Friday, 7 April 2023

Kremlin spokesman terms Xi-Macron talks in Beijing 'important point of contact

Kremlin spokesman terms Xi-Macron talks in Beijing 'important point of contact

Kremlin spokesman terms Xi-Macron talks in Beijing 'important point of contact




French President Emmanuel Macron and Chinese President Xi Jinping
©Ludovic Marin/Pool via AP






The Kremlin is keeping a close eye on reports of talks between President Xi Jinping of China and President Emmanuel Macron of France as Russia sees the tete-a-tete as an "important point of contact," Russian Presidential Spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Friday.







"Undoubtedly, it is a very important point of contact and we are certainly monitoring all reports in that regard," he said.


"As you are aware, we have our own relationship with China; we have a wealth of very wide-ranging ties, and this is where we place our priority focus," Peskov added.


When asked if Macron could potentially influence China’s position on the Ukrainian conflict during his visit to Beijing, Peskov said that, "China is a very serious major power that maintains its own sovereign position." "It is a very serious-minded position that has been formulated with all due gravity. It’s not the type of country to suddenly up and alter its positions due to foreign influence," the Kremlin spokesman noted.


The French leader arrived on a state visit to China on Wednesday. He is being accompanied by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. Xi held talks with Macron and von der Leyen in Beijing on Thursday. Resolving the Ukrainian crisis was one of the main issues on the agenda for the talks.



Macron's Beijing Mission Will Fail to Split China From Russia, Experts Say



Emmanuel Macron may have hoped to drive a wedge between Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin, but he will instead go home red-faced, argue scholar, educator and journalist K J Noh, a member of Veterans for Peace, and Dr Kenneth Hammond, professor of East Asian and global history at New Mexico State University.


French President Emmanuel Macron's will leave Beijing empty-handed if he hopes to change China's stance on Russia and Ukraine, scholars have said.


Macron and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen flew to the Chinese capital on Wednesday for talks with President Xi Jinping.


On the agenda was China's 12-point blueprint for a ceasefire in Ukraine, which calls on the Kiev's western backers to abandon their "Cold War" mentality and unilateral use of coercive sanctions and heed Russia's security concerns.


Dr Kenneth Hammond told Sputnik that the leaders' mission was based on a "false expectation" that China would "jump ship and suddenly throw itself in with the US-led forces in the West" against Russia's military operation in Ukraine.


"China clearly restated its commitment to seeking a peaceful resolution of the situation in Ukraine," Hammond said, respecting "the security interests of all parties, respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity" — including Russia's. "These are issues, these are principles that have animated Chinese foreign policy, not just in regard to the Ukraine situation, but more broadly for for many, many, many years."







The lecturer condemned the "demonization of China" in Western media and politics in his country.


"The negative portrayal of China has been so relentless, for at least the last decade and more," Hammond said. "The American government, especially in just the last few years, has been relentless in trying to shut down communication, knowledge, information exchange between people in China and people in the West."


The Confucius Institutes, where Americans can learn the Chinese language, have been suppressed, while Chinese academics working in the US "have been targeted by the FBI and the Justice Department on grounds that are all almost always dismissed as having no real basis in fact."


He recalled taking many groups of Americans on trips to China over the years. "When they get there, the first thing they say is 'What the heck is going on here? Where are all the police? Why do these people look happy? How come they're wearing decent clothes?'," Hammond said. "We just have this this mythology that China is poor and oppressed and everybody's suffering and the government is brutal and all."


K J Noh pointed out to Sputnik that Macron's trip to Beijing came as he was facing "terrific" protests against his attempt to raise the state pension age from 62 to 64, "so now he's beating down protesters all over France."


Macron is "trying to do the kind of global statesman impression," the scholar said, walking a tightrope between his country's interests and those of the US which "has been putting tremendous pressure on France and all the EU nations to fall into line... they want them to decouple from China."


"Macron doesn't want to decouple from China," however, said Noh. "You can see that because he took with him 60 executives from France's top corporations, because he wants to get some kind of commercial benefit out of these relations. He's going there with his hat in his hand."


The journalist argued that Macron's approach was a "veiled refutation of the US position" and an "endorsement of China's peace plan" which Washington has rejected out of hand.


Von der Leyen's presence, by contrast, was on US orders to act as a "chaperone" to make sure Macron doesn't go too far off the track.








"Macron has a weakness for matronly people who tell him what to do, and he may fall in line," the scholar cracked in a jibe at the French president's marriage to his former schoolteacher.


"Von der Leyen is charging that China is pursuing systematic change of the international order, and she wants to reset relations with China and she wants to 'de-risk' relations," Noh noted. "De-risk means it's a soft word for decouple."


Beijing's refusal to criticize Moscow over its conflict with US proxy Ukraine — in defence of the Russian-speaking population of the Donbass, Crimea, Zaporozhye and Kherson — may stem from Washington's recent change in stance towards Taiwan.


Former US House of Representatives speaker Nancy Pelosi, a member of President Joe Biden's Democratic Party, made an unannounced visit to Taipei last August on a US Air Force jet, meeting President Tsai Ing-wen in breach of Washington's stated 'one China policy' of recognizing Beijing's authority over both the mainland and the island province.


That prompted a breakdown in relations with China and a rise in military tensions, more recently exacerbated by the US shooting-down of a Chinese weather balloon that drifted over US territory.


"The reality of it is that the US is escalating to war," Noh warned, tracing Washington's hostility to Beijing back to the end of the Second World War and the Chinese revolution.


"It thought that it owned China. And when China turned communist, it became very, very upset," Noh said. "There's been a continuous Cold War and it has used Taiwan Island, this kind of corrupt state that lost the civil war as its forward force projection platform."


Even after the US altered its 'one China' policy to recognise only the People's Republic of China, it still maintained "grey-zone relations" with Taiwan where "we send them troops and we send them weapons, but not really... kind of don't ask, don't tell situation."














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