Russia and China agree to expand security ties
A top Russian official declares on a visit to
China that Kremlin considers beefing up ties with Beijing a top policy goal.
19 Sep 2022
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/9/19/russia-china-agree-to-expand-security-ties
A top Russian security official has stated on a
visit to China that the Kremlin considers beefing up ties with Beijing as a top policy goal.
Nikolai Patrushev, secretary of the National Security
Council chaired by Russian President Vladimir Putin, described the
“strengthening of comprehensive partnership and strategic cooperation with
Beijing as an unconditional priority of Russia’s foreign policy”.
Patrushev is one of Putin’s closest associates.
During a meeting with Guo Shengkun, a top official of China’s
Communist Party, he said on Monday that “in the current conditions, our
countries must show even greater readiness for mutual support and development
of cooperation”.
Patrushev’s office said in a statement after the talks
in the city of Nanping that the parties agreed to “expand information exchanges
on countering extremism and foreign attempts to undermine constitutional order
of both countries”.
The Chinese and Russian officials also emphasized a
need to expand cooperation on cybersecurity.
Putin met Chinese President Xi
Jinping last week in Uzbekistan, their first
encounter since the Russian leader sent troops into Ukraine in late February.
A Chinese government statement issued after the
meeting did not mention Ukraine but said Xi promised “strong
support” for Russia’s “core interests”.
The statement did not give specifics, but Beijing uses
“core interests” to describe issues such as national sovereignty and the ruling
Communist Party’s claim to Taiwan, over which it is willing to go to war.
Xi’s government, which said it had a “no-limits”
friendship with Moscow before the February 24 invasion of Ukraine, has refused
to criticize Russia’s military actions. China and India have increased imports
of Russian oil and gas, helping Moscow offset Western
sanctions imposed over its actions in Ukraine.
During his meeting with Xi on Thursday, Putin praised
China’s president for maintaining a “balanced” approach to the Ukrainian crisis
and said he was ready to discuss Beijing’s “concerns” about Ukraine.
Putin’s rare mention of Chinese worries came as the
impact of volatile oil prices and economic uncertainty due to almost seven
months of fighting in Ukraine has caused anxiety in China.
Xi and Putin met on the sidelines of a summit of the
Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), an eight-nation regional alliance
created as a counterweight to US influence that includes India, Pakistan, and four ex-Soviet nations in Central Asia.
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