China will help Russia weather storm of Ukraine sanctions
China could buy more Russian energy and lend Moscow cash to
help Vladimir Putin weather the storm of sanctions imposed by the West over the
Ukraine crisis, experts have predicted.
Mr Putin's decision to launch military action against
Ukraine will result in the US, UK and other NATO allies rolling out more
punitive measures against Russia.
Experts believe China is likely to help Russia 'behind the
scenes', with the level of support from Beijing potentially becoming an
'influential factor in shaping an evolving crisis'.
However, China will need to 'walk a fine line' as it tries
to avoid damaging its links to the West, with protecting trade likely to be a
key priority.
China and Russia have moved closer in recent years as both
have faced rising tensions with the West.
Mr Putin visited Beijing at the beginning of February for
the start of the Winter Olympics.
He and President Xi Jinping issued a statement at the time
which declared the 'friendship between the two States has no limits'.
China backed Russia in opposing NATO expansion as the two
nations accused the US, UK and others of adopting 'ideologized Cold War
approaches' to international relations.
The statement committed the pair to strengthening foreign
policy coordination and to defend common interests.
However, China has not publicly backed Russia over the
Ukraine crisis, instead urging 'all parties' to 'exercise restraint'.
Beijing has said the situation in Ukraine is the 'result of
many complex factors' and 'China always makes its own position, according to
the merits of the matter itself'.
Following the invasion of Ukraine, China is unlikely to
publicly support Mr Putin's actions but it is also unlikely to criticise the
Russian President.
Experts believe China will help Russia as sanctions imposed
by the West begin to bite.
That could mean Chinese banks lending money to Moscow and
Beijing buying more Russian oil and gas.
Tom Rafferty, a Beijing-based analyst with the Economist
Intelligence Unit, told the Financial Times: 'The level of Chinese support for
Russian actions could be an influential factor in shaping an evolving crisis.'
Jakub Jakobowski, a senior fellow with the China programme
at the Eastern Studies Centre in Warsaw, told the newspaper: 'Unless the West
puts a really tangible cost on China, China will still help Russia behind the
scenes.'
However, many believe China will want to avoid damaging its
economic interests which are linked to the West and that is likely to temper
its support for Moscow.
Noah Barkin, an expert on Europe-China relations at US
research firm Rhodium Group, told Bloomberg that Beijing 'will have to walk a
fine line in this crisis'.
He said: 'It will want to avoid openly criticising Russia's
actions in Ukraine, while affirming its support for the principles of
territorial integrity and non-interference. The hotter the conflict in Ukraine
gets, the more difficult it will be for Beijing to walk this line.'
Meanwhile, Professor Steve Tsang, director at the School of
Oriental and African Studies (Soas) China Institute, told the i newspaper that
China is 'not keen to see a war over Ukraine, as it has strong economic and
other ties with Ukraine'.
Rising tensions with the West are expected to quicken
Russia's ongoing pivot to the East when it comes to selling its oil and
gas.
Russian energy firms agreed new long-term supply deals with
China at the start of February.
The expectation is that China's demand for Russian energy
will now surge in the coming years while European demand is likely to
fall.
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