US calls on a silent China to use its sway over Russia and North Korea
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[November 01, 2024]
By DIDI TANG and MATTHEW LEE
WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. and South Korea have called on China to use
its influence over Russia and North Korea to prevent escalation after
Pyongyang sent thousands of troops to Russia to aid Moscow's war against
Ukraine. Beijing has so far stayed quiet.
In a rare meeting earlier this week, three top U.S. diplomats met with
China’s ambassador to the United States to emphasize U.S. concerns and
urge China to use its sway with North Korea to try to curtail the
cooperation, according to a State Department official, who spoke on
condition of anonymity.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Thursday that the sides had “a
robust conversation just this week" and that China knows U.S.
expectations are that “they’ll use the influence that they have to work
to curb these activities."
“But I think this is a demand signal that’s coming not just from us, but
from countries around the world,” he said at a news conference in
Washington with Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and their South Korean
counterparts.
Liu Pengyu, spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, said in a
statement that China's position on the Ukraine crisis is “consistent and
clear.”
China strives "for peace talks and political settlement of the Ukraine
crisis. This position remains unchanged. China will continue to play a
constructive role to this end,” Liu said.
The U.S. says 8,000 North Korean soldiers are in Russia near Ukraine’s
border and are preparing to help the Kremlin fight against Ukrainian
troops in the coming days. China has yet to publicly comment on the
move.
Beijing has forged a “no limits” partnership with Moscow, and while it
has also been a major ally for Pyongyang, experts say Beijing might not
approve of the closer military partnership between Russia and North
Korea because it sees it as destabilizing in the region.
The Russia-North Korea partnership runs contrary to Beijing’s goal for a
peaceful Korean Peninsula, said Shi Yinhong, an international relations
expert at China’s Renmin University.
Beijing is “aware of the complexity and danger of the situation,” Shi
said, noting that the “fact that China hasn’t said anything yet on the
military alliance agreement between North Korea and Russia indicates
that China strongly disagrees with it.”
Dennis Wilder, senior fellow for the Initiative for U.S.-China Dialogue
on global issues at Georgetown University, called Beijing’s “radio
silence” on North Korea’s move “staggering." He said Beijing must find a
balance between supporting Moscow and not angering the West, and that
Chinese President Xi Jinping might “for his own sake ignore the whole
thing.”
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Chinese President Xi jinping speaks during a meeting with Finnish
President Alexander Stubb at the Great Hall of the People on
Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2024 in Beijing, China. (Kazuki Kozaki, Pool Photo
via AP)
Xi has built a personal relationship with Russian President Vladimir
Putin, and “he cannot see Putin fail,” Wilder said this week at a
panel discussion hosted by the Washington-based think tank Center
for Strategic and International Studies.
At the same time, Xi cannot anger the Europeans and Americans when
his country's economy is struggling, Wilder said. “So he’s not going
to say anything publicly about this,” Wilder said.
Victor Cha, Korean chair at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, said at the same panel discussion that for
China, “there’s probably a combination of a little bit of
exasperation, a little bit of panic and a little bit of they don’t
know what to do with regard to the current situation.”
It’s unclear if Beijing was informed of Pyongyang's move in advance,
Cha said. Beijing also could fret over Russia gaining more influence
than China over North Korea, Cha said.
Austin said Thursday that China “should be asking Russia some hard
questions at this point and whether it intends to broaden this
conflict by this kind of behavior.”
Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell, Assistant Secretary of
State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Dan Kritenbrink and
Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs James O’Brien met
with Chinese envoy Xie Feng in Washington on Tuesday, according to
the State Department official, who would not detail the Chinese
response.
Lu Chao, director of the Institute of American and East Asian
Studies at Liaoning University in China's northeastern province of
Liaoning, said the U.S. should not expect China to manage North
Korea.
“It is not the case that China is responsible to manage North Korea
and the U.S. is responsible for managing South Korea,” Lu said. “I
hope the U.S. government could understand China’s stance."
Lu also said the troop deployment is “a matter between Russia and
North Korea,” while China’s attitude remains unchanged that the
conflict should not be escalated.
—
AP researcher Yu Bing in Beijing contributed to this report.
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