Cracks have emerged in their marriage of convenience, but the two autocrats are in it for the long haul.
President Xi Jinping is welcomed by his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin during an event in Moscow, on March 22, 2013. SERGEI ILNITSKY/POOL/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
OCTOBER 6, 2022, 4:26 AM
Anyone who has been in a relationship knows there are good days and not so good days. While trust and respect are the bedrock of healthy partnerships, transactional and even toxic relationships have proven, time and again, to be just as durable. Sometimes more so. That is why Chinese leader Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin’s marriage of convenience will endure, not despite Russia’s recent battlefield setbacks, but because of them.
To be fair, Xi appears
to be concerned about Putin’s accumulating losses in Ukraine. Chinese
observers, like their Western counterparts, probably expected the war to last
weeks, not months. Even fewer could have predicted Kyiv would mount successful counteroffensives striking deep into Russian-held territory.
But these developments aside, Xi is unlikely to turn on Putin, even as Russia
resorts to nuclear saber-rattling and sham referendums that challenge Beijing’s long-held anti-secessionist stance.
Indeed, Xi is wedded to
Putin’s war because China has much to gain geopolitically from a Russian
victory and potentially even more to lose from a Russian defeat. And, just as
important, Xi supports Putin’s revisionism, despite the fact that Beijing has gone out its way to avoid
violating sanctions which could harm its economy. That risk calculus could
change, though, if Xi perceives Putin’s regime is starting to crumble, a
prospect that no longer seems too remote to ignore. Even less understood is
just how far Xi might go to save Putin, the results of which will test
the durability of their “no-limits” partnership.
Unsurprisingly, neither
Xi nor Putin attended Queen Elizabeth’s funeral in London or the United Nations
General Assembly in New York last month. Their absence was intentional. Both
men traveled instead to Uzbekistan for meetings of the Beijing-led
Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO). Xi’s and Putin’s travel priorities
reflect their mutual disdain for the Western-led order, epitomized by
trans-Atlanticism, Cold War-era alliances, and the established multilateral
institutions. Their decision also signifies their burgeoning interest in
constructing an alternate international architecture that not only reflects
autocratic values but purposefully excludes the United States and its closest
democratic allies. Already, Xi and Putin can boast that the SCO represents more
than 40 percent of the world’s population, with more countries, like Iran and even NATO member state Turkey, seeking to join.
Xi and Putin’s marriage
of convenience will endure, not despite Russia’s battlefield setbacks, but
because of them.
Like the U.N. General
Assembly, the SCO summit produced little in the way of tangible results. But,
unlike the U.N., the SCO is an underachiever by design. The reason: Neither Xi
nor Putin want the SCO to develop into a supranational behemoth capable of
lecturing its members or resolving disputes. Instead, the SCO’s hands-off
mandate embodies China’s—and to a slightly lesser-extent Russia’s—desire to
reset and reshape global governance narratives, often under the banner of a
more just and fairer multipolar world. So far, that framing has proven
appealing to many countries, such as India, that feel either maligned or ignored
by the U.N. and other multilateral bodies. The SCO’s growing allure
demonstrates that Xi and Putin are, indeed, capable of cobbling together new
international coalitions by not requiring Western-style “like-mindedness,”
including tolerance for some members condemning Russia’s Ukraine invasion and
China’s support for it. But more troubling is that SCO’s growing role has
hardened Xi’s view that China needs Russia’s help challenging the United States
and its alliance network to hasten the West’s retrenchment from their
respective peripheries.
Nevertheless, the SCO
and its agenda is not what garnered the most attention at the Uzbekistan
summit. What did was Putin’s suggestion that Beijing had “questions and concerns” over Russia’s
actions in Ukraine, a veiled admission that China harbors doubts about Moscow’s
battlefield performance. Clearly, Moscow’s efforts to redraw Europe’s borders
have not gone according to plan. But Putin’s statement and Xi’s reservations,
to the extent they are being interpreted (or misinterpreted), do not reflect a
seismic Sino-Russian schism. More likely, they signal the growing power
asymmetry between the two countries and, ominously, Beijing’s desire for Moscow
to take stronger actions to win the war, not to abandon it all together.
Yet a Russian escalation
will test Beijing in ways it is unaccustomed to and unprepared for. To help
underwrite Putin’s revanchism, Beijing may be forced to take actions that buck
its own self-seeking instincts and undercut its own national interests. For
instance, to keep Russia’s economy afloat, Beijing could accept rubles as
payment for anything Russia needs to buy. Doing so would, however, represent a
new credit risk to the People’s Bank of China, which would in effect be
bringing the Russian economy’s liabilities and risks onto its own balance
sheet. These and other potential sanctions-busting measures, in turn, could
accelerate China being cut off from the very Western technology and capital
needed to support its development.
China’s deepening
support for Putin will also degrade its ability to convincingly play both
sides. Exhibit A has been China’s conflicted economic response to the war. On
the one hand, total goods traded between China and Russia surged 31 percent to $117 billion during the first eight months of
2022 compared to the same period last year, and they are on track to best last
year’s record of $147 billion. Chinese semiconductor sales to Russia, as well
as some commodity transfers, have similarly skyrocketed. And yet, China
has balked at Russian pleas for explicit military support, as well as
demurred in taking concrete measures that could result in China or Chinese
entities being subjected to sanctions.
Meanwhile, Moscow’s
growing reliance on China has been a boon for Beijing. Taking advantage of
Russia’s growing isolation, Beijing has ramped up its purchases of steeply discounted Russian
oil to meet China’s current and future demand. And those semiconductor
transfers? China made a tidy profit from selling some surplus chips to Russia
earlier this year, even if those gains could be short-lived after the U.S.
Commerce Department banned such sales in August. China has
even resorted to reselling its excess liquefied natural gas
purchased from the United States to European countries desperately looking to
diversify their energy sources, in effect undermining Putin’s strategy of weaponizing
Europe’s reliance on Russian gas. But while such double-crossing may be typical
of a Chinese business mindset in which China wins twice, there is reason to
suspect that Beijing may soon approach the outer limits of its fence-straddling
strategy, particularly as the war takes a turn for the worse.
Will Beijing, for
example, defy U.S. sanctions on semiconductors or other technology by providing
Russia with the types of assistance it desperately needs to sustain its war
effort? How will Xi respond if Putin follows through on his threat to use
tactical nuclear weapons? Relatedly, will China acknowledge the results of
Russia’s sham referendums, even though doing so could undermine China’s
presumed condemnation of a Taiwanese independence referendum in the future?
These and other near-term unanswered questions lay bare that as Russia’s
options dwindle, so too does China’s ability to have it both ways.
As a potential Russian
defeat comes into view that threatens to undermine China’s grand revisionist
agenda, Xi will, perhaps sooner than he would prefer, need to consider taking
bolder steps to boost Russia’s economy and war-fighting capabilities. Such
support, at least at first, will probably fall well short of violating
sanctions. Should the war drag on, though, China could engage in more
provocative actions likely to garner an international response, including
limited sanctions breaking and perhaps even nonlethal military assistance.
Nevertheless, it is
difficult to fathom a scenario in which China puts Russia’s needs squarely
above its own, at least not without a clear return on investment or compelling
evidence that such assistance will meaningfully shift the war’s momentum in
Russia’s favor. Pushback from parts of China’s vast party-state may also inhibit
more intense Chinese support, with different bureaucratic constituencies
fearful that violating sanctions could seriously detract from their ability to
meet Xi’s ambitious development targets.
In short, Beijing will
face paralysis by analysis, a quandary all too familiar from its current
reticence to institute the painful but needed reforms to stabilize China’s
rapidly cooling economy. And while China may yet hope that its economic woes
will resolve themselves in due course, time may not be on Russia’s side. Just
as troubling is that Beijing cannot fix what truly ills Putin’s war effort:
massive failures of strategy, organization, command, and logistics, as well as
severe shortages of manpower. As a result, Xi’s key challenge going forward may
have less to do with making sure Putin wins, and more with figuring out just
how far China is willing to go to make sure Putin does not lose. That may not
sound much like a match made in heaven. But remember that no one ever said it
would be.
https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/10/06/xi-putin-china-russia-ukraine-war-sanctions-sco/

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