In Moscow, Xi and Putin Bury Pax Americana
PEPE ESCOBAR • MARCH
22, 2023
https://www.unz.com/pescobar/in-moscow-xi-and-putin-bury-pax-americana/
What has just taken place in Moscow is nothing less
than a new Yalta, which, incidentally, is in Crimea. But unlike the momentous
meeting of US President Franklin Roosevelt, Soviet Leader Joseph Stalin, and
British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in USSR-run Crimea in 1945, this is
the first time in arguably five centuries that no political leader from the
west is setting the global agenda.
It’s Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian
President Vladimir Putin that are now running the multilateral, multipolar
show. Western exceptionalists may deploy their crybaby routines as much as they
want: nothing will change the spectacular optics, and the underlying substance
of this developing world order, especially for the Global South.
What Xi and Putin are setting out to do was explained
in detail before their summit, in two Op-Eds penned by the presidents
themselves. Like a highly-synchronized Russian ballet, Putin’s vision was laid out in
the People’s Daily in China, focusing on a “future-bound
partnership,” while Xi’s was published in
the Russian Gazette and the RIA Novosti website,
focusing on a new chapter in cooperation and common development.
Right from the start of the summit, the speeches by
both Xi and Putin drove the NATO crowd into a hysterical frenzy of anger and
envy: Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova perfectly captured
the mood when she remarked that the west was “foaming at the mouth.”
The front page of the Russian Gazette on
Monday was iconic: Putin touring Nazi-free Mariupol, chatting with residents,
side by side with Xi’s Op-Ed. That was, in a nutshell, Moscow’s terse response to
Washington’s MQ-9 Reaper stunt and
the International Criminal Court (ICC) kangaroo court shenanigans. “Foam at the mouth” as much as you
like; NATO is in the process of being thoroughly humiliated in Ukraine.
During their
first “informal” meeting, Xi and Putin talked for no less than four and a half
hours. At the end, Putin personally escorted Xi to his limo. This conversation
was the real deal: mapping out the lineaments of multipolarity – which starts
with a solution for Ukraine.
Predictably,
there were very few leaks from the sherpas, but there was quite a significant
one on their “in-depth exchange” on Ukraine. Putin politely stressed he
respects China’s position – expressed in Beijing’s 12-point conflict resolution
plan, which has been completely rejected by Washington. But the Russian
position remains ironclad: demilitarization, Ukrainian neutrality, and
enshrining the new facts on the ground.
In parallel,
the Russian Foreign Ministry completely ruled out a role for the US, UK,
France, and Germany in future Ukraine negotiations: they are not considered
neutral mediators.
A
multipolar patchwork quilt
The next day
was all about business: everything from energy and “military-technical”
cooperation to improving the efficacy of trade and economic corridors running
through Eurasia.
Russia
already ranks first as a natural gas supplier to China – surpassing
Turkmenistan and Qatar – most of it via the 3,000 km Power of Siberia pipeline
that runs from Siberia to China’s northeastern Heilongjiang province, launched
in December 2019. Negotiations on the Power of Siberia II pipeline via Mongolia
are advancing fast.
Sino-Russian
cooperation in high-tech will go through the roof: 79 projects at over $165
billion. Everything from liquified natural gas (LNG) to aircraft construction,
machine tool construction, space research, agro-industry, and upgraded economic
corridors.
The Chinese
president explicitly said he wants to link the New Silk Road projects to the
Eurasia Economic Union (EAEU). This BRI-EAEU interpolation is a natural
evolution. China has already signed an economic cooperation deal with the EAEU.
Russian macroeconomic uber-strategist Sergey
Glazyev’s ideas are finally bearing fruit.
And last but
not least, there will be a new drive towards mutual settlements in national
currencies – and between Asia and Africa, and Latin America. For all practical
purposes, Putin endorsed the role of the Chinese yuan as the new trade currency
of choice while the complex discussions on a new
reserve currency backed by gold and/or commodities proceed.
This joint
economic/business offensive ties in with the concerted Russia-China diplomatic
offensive to remake vast swathes of West Asia and Africa.
Chinese
diplomacy works like the matryoshka (Russian stacking dolls)
in terms of delivering subtle messages. It’s far from coincidental that Xi’s
trip to Moscow exactly coincides with the 20th anniversary of
American ‘Shock and Awe’ and the illegal invasion, occupation, and destruction
of Iraq.
In parallel,
over 40 delegations from Africa arrived in Moscow a day before Xi to take part
in a “Russia-Africa in the Multipolar World” parliamentary conference – a
run-up to the second Russia-Africa summit next July.
The area
surrounding the Duma looked just like the old Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) days
when most of Africa kept very close anti-imperialist relations with the USSR.
Putin chose
this exact moment to write off more than $20
billion in African debt.
In West
Asia, Russia-China are acting totally in synch. West Asia. The Saudi-Iran
rapprochement was actually jump-started by Russia in Baghdad and
Oman: it was these negotiations that led to the signing of the deal in Beijing.
Moscow is also coordinating the Syria-Turkiye rapprochement discussions.
Russian diplomacy with Iran – now under strategic partnership status – is kept
on a separate track.
Diplomatic
sources confirm that Chinese intelligence, via its own investigations, is now
fully assured of Putin’s vast popularity across Russia, and even within the
country’s political elites. That means conspiracies of the regime-change
variety are out of the question. This was fundamental for Xi and the
Zhongnanhai’s (China’s central HQ for party and state officials) decision to
“bet” on Putin as a trusted partner in the coming years, considering he may run
and win the next presidential elections. China is always about continuity.
So the
Xi-Putin summit definitively sealed China-Russia as comprehensive strategic
partners for the long haul, committed to developing serious geopolitical and
geoeconomic competition with declining western hegemons.
This is the
new world born in Moscow this week. Putin previously defined it as a new
anti-colonial policy. It’s now laid out as a multipolar patchwork quilt.
There’s no turning back on the demolition of the remnants of Pax Americana.
‘Changes
that haven’t happened in 100 years’
In Before
European Hegemony: The World System A.D. 1250-1350, Janet Abu-Lughod built
a carefully constructed narrative showing the prevailing multipolar order when
the West “lagged behind the ‘Orient.’” Later, the West only “pulled ahead
because the ‘Orient’ was temporarily in disarray.”
We may be
witnessing a similarly historic shift in the making, trespassed by a revival of
Confucianism (respect for authority, emphasis on social harmony), the
equilibrium inherent to the Tao, and the spiritual power of Eastern Orthodoxy.
This is, indeed, a civilizational fight.
Moscow,
finally welcoming the first sunny days of Spring, provided this week a
larger-than-life illustration of “weeks where decades happen” compared to
“decades where nothing happens.”
The two
presidents bid farewell in a poignant manner.
Xi: “Now,
there are changes that haven’t happened in 100 years. When we are together, we
drive these changes.”
Putin: “I
agree.”
Xi: “Take
care, dear friend.”
Putin: “Have
a safe trip.”
Here’s to a
new day dawning, from the lands of the Rising Sun to the Eurasian steppes.
(Republished
from The
Cradle by permission of author or representative)
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