China’s Xi warns Putin not to use nuclear arms in
Ukraine
Chinese leader makes the call during a visit by German
Chancellor Olaf Scholz.
BY STUART
LAU
NOVEMBER 4,
2022 11:17 AM
TAIPEI —
Chinese leader Xi Jinping made his most direct criticism yet of Vladimir
Putin’s war on Ukraine on Friday, warning the Russian president not to resort
to nuclear weapons and calling on visiting German Chancellor Olaf Scholz to
push for peace talks.
Xi’s
warning comes just over a month after Putin threatened Ukraine with a nuclear
attack, a sign of how far Ukrainian forces had rocked the Kremlin with their
advances against invaders in the East.
The
international community, said Xi, should “jointly oppose the use of, or threats
to use, nuclear weapons,” according to a statement carried by Xinhua, China’s
state news agency. The world should also “advocate that nuclear weapons cannot
be used, a nuclear war cannot be waged, in order to prevent a nuclear crisis”
in Europe or Asia, Xi added.
The Chinese
leader, who just weeks ago secured a norm-breaking third term in office, asked
Germany and Europe to “play an important part in calling for peace and
facilitating negotiations.”
Xi also
called for “improving the humanitarian situation” in the crisis areas
especially during the winter.
Still, the
Chinese leader, who before the war referred to Putin as his best friend,
notably stopped short of asking Russia to withdraw, a key demand for Ukraine
and its Western backers. He also made no mention of Putin’s refusal to honor
the U.N. agreement on facilitating Ukrainian grain exports, with his premier
instead advocating the export of Chinese grain to help ease the food crisis.
In
September Putin publicly acknowledged for the first time that Xi had
“questions” and “concerns” about the war. Shortly after that meeting between
the Chinese and Russian leaders, Putin upped the ante and raised the notion
that nuclear weapons could be used. “To defend Russia and our people, we
doubtlessly will use all weapons resources at our disposal,” Putin said. “This
is not a bluff.”
“We cannot
afford any further escalation,” China’s outgoing Premier Li Keqiang said at a
press conference. Referring to Scholz who was standing next to him, Li said:
“Both of us … hope the crisis ends soon.”
Scholz
wants business
Xi’s show
of opposition to Putin’s nuclear threats was hailed as a major diplomatic
victory by Scholz, who has faced weeks of criticism for leaning too closely
toward Beijing.
“We have
agreed that threatening nuclear attacks is irresponsible and dangerous,” Scholz
told reporters, referring to his meeting with Xi. “I have told President Xi the
importance for China to exert its influence on Russia.”
Scholz
brought with him a delegation of big businesses and also recently approved a
deal by a Chinese state-owned company to acquire part of a terminal in the
strategically important port of Hamburg.
Indeed, during
the opening remarks at his meeting with Xi, Scholz again recalled his earlier
career as the Hamburg mayor, while urging Xi to deepen trade ties with Germany,
the EU’s biggest economy.
Scholz
named few deliverables, apart from a deal for expatriates — not local Chinese
people — to take BioNTech coronavirus vaccine shots in China, and vowed
cooperation on climate change and disease prevention.
Taiwan
tensions
Before the
press conference drew to a close without a single question from reporters,
Scholz brought up the escalating tension across the Taiwan Strait.
“Any change
to the status quo of Taiwan can only take place through mutual agreement and
peacefully,” he said, adding that he also raised the issue of the human rights
abuses against China’s Muslim minority in Xinjiang.
Scholz
alluded to Beijing’s economic coercion against Lithuania when the Baltic
country pursued closer ties with Taiwan, saying: “It is also important to be
clear: Economic measures against individual EU member states are directed
against the entire EU internal market, and sanctions against EU
parliamentarians are also unacceptable to us.”
While
Scholz didn’t play up the trade focus of his trip, his Chinese host made sure
to send a clear message to German businesses, which China considers to be a
major source of stability in otherwise shaky EU-China relations.
“We
continue to be prepared to assist Germany in accessing our market,” Premier Li
told reporters at the press conference, calling for a “sound and stable”
relationship with Germany. “We support a multipolar world, free trade, and want
to meet our partner on an equal footing.”

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