role in the development of bilateral relations, he added.

"We first met back in March 2010, and we have been seeing and calling each other regularly ever since. President Xi maintains a respectful, friendly, open and at the same time business-like style of communication," Putin said, adding that each meeting was not only a dialogue between old friends but also a fruitful exchange of views on bilateral and international agendas.

Putin recalled that in 2013, President Xi chose Russia as the first destination of his state visit as China's head of state. After being re-elected as Chinese president in March last year, his first state visit was again to Russia. They spent nearly five hours together, holding one-on-one in-depth talks, followed by a day of substantive official events.

"This unprecedented level of strategic partnership between our countries determined my choice of China as the first state to be visited after the official inauguration as the president of the Russian Federation," Putin emphasized.

He pointed out that the deep and longstanding friendship and cooperation between the peoples of Russia and China has established one of the most important pillars of bilateral relations. Today, relations between Russia and China have reached their highest level in history, and despite a challenging international situation, the relationship continues to develop, he added.

Putin underscored that this year is special for both countries, noting that October marks the 75th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China, which is celebrating this significant historical moment with outstanding achievements.

As a long-standing and reliable friend, Russia welcomes China's accomplishments, he said, adding that for three-quarters of a century, the two countries have navigated a long and sometimes difficult path, drawing lessons from different stages of their relations.

Today, they recognize that complementary advantages are injecting strong momentum into the comprehensive and rapid development of bilateral ties, he said.

Referring to the practical cooperation in trade and economic fields, Putin noted that the rapid development of Russia-China trade relations has been demonstrating strong immunity to external challenges and crises.

In the past five years, trade between the two countries has doubled, he noted, saying that China has been Russia's largest trading partner for 13 consecutive years, and in 2023, Russia ranked the fourth among China's trading partners. More than 90 percent of transactions between the companies from the two countries are settled in their national currencies, Putin added.

Putin noted the two sides are systematically and consistently developing strategic cooperation in the energy sector, working on new large-scale energy projects.

Supplies of Russian agricultural produce to the Chinese market are showing positive dynamics, initiatives in investment and production are being implemented, and transportation and logistics corridors between the two countries are operating smoothly and growing, he said.

"I believe that Russian-Chinese economic ties have great prospects," Putin said.

"We will try to establish closer cooperation in industry and high-tech, outer space and peaceful atom, artificial intelligence, renewable energy and other innovative sectors. We will keep working to provide favourable legal and organizational conditions for that and develop transport and financial infrastructure," he said.

The years 2024 and 2025 are designated as the Years of Culture between Russia and China.

Putin said he believes Russia and China have been inextricably linked for centuries, both by an extensive common border and by close cultural and people-to-people ties.

Today, he said, there is high interest in Chinese culture and arts within Russian society.

Putin noted that approximately 90,000 Russian students at various educational levels are learning Chinese, and tours and exhibitions involving Chinese artists have been highly successful. The number of tourists between the two continues to surge, with over 730,000 Russian citizens visiting China last year, he added.

"I know that people in China are also keen to get acquainted with Russian literature, art and traditions. Our eminent theatre groups and musicians regularly perform in China, museums organize their exhibitions, and Russian films are run in cinemas. We are most willing to introduce our Chinese friends to historical, artistic and cultural heritage of multi-ethnic Russia in all its diversity," Putin said.

The Russian president also shared his personal appreciation for Chinese culture. "I am always eager to discover China's unique and authentic traditions, especially during my visits to China. I know quite a bit about your martial arts, including Wushu, which is very popular in our country. I also have respect for Chinese philosophy. My family members are also interested in China, and some of them are learning Chinese."

Putin highly values the collaboration between Russia and China on the international stage.

He noted that the two countries hold similar or identical positions on key issues in the international agenda. Both advocate for the primacy role of international law, and support equal, indivisible, comprehensive and sustainable security at both the global and regional level with the UN's central coordinating role, he said, adding Russia and China also reject Western attempts to impose an order based on lies and hypocrisy, on some mythical rules of no one knows whose making.

Currently, multilateral mechanisms such as the BRICS and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) are uniting countries of the "Global South" in a spirit of equality, openness, transparency and inclusiveness, pushing for reforms in the global governance system.

Putin noted that with active participation from Russia and China, multilateral organizations and mechanisms that are independent of the West are successfully operating, saying that in their work they build on the principles of equality, justice, transparency, respect and consideration of each other's interests.

"The Shanghai Cooperation Organization and BRICS, which have well established themselves as key pillars of the emerging multipolar world order, can be cited as vivid examples of such mutually beneficial cooperation. They have come to be reputable and dynamic international platforms whose participants build constructive political, security, economic and cultural and people-to-people interaction. Hence the ever increasing interest of other states in the work of these associations and the growing number of their participants," Putin said.

With the expansion as a new starting point, the BRICS cooperation mechanism has entered a new era of "greater BRICS cooperation." Russia is the rotating chair of the BRICS this year.

Putin stated that Russia's BRICS Chairmanship has gained a steady momentum, saying that full-scale work is underway on all three main pillars of cooperation -- politics and security, the economy and finance, and people-to-people exchanges, with more than 200 events planned during its chairmanship.

"One of the main goals of the Russian Chairmanship is undoubtedly the seamless integration of the BRICS new members. We are actively assisting them in joining the existing network of cooperation mechanisms," he said.

Another priority is to seek to continue coordinated work to enhance the visibility of BRICS in global affairs and build its capacity to promote a more democratic, stable and fair architecture of international relations, he added.

"Cooperation within BRICS relies on the principles of mutual respect, equality, openness and consensus. That is why countries of the Global South and East, which see BRICS as a platform for their voices to be certainly heard and taken into account, find our association so attractive," Putin said.

Regarding China's efforts towards the political settlement of the Ukraine crisis, Putin expressed positive views on China's position.

He said that China clearly understands the roots of the Ukraine crisis and its global geopolitical impact, as reflected in the "China's Position on the Political Settlement of the Ukraine Crisis," a 12-point proposition issued by China in February 2023. The concepts and suggestions indicated in the document demonstrate the sincere desire of China to stabilize the situation, he added.

Putin emphasized that the four principles for the peaceful resolution of the Ukraine crisis recently proposed by Xi seamlessly fit in the above-mentioned document.

"The steps build on the idea that we need to forego the 'Cold War mentality' and ensure indivisible security and respect for international law and the UN Charter in their entirety and interrelation," he said.

"We have never refused to negotiate," Putin said. "We are seeking a comprehensive, sustainable and just settlement of this conflict through peaceful means. We are open to a dialogue on Ukraine, but such negotiations must take into account the interests of all countries involved in the conflict, including ours."

Putin also outlined the goals and plans for national development during his new term.

He mentioned that the tasks proposed in the annual address to the Federal Assembly on Feb. 29, such as promoting regional development, boosting economic and social development, increasing the birth rate, supporting families with children, and eradicating poverty and inequality, are of great practical significance.

"We recognize the scale of these challenges and can provide solutions. To do this we will rely on the consolidated will of our people, the necessary resources and capabilities, and the rich experience of interaction between the state, businesses and the civil society," he said.

Putin pointed out that, calculated based on purchasing power parity, Russia has now been among the top five economies globally.

"We are aiming for the top four largest economies on the planet. We prioritize such tasks as ensuring quality and the effective development across all spheres, as well as increasing our citizens' well-being," he said.

"I am confident that we will implement all the strategic plans we have set. We are willing to work together with our partners worldwide, including China, our good neighbour and trusted friend," Putin said. ¦

english.news.cn



To: roto who wrote (15784)6/16/2024 7:08:23 AM
From: roto1 Recommendation

Recommended By
kidl

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 15991
 
have to put things in perspective.. looks like China is the 'lifeblood' keeping Russia economically viable.

"Russia’s dominant position in the global energy and commodities trade—as it is a key producer of oil, gas, platinum, cobalt, gold, nickel, phosphates, iron, wheat, barley, buckwheat, oats, and more—provides it with substantial leverage over markets and economies, making it less susceptible to sanctions and less easily cowed by Western pressure" nationalinterest.org


Russia is now a Chinese colony — while still foolishly dreaming of empire
BY ALEXANDER J. MOTYL, OPINION CONTRIBUTOR - 06/15/24 2:00 PM ET


Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping shake hands during their meeting, May 16, 2024, in Beijing, China. (Photo by Contributor/Getty Images)

Putin’s Russia rests on an unsustainable contradiction. It is, at one and the same time, both a colony and an aspiring empire. It can’t be both, however, and sooner rather than later Russia will be forced into one or the other direction.

All the signs point to a disheartening conclusion for the Kremlin’s wannabe empire-builders: Russia will succeed as a colony but fail as an empire.

It’s often said that Putin has effectively transformed his country into a vassal of China. That’s true, but Russia’s relationship with its much more powerful neighbor to the south is more accurately termed colonial. Colonies are locally administered territories that are subordinate to the political and economic priorities set by foreign powers. Colonies are not fully sovereign, inasmuch as they don’t make the decisions that determine their fate. Seen in this light, Putin’s Russia is as much a colony of China as medieval Muscovy was a colony of the Mongol Empire.

Putin’s recent visit to Beijing, with most of his ministers tagging along, nicely illustrates just who is the lord and who comes as the supplicant. Not surprisingly, one of the outcomes of that junket was a deal enabling China to lease large swathes of land in Moscow Province. Equally unsurprisingly, Putin has transformed Russia into China’s raw-materials supplier and home for millions of Chinese expats. Small wonder that China has produced maps of Russia’s Far East with Chinese names for (still) Russian cities.

Some Russian analysts insist that China also interferes in the Russian elite’s ongoing political battles — which wouldn’t be surprising, given China’s growing stake in Russia’s stability and subordination. Whatever the exact nature of China’s domination of Russia, and regardless of their saccharine rhetoric of eternal love, we can be sure that it entails and will continue to entail creeping imperialization. Given the economic mismatch between China and Russia, Russia’s involvement in a war it cannot win and Putin’s evident inability to run his bailiwick efficiently, China has every incentive to meddle in its colony’s internal affairs — in order to correct the Kremlin’s mistakes, protect its settlers and safeguard its investments.

Ironically, while becoming a Chinese colony, Putin’s Russia desires to restore the empire it once had. Putin sees himself as a modern version of Peter the Great, the bloodthirsty czar who converted Muscovy into the Russian Empire. Putin also venerates Alexander Dugin, the imperialist philosopher, and Anton Denikin, the White general who aspired to reestablish the empire during the turbulent years following the Bolshevik seizure of power. Putin invaded Ukraine, twice, in order to capture the jewel in imperial Russia’s crown. His exalted ambitions extend to the Caucasus, Central Asia and Eastern Europe. And all of his expansionist talk and action are taking place at the same time that Russia’s status as a Chinese colony is being cemented.

It won’t work. Empires acquire colonies, but colonies do not acquire empires. Colonies aspiring to become empires can only succeed in destabilizing their relationship with their imperial masters.

Although China has no choice but to side with Russia in its genocidal war against Ukraine, that war and the resultant instability it has engendered are the last things China needs. China’s claims to global hegemony rest on its economic strength, military clout and modus vivendi with the international status quo. A misguided war that threatens to destabilize its largest colony — Russia — and disrupt China’s profitable relations with the rest of the world may bring Beijing some short-term benefits, but is ultimately self-defeating.

If and when the tide turns against Russia in Ukraine, as it very likely will in light of the Russian military’s unsustainably high casualties (1,100 to 1,400 per day), China will have to coax Moscow into reining in its overreach and coming to its senses.

Far more disturbing for both China and Russia is the very real possibility of Russia’s losing the war or getting so battered that Putin, his regime, and the brittle state come under internal attack by Russians and non-Russians within Russia. Colonies are weak, and weak polities have no business pretending to be warlike empires. And when they fail, uprisings, coups and wars amid state and regime failure are extremely likely.

If Putinite Russia goes this way, China will face a painful choice: to watch its colony go down in flames or to try to prop it up, at great cost to itself. The resulting maelstrom may teach rump Russia that it will never again be an empire. China may learn that possessing megalomaniacal colonies just isn’t worth the trouble.

Ukraine, meanwhile, will enjoy watching Moscow and Beijing squirm. So should the West.

Alexander J. Motyl is a professor of political science at Rutgers University-Newark. A specialist on Ukraine, Russia and the USSR, and on nationalism, revolutions, empires and theory, he is the author of 10 books of nonfiction, as well as “ Imperial Ends: The Decay, Collapse, and Revival of Empires” and “ Why Empires Reemerge: Imperial Collapse and Imperial Revival in Comparative Perspective.”

thehill.com