By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
Why China’s Affinity With Russia Is Over
Throughout the
ongoing war in Ukraine, a truism has held across most of the political
spectrum, from left to right, about the second-order effects of the conflict’s
outcome. A Ukrainian victory would strengthen the position of the United States
vis-à-vis China globally, while a Russian victory would achieve the opposite.
It is easy to see how
takes like this gain such a strong foothold. Analysts
quickly apply sweeping, abstract constructs to their assessments of major world
events. This time that has meant a supposed worldwide faceoff between
authoritarianism and democracy. Beyond such considerations, many have tried to
imagine the Ukraine conflict’s effects on Chinese thinking about Taiwan. Here
again, it is supposed that a Ukrainian victory against a vastly larger invading
adversary would be deflating for China, lowering the risk of any near-term
attempt to take control of Taiwan by force. And a Russian victory, which now seems quite unlikely, would produce the
opposite effect.
But while we are busy
imagining, there is a more interesting puzzle that has so far received
surprisingly little attention involving China, Russia, and Ukraine, and that
involves the way Beijing views the recent attempt by Wagner Group chief Yevgeny
Prigozhin to drive his private army from the Russian southwestern borderlands
to Moscow, to either overthrow President Vladimir Putin, kidnap his top defense
officials, or lodge a dramatic patriotic protest, depending on whose interpretation
one takes of last weekend’s shocking news from the country. Here, “puzzle” is
the only appropriate word, not because we don’t know what motivated Prigozhin
or who, if any, his co-conspirators within the Putin system may have been, but
because high-level Chinese thinking on global events of the first rank is
utterly shrouded in a black box.
What, though, do the
Chinese themselves think of the latest events out of Russia? If Beijing ever
placed any stock in the idea that Russia and China were together defending the
virtues of authoritarianism against an unending onslaught of what is fancied as
Western liberalism and democracy, any such illusions by now must be cold and
six feet under. There is no longer any possible way to understand or interpret Putinism that could make China comfortable with a close
ideological pairing or comparison.
It is publicly known
that China’s leader, Xi Jinping, made a powerful statement of sympathy toward Russia and Putin early last
year when he spoke of their friendship as having “no limits.” Since then, China
has been at pains to say that this does not mean the two countries have allied.
Beijing has been caught in a delicate and even costly balancing act, trying to
show support for Moscow in various ways through public statements and high-level diplomatic exchanges. To avoid
incurring high costs in its already troubled relationship with Washington has
required Beijing to avoid the slightest appearance of providing lethal weapons
to Putin’s flagging army. And to avoid serious damage to relations with Europe,
China has had to maintain that it is not so much interested in a Russian
victory as it is in some scarcely defined just and peaceful outcome. But
European countries that feel threatened by Putin’s recklessness and exasperated
by the cost of the conflict seem less and less inclined to believe in China’s
good offices.
Much has been made of
China’s growing authoritarianism under Xi. Still, it is hard to imagine that Xi
looks upon the degraded spectacle of Russia with anything less than quiet
contempt. Xi has famously required members of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to
study and derive lessons from the demise of the Soviet Union under Mikhail
Gorbachev. His synoptic assessment of how that erstwhile superpower collapsed is
that it lost its nerve, meaning it didn’t have the guts to fight to defend and
sustain its system. Putin has the will to keep fighting for power, but in the
view of Xi, can Putin be said to have a system worth fighting for? China’s
history from the mid-20th century until now says otherwise.
One of the
foundational principles of Mao Zedong, whose victory against
Nationalists in a long civil war led to the establishment of the People’s
Republic of China, was that the country’s military must always remain under
unambiguous control and at the service of the CCP. Every leader since Mao has
clung to this line, none more so than Xi, who has
doubled down.
But China’s history
holds even older reasons to feel repelled by Russia’s unrelenting decay under
Putin. For decades before the CCP victory in 1949, the country was constantly
riven by warlordism. Here is where the spectacle of
today’s Russia comes most sharply into critical focus. As if pursuing history
in reverse, Putin has increasingly relied on warlords and militias to shore up his power and pursue strategic
goals.
At the turn of the
century, a murderous earlier round of this involved Chechnya when Putin relied
on forces loyal to Akhmad Kadyrov to put down a
separatist rebellion there. Last year in Ukraine, Putin went beyond doubling
down on that strategy, leaning heavily on Prigozhin’s paramilitary Wagner Group
to conquer and reabsorb into Russia not just any component of the former Soviet
Union but the largest country in Europe by territory.
He might have heeded
Machiavelli, who wrote: “Mercenaries and auxiliaries are useless and dangerous;
and if one holds his state based on these arms, he will stand neither firm nor
safe; for they are disunited, ambitious, and without discipline.” That’s
reaching back to the 16th century, though, which China, with its deep
traditions of statecraft, would probably view as unnecessary, mainly because
its history of the last century is so rich in cautionary examples.
This helps explain
why Beijing was silent for so long after Prigozhin’s
short-lived insurrection began. It was embarrassing, and for the duration,
no one there could have wanted to be associated too closely with Russia. When
Beijing finally began to comment, it was to merely express the bland wish that its neighbor could somehow
preserve its national stability.
None of this should
suggest that China will wash its hands of Russia or Putin. How could it? They
are nuclear-armed neighbors linked by many things, from Russia’s growing dependence on China as a buyer of its hydrocarbons, to the
flow of Chinese economic migrants into the lightly populated borderlands of the
Russian far east.
Undoubtedly, China
once strongly modeled itself after the Soviet Union. Even Mao’s personalized
rule and many attempts by Russia to define and police political orthodoxy have
not changed that. At least as long as Putin remains in power, what is gone,
though, is any thought that the two countries still share any substantive
ideology. Even from Beijing, the criminalized authoritarianism of Putin must
look cringeworthy. Distrust the smiles. Far from an ally, Russia increasingly
stands out as a problem.
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