Zelensky called Xi Jinping: I want to talk to him in Ukraine




Zelensky called Xi Jinping: I want to talk to him in Ukraine


29.03.2023

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called Xi Jinping in an interview with the Associated Press on Tuesday, expressing his desire to talk to him in Ukraine. A spokesman for China’s foreign ministry said in response that it had no information to provide. A Kremlin spokesman said Russia had no right to make suggestions on whether Xi Jinping should visit Ukraine.

(Voice of Deutsche Welle Chinese Network) According to the Associated Press, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky accepted an exclusive interview with the Associated Press on a train bound for Kiev on Tuesday (March 28) and addressed Chinese President Xi Jinping, Said that he would like to meet him in Ukraine and talk to him. “We’re ready to see him here. I want to talk to him. I had contact with him before total war. But not in over a year,” Zelinsky said.

At the regular press conference of the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs on March 29, a reporter asked a question. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky recently said that he is willing to meet with Chinese state leaders in Ukraine. What is China’s comment. Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Mao Ning said that on the Ukrainian issue, China maintains communication with relevant parties including Ukraine. I have no information to provide regarding the specific issue you mentioned.

On March 23, Mikhailo Podolyak, an adviser to the chief of the Ukrainian President’s Office, revealed that preparations for arranging a telephone conversation between Zelensky and Xi Jinping were underway.

According to Archyde.com, when asked on March 29 whether the meeting between Xi Jinping and Zelensky would help resolve the conflict in Ukraine, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, “We appreciate China’s balanced stance, and we Takes it very seriously and believes that Chinese leaders have their own decisions about the appropriateness of certain engagements. We have no right to make any recommendations here.”

What has been the response to China’s diplomatic engagement?

last week,Xi Jinping Pays Three-Day State Visit to Russia. At the end of the visit, China and Russia issued a joint statement referring to the document “China’s Position on the Political Solution to the Ukraine Crisis”. The Chinese document contains 12 points and calls for “ceasefire, cessation of war and start of peace talks”.

In response to the document, the U.S. said a ceasefire would now allow Russia to hold onto the Ukrainian territory it had seized and give its forces time to regroup.

Ukraine welcomed China’s diplomatic engagement, but Zelensky said he would consider a peaceful solution only after Russian troops withdrew from Ukrainian territory.

Although China and Russia reaffirmed their adherence to, upholding and strengthening the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons in their joint statement on March 22, just days after Xi Jinping concluded his visit to Russia, Putin announced that he would deploy tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus.

In an interview with the Associated Press on March 28, Zelensky said he believed Putin’s move was to distract attention from the lack of assurances he had received from China. “What does that mean? It means that the visit is not good for Russia,” Zelenskiy speculated.

Changes in Sino-Russian Relations: From Brothers, Rivals to Strategic Partners

initial allies

The day after the People’s Republic of China was proclaimed on October 1, 1949, the Soviet Union became the first country to establish diplomatic relations with China. At the end of the year, Mao Zedong visited Moscow and stayed in the Soviet Union for more than two months to participate in the celebration of Stalin’s 70th birthday (pictured). Afterwards, Mao Zedong complained about being treated coldly by Stalin and that the signing talks were not going well. On February 14, 1950, Mao Zedong signed the “Sino-Soviet Treaty of Friendship, Alliance and Mutual Assistance” in Moscow, and China and the Soviet Union became allies.

Changes in Sino-Russian Relations: From Brothers, Rivals to Strategic Partners

Soviet “Big Brother”

From the 1950s to the early 1960s, it was regarded as the “honeymoon period” of Sino-Soviet relations by the outside world. The two sides signed a series of agreements. The Soviet Union provided funds, materials and personnel to China from a series of aspects such as trade, higher education, nuclear technology, and industry. assistance to help China establish a complete industrial system. The first “Five-Year Plan” formulated by the Chinese government for economic development in 1953 was introduced with the help and planning of the Soviet Union. Mao Zedong emphasized the need to learn from the Soviet Union in all aspects, “The Communist Party of the Soviet Union is our best teacher.” The picture shows the report album published in 1956 commemorating the 6th anniversary of the Sino-Soviet Friendship Treaty.

Changes in Sino-Russian Relations: From Brothers, Rivals to Strategic Partners

korean war

The Korean War broke out in June 1950, and China sent troops to join the war in October (the picture shows volunteers crossing the frozen Yalu River), directly confronting the United Nations forces led by the United States. China called it “Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea”. The Soviet Union did not directly participate in the war, but provided a large amount of weaponry and financial assistance. In June 1953, the North and the South signed the Panmunjom Agreement, which stipulated that the North and South Koreas should cease fire at the 38th parallel north latitude, which solidified the split pattern of the Korean peninsula.

Changes in Sino-Russian Relations: From Brothers, Rivals to Strategic Partners

From rebellion to breakup

In September 1959, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev visited China (pictured) to participate in the tenth anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China. At that time, the differences between the leaders of China and the Soviet Union in terms of political concepts and differences and the contradictions in strategic interests had already appeared. In 1960, Moscow recalled all the Soviet experts who aided China and abolished various agreements on economic and technological cooperation between the two countries. Beijing, on the other hand, launched a long-term sharp criticism of the “revisionism” of the Soviet Union and the foreign and domestic policies of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.

Changes in Sino-Russian Relations: From Brothers, Rivals to Strategic Partners

border conflict

China and the Soviet Union are the two neighbors with the longest land border in the world. In 1964, the first round of border negotiations between China and the Soviet Union failed. On June 3, 1969, Chinese and Soviet armies clashed on Zhenbao Island in the border river Ussuri River (the picture shows the Chinese defenders on Zhenbao Island), and both sides suffered casualties. In the same year, the two countries clashed again in Bacha Island in Heilongjiang and Tielekti in Xinjiang. In September, Kosygin, Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Soviet Union, passed through Beijing and had an emergency meeting with Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai at the airport for three hours, reaching a consensus to maintain the status quo on the border and avoid armed conflicts.

Changes in Sino-Russian Relations: From Brothers, Rivals to Strategic Partners

Sino-Soviet Enmity

After Brezhnev became the leader of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Sino-Soviet relations remained in a state of confrontation. After the Chinese Cultural Revolution began in 1966, almost all exchanges between the two countries ceased. In 1967, Red Guards stormed the Soviet embassy in Beijing. The picture shows workers at Baotou Iron and Steel Works protesting against “Soviet revisionist social-imperialism” after the Sino-Soviet border conflict in 1969.

Changes in Sino-Russian Relations: From Brothers, Rivals to Strategic Partners

Boycott the Moscow Olympics

After entering the 1970s, China began to improve relations with Western countries led by the United States. Nixon’s visit to China in 1972 opened the door of China’s opening to the international community. In the 1980s, the Soviet Union faced more severe sanctions and confrontation from Western countries for invading Afghanistan. When Moscow hosted the Olympic Games in 1980, China joined the boycott camp of Western countries led by the United States.

Changes in Sino-Russian Relations: From Brothers, Rivals to Strategic Partners

normalization of relationship

At the end of the Soviet Union, Sino-Soviet relations eased somewhat. From October 1982 to June 1988, special envoys of the Chinese and Soviet governments conducted 12 rounds of consultations on the normalization of bilateral relations. In May 1989, Gorbachev, General Secretary of the CPSU Central Committee, visited China and met with Deng Xiaoping. The two sides issued the “Joint Communiqué” in Beijing, marking the normalization of relations between the two countries.

Changes in Sino-Russian Relations: From Brothers, Rivals to Strategic Partners

From good neighbors to strategic partners

After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, China announced that it recognized Russia as the successor of the Soviet Union. Contacts between the highest levels of the two countries have begun to resume. In 1999, the “Protocol Concerning the Narration of the East and West Sections of the Sino-Russian Boundary” was signed, and the long-standing issue of border demarcation was basically resolved. After Putin came to power in 2001, Russia and China signed the “Sino-Russian Treaty of Good-Neighborliness, Friendship and Cooperation”, establishing a strategic cooperative partnership of equality and trust. In 2010, the two countries confirmed the “comprehensive strategic partnership of coordination”. The picture shows Putin, Bush and Jiang Zemin at the APEC summit in Shanghai in 2001.

Changes in Sino-Russian Relations: From Brothers, Rivals to Strategic Partners

Go to the international stage

Entering the new millennium, both Beijing and Moscow intend to play a more active role on the international stage as their economies grow stronger. Multilateral platforms such as the BRICS summit and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (founded in 2002) provide opportunities for this. The picture shows the BRICS summit held in India in October 2016.

Changes in Sino-Russian Relations: From Brothers, Rivals to Strategic Partners

political strongman friendship

The two authoritarian leaders, Xi Jinping and Putin, share similar beliefs in great power politics. While firmly consolidating their own power, they also hope to break the existing international order dominated by the United States. During Putin’s visit to Beijing and attendance at the Winter Olympics in February 2022, China emphasized that China and Russia have “unlimited friendship and endless cooperation.” The picture shows Xi Jinping tasting caviar pancakes with Putin in the Russian Far East port of Vladivostok in 2018.

Changes in Sino-Russian Relations: From Brothers, Rivals to Strategic Partners

Not an ally, but an ally

Since the outbreak of the Ukrainian War in February 2022, Russia has been subject to international sanctions and isolation. But China has always refused to condemn Russia’s aggressive behavior, instead blaming the United States and NATO for the conflict, opposing sanctions, and calling attention to Russia’s “security concerns.” At the same time, China has substantially expanded its imports from Russia, especially energy imports. In March 2023, Xi Jinping visited Moscow and became the first head of a major country to visit Russia since the outbreak of the Ukraine war.

(Associated Press, etc.)

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