By Martin Quin Pollard and Yew Lun Tian
June 28, 2023 3:20 AM GMT+7
Fighters of Wagner private mercenary group pull out of the headquarters of the Southern Military District to return to base, in the city of Rostov-on-Don, Russia, June 24, 2023. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo
BEIJING, June 27
(Reuters) - As news broke on Saturday that mercenary Wagner troops were
careering towards Moscow in a short-lived
rebellion, several businessmen from southern China began frantically
calling factories to halt shipments of goods destined for Russia.
While the mutiny - the
biggest test of Russian President Vladimir Putin's leadership since his
February 2022 invasion of Ukraine - quickly faded, some of these exporters are
now left questioning their future dependence on Beijing's closest ally.
"We thought there
was going to be a big problem," Shen Muhui, the head of the trade body for
the firms in China's southern Fujian province said, recalling the scramble
among its members exporting auto parts, machinery and garments to Russia.
Though the crisis has
eased, "some people remain on the sidelines, as they're not sure what will
happen later," he added, declining to name the companies pausing
shipments.
China has sought to
play down the weekend's events and voiced support for Moscow, with which it
struck a "no limits" partnership shortly before Russia invaded
Ukraine in what Moscow calls a "special military operation".
But a top U.S.
official on Monday said the weekend uprising had unsettled Beijing's cloistered
leadership, and some analysts inside and outside China have started to question
whether Beijing needs to ease off its political and economic ties to Moscow.
"It has put a
fly in the ointment of that 'no-limits' relationship," said
Singapore-based security analyst Alexander Neill.
China's foreign ministry, which described the aborted mutiny as
Russia's "internal affairs" and expressed
support for Moscow's efforts to stabilise the situation, did
not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.
CALLS FOR CAUTION
Yevgeny Prigozhin,
head of the Wagner private army that has fought some of Russia's bloodiest
battles in the Ukraine war, led the armed revolt after he alleged a huge number
of his fighters had been killed in friendly fire.
But the mercenary
leader abruptly called the uprising off on Saturday evening as his fighters
approached Moscow while facing virtually no resistance during a dash of nearly
800 km (500 miles).
China did not comment
as the crisis unfolded, but released a statement on Sunday when Foreign
Minister Qin Gang hosted a surprise meeting with Russia's deputy foreign
minister in Beijing.
At the heart of China
and Russia's relations is a shared opposition to what they see as a world
dominated by the United States and the expansion of the NATO military alliance
that threatens their security.
After securing an
unprecedented third term as president earlier this year, Chinese President Xi
Jinping made his first overseas trip to Moscow to meet his "dear
friend" Putin.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping attend a reception at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia March 21, 2023. Sputnik/Pavel Byrkin/Kremlin via REUTERS /File Photo
While nationalistic
commentators in state-run Chinese tabloids cheered Putin's swift efforts to
stamp out the rebellion, even some in China - where critical speech is tightly
controlled - have started to question Beijing's bet on Russia.
China "will be
more cautious with its words and actions about Russia", said
Shanghai-based international relations expert Shen Dingli.
Some Chinese scholars
have gone even further.
Yang Jun, a professor
at Beijing's China University of Political Science and Law, wrote a commentary
published on Saturday that called for China to directly support Ukraine to
avoid being "dragged into a quagmire of war by Russia".
"With the
development of the current situation and the trend of the war...(China) should
further adjust its position on Russia and Ukraine, make its attitude clearer,
and decisively stand on the side of the victors of history," he wrote in
Chinese-language Singaporean newspaper Lianhe Zaobao.
It was unclear if
Yang's article was written before the Wagner rebellion and he did not respond
to requests for an interview from Reuters.
Other China-based
academics, however, said Beijing would not change its stance on Russia as a
result of the incident.
INVESTOR UNCERTAINTY
China is Russia's top
trading partner, with Beijing exporting everything from automobiles to
smartphones and receiving cheap Russian crude oil that faces sanctions in much
of the rest of the world.
But even in the
energy sector, which fuelled a 40% jump in trade between Russia and China in
the first five months of this year, there are some signs of caution in China.
Top company executives at Chinese state energy companies have
routinely said it was too
early to comment or sidestepped questions on new investments in
Russia.
"Should Russia
lose the war or see changes in the domestic leadership, it will create huge
uncertainties for Chinese investors," said Michal Meidan, head of China
energy research at The Oxford Institute for Energy Studies.
He said the Chinese government also seemed to be exercising
caution, pointing out that Beijing had not yet signed a deal for a major
new gas pipeline connecting the countries despite a push from
Moscow.
While China is vital
to Russia's economy, China's trade with the likes of the United States, the
European Union and Japan - among the fiercest critics of Moscow's war in
Ukraine - dwarfs its dealings with Russia.
"Beijing now has
more reasons to have more reservations and to become more transactional in its
dealings with Putin's Russia," said Wen-Ti Sung, a political scientist at
the Australian National University.
"There's no point
making long-term investment in someone who may not credibly survive into the
long-term."
Reporting by Martin
Quin Pollard and Yew Lun Tian in Beijing and the Shanghai newsroom; Writing by
John Geddie; Editing by Alex Richardson
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
https://www.reuters.com/world/wagner-mutiny-exposes-risks-chinas-deep-russian-ties-2023-06-27/
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