The meeting between Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Chinese Foreign
Minister Wang Yi, in the Chinese eastern city of Huangshan on March 30, is
likely to go down in history as a decisive meeting in the relations between the
two Asian giants.
The meeting was not only important due to its timing or the fact that it
reaffirmed the growing ties between Moscow and Beijing, but because of the
resolute political discourse articulated by the two top diplomats.
In Huangshan, there was no place for ambiguity. Lavrov spoke of a new ‘world order’, arguing that the world is now “living
through a very serious stage in the history of international relations” in
reference to the escalating Russia-Ukraine/NATO conflict.
“We, together with you (China) and with our sympathizers,” Sergei Lavrov added with assuredness, “will move towards a multipolar, just,
democratic world order.”
For his part, Wang Yi restated his country’s position regarding its
relations with Russia and the West with precise words, some of which were used
before in the February 4 meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Chinese
counterpart, Xi Jinping. “China-Russia cooperation has no limits … Our striving
for peace has no limits, our upholding of security has no limits, our
opposition towards hegemony has no limits,” Wang said.
Those following the evolution of the Russia-China political discourse,
even before the start of the Russia-Ukraine war on February 24, will notice that the
language employed supersedes that of a regional conflict, into the desire to
bring about the reordering of world affairs altogether.
Though the readiness to push against US-led western hegemony is inherent
in both countries’ political objectives, rarely did Moscow and Beijing move
forward in challenging western dominance, as is the case today. The fact that
China has refused to support western economic sanctions, condemn or isolate Russia
is indicative of a clear Chinese forward thinking policy.
Moreover, Beijing and Moscow are clearly not basing their future
relation on the outcome of the Ukraine war alone. What they are working to
achieve is a long term political strategy that they hope would ultimately lead
to a multipolar world.
Russia’s motives behind the coveted paradigm shift are obvious:
resisting NATO’s eastern expansion, reasserting itself as a global power and freeing itself from the
humiliating legacy of the post-Soviet Union. China, too, has a regional and
global agenda. Though China’s ambitions are partly linked to different
geopolitical spheres – South and East China Seas and the Indo-Pacific region – much of Beijing’s grievances, and priorities, overlap
with those of Moscow.
Aside from the direct economic interests between Russia and China, who
share massive and growing markets, they are faced with similar challenges: both
are hoping to gain greater access to waterways and to push back against
US-western military advancements in some of the world’s most important trade
routes.
It was no surprise that one of Russia’s top strategic priorities from
its war with Ukraine is to widen its access to the Black Sea, a major trade hub with a sizable percentage of world trade, especially in wheat and
other essential food supplies.
Like Russia, China too has been laboring to escape US military hegemony,
particularly in the Indo-Pacific. The exponential rise in the Chinese military
budget – estimated to grow by 7.1% in 2022, speaks of the way that China sees its
role in world affairs, now and in the future.
The US trade war against China, which was accelerated by former US President Donald
Trump, was a clear reminder to Beijing that global economic power can only be
guaranteed through an equal military might. This realization explains China’s
decision to open its first overseas military base in Djibouti, in the very
strategic Horn of Africa, in 2017, in addition to Beijing’s military moves in the three artificial islands in the South China Sea, and its
latest military deal with Solomon Islands in the South Pacific.
While the Russian and Chinese motives, as enunciated by top officials on
both sides are clear – to “move towards a multipolar world order” – the US and
its allies are not motivated by a specific, forward thinking political
doctrine, as was often the case in the past. Washington simply aims to contain the two rising powers as stated in the yet-to-be
officially released 2022 National Defense Strategy (NDS). According to the NDS,
“the growing multi-domain threat posed by the (People’s Republic of China) PRC”
is the primary challenge to US interests, followed by the “acute threats” posed
by Russia.
Considering the complex interests of both Russia and China, and the fact
that the two countries are facing the same mutual enemy, chances are the war in
Ukraine is merely a prelude to a protracted conflict that will manifest itself
through economic, political and diplomatic pressures and even outright wars.
Though it is premature to speak about the future of this global conflict
with certainty, there is little doubt that we are now living in a new era of
global affairs, one which is fundamentally different from the decades that
followed the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
Equally true, we also know that both China and Russia will be key
players in shaping that future, which could indeed push us away from US-OTAN
hegemony and “towards a multipolar world order”.
The bell tolls for the American Empire.
That is in case US’s Government & Oligarchs Ukraine dangerous game
doesn’t take us to a new World War that would be the end of us all.
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