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Is there anyway that someone can translate these 5 points that China have made into an easier way to understand what exactly it is that they are saying because unless I am just tired and my eyes aren’t working and my tired brain has slowed , it seems on the one hand that they support Russia but on the other are stating that peaceful negotiation is the way to move forward.
Please- anyone? I’m a tad confused
I think you need to be an expert in diplomatic speak to really understand it, and I am not.
- China "firmly advocates" abiding by the UN Charter and respecting the territorial integrity of all countries, including Ukraine.
- The security of one country cannot be strengthened at the expense of another, and Russia is justified to have concerns about five rounds of NATO expansion.
- China believes "all parties" should exercise restraint and protect civilian life and property to prevent a large-scale humanitarian crisis.
- China supports "direct dialogue and negotiation between Russia and Ukraine as soon as possible," and believes Ukraine "should be a bridge between East and West, not a frontier of great power confrontation."
- The UN Security Council should be used to "facilitate a diplomatic solution and "cool tensions rather than fuel them." China has always opposed UN resolutions that invoke Chapter VII of the UN Charter, which authorizes military and non-military steps to "restore international peace and security."
2. The Nato expansion around Russia concerns them. This could be related to US expansion in the South China Seas?
3. Seems to speak for itself.
4. This seems to correlate to the railroad passage from China, through Ukraine an to the West. I think they'd rather focus on peaceful trade than on war. War isn't good for general trade in goods from China to the West, which is China's income.
5. Hard to translate, but here China is being China...I honestly think that outside their own sphere of influence they prefer peaceful trade over war. However, they are also highly aware of some similarities between their sphere of influence and the way Russia sees its sphere of influence over the former Soviet Republics. They don't want to be called out by the UN for doing things that might be considered equivalent to things Russia does in its own sphere of influence. This could be things like Tibet, Taiwan, South China Seas, and the how do you spell 'Uigur' issues, which could in some ways be conflated to how Russia sees its Muslim populations in some of the former Soviet Republics like Chechnya.
They want to be allied to Russia, they don't want to come down hard on Russia. But they don't seem supportive of the invasion of Ukraine. I think they also have areas that border Russia, and they wouldn't want these conflicts in the nations that border them, so they can't be too supportive, yet they can't be too critical. That seems to be the line they are trying to walk.