U.S. relieved as China appears to heed warnings on Russia
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[May 03, 2022] By
Steve Holland, Trevor Hunnicutt and David Brunnstrom
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Two months after
warning that Beijing appeared poised to help Russia in its fight against
Ukraine, senior U.S. officials say they have not detected overt Chinese
military and economic support, a welcome development in the tense
U.S.-China relationship.
U.S. officials told Reuters in recent days they remain wary about
China's long-standing support for Russia in general, but that the
military and economic support that they worried about has not come to
pass, at least for now. The relief comes at a pivotal time.
President Joe Biden is preparing for a trip to Asia later this month
dominated by how to deal with the rise of China and his administration
is soon to release his first national security strategy about the
emergence of China as a great power.
As well as steering clear of directly backing Russia's war effort, China
has avoided entering new contracts between its state oil refiners and
Russia, despite steep discounts. In March its state-run Sinopec Group
suspended talks about a major petrochemical investment and a gas
marketing venture in Russia.
Last month, the U.S. envoy to the United Nations hailed China's
abstentions on U.N. votes to condemn Russia's invasion of Ukraine as a
"win," underscoring how Beijing's enforced balancing act between Russia
and the West may be the best outcome for Washington.
Still, China has refused to condemn Russia's actions in Ukraine and has
criticized the sweeping Western sanctions on Moscow, while saying it is
not deliberately helping circumvent them.
Trade volume between Russia and China also jumped in the first quarter,
and the two declared a "no limits" partnership in February.
On Monday, Beijing's Washington embassy issued a 30-page newsletter
accusing the United States of spreading "falsehoods" to discredit China
over Ukraine, including through a March press leak saying Russia had
sought Chinese military help. The embassy noted that U.S. officials had
since said they had seen no evidence of China providing such support.
Biden himself has not spoken of China helping Russia since telling
reporters in Brussels March 24 that in a phone call with Chinese
President Xi Jinping, he "made sure he understood the consequences."
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Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting with Chinese
President Xi Jinping in Beijing, China February 4, 2022.
Sputnik/Aleksey Druzhinin/Kremlin via REUTERS/File Photo
Secretary of State Antony Blinken told the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee last week China is dealing with the
"significant reputational risk" of being Russia's ally and that "for
now we're not seeing significant support from China for Russia's
military actions."
Biden is to visit Tokyo and Seoul in what will be his first trip to
Asia as president - one that won't include a stop in China. He'll
meet with Indian and Australian leaders too, during a 'Quad' meeting
in Tokyo.
China has made Russia a key part of its foreign policy strategy to
counter the West. Biden aides were worried Xi was planning to
provide direct support to Russian President Vladimir Putin as his
campaign in Ukraine faced fierce setbacks, one U.S. official said.
They were heartened this has not happened so far, but Washington and
its allies are continuing to closely monitor the level of
assistance, the official said.
Bonnie Glaser, an Asia expert at the German Marshall Fund of the
United States, said stark warnings by the U.S. and European Union
have paid off so far.
"There has been consistent messaging that if China does so it will
face severe consequences. It appears that so far, the Chinese have
not. It is feasible that the Chinese planned to provide military
assistance and changed their minds," she said.
However U.S. officials remain concerned about China's refusal to
condemn Russia's actions in Ukraine and what they say is its
continued parroting of Russian disinformation over its intervention
there.
Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman said on April 21 that
Beijing had "repeatedly drawn false equivalencies between Russia's
war of aggression and Ukraine's self-defensive actions."
She added: "Let's be clear, China's already doing things that do not
help this situation."
(Reporting By Steve Holland, David Brunnstrom and Trevor Hunnicutt;
Editing by Heather Timmons and Richard Pullin)
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