-
周波:乌克兰战争将加速地缘政治自西向东转移
Senior Colonel Zhou Bo says the war in Ukraine will accelerate the geopolitical shift from West to East
If the enemy of my enemy is my friend, is the enemy of my friend also my enemy? Not necessarily. Or so China’s thinking goes when it comes to the raging Russian-Ukranian war. On the one hand China is Russia’s strategic partner. On the other, China is the largest trading partner of Ukraine. Beijing therefore tries painstakingly to strike a balance in its responses to the war between two of its friends. It expresses understanding of Russia’s “legitimate concerns” over NATO’s expansion, while underlining that “the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all countries must be respected”.
Such carefully calibrated neutrality may not be what the warring parties really want, but it is acceptable to both. If China joins the West in condemning Russia, it will be much applauded in Washington and most European capitals. But it will lose Russia’s partnership. And it is only a matter of time before America takes on China again. The Biden administration’s policy towards my country is “extreme competition” that stops just short of war.
Obviously, the confict in Ukraine has done tremendous damage to Chinese interests, including its Belt and Road initiative in Europe. But Beijing sympathises with Moscow’s claim that the root cause of the confict is NATO’s inexorable expansion eastward after the fall of the Soviet Union. All Russian leaders since Mikhail Gorbachev have warned of the consequences of such expansion. Russia feels that it cannot allow its Ukrainian brethren to leave Russkiy mir—the Russian world—to join another camp. If NATO looks like Frankenstein’s monster to Russia, with new additions here and there, Vladimir Putin probably believes he must slay the creature.
The future of Europe is not hard to fathom. Mr Putin’s all-out war against Ukraine has failed. Precisely because of that, he will fight until he can declare some sort of “victory”. Presumably this will involve Ukraine’s acceptance that Crimea is part of Russia, its promise not to join NATO and the independence of the two “republics” of Donetsk and Luhansk. The challenge is whether Russian troops are able to control Donbas after occupying it.
A protracted war looks probable, if not inevitable. The situation bears similarities to the one in Afghanistan during Russia’s war there in the 1980s. An American-led alliance sent endless weapons to the mujahideen who managed to bog down and exhaust the invading Soviet soldiers.
Thanks to the crisis, a brain-dead NATO has revived. In February Germany’s chancellor, Olaf Scholz, created a special €100bn ($105bn) fund for defence and announced that his country would spend 2% of its GDP on defence every year—a NATO guideline. It will beef up the alliance and bolster the idea of European “strategic autonomy” (little more than a French slogan until now).
The irony is that the more popular NATO becomes, the more insecure Europe will be. If Finland joins NATO, as looks likely, the alliance’s troops would be a stone’s throw from St Petersburg. The Kremlin has warned that such a move would end the “non-nuclear status of the Baltic Sea”. This could be a bluff. But who knows? If NATO’s worst fear is that Russia might launch a tactical nuclear attack, then why keep poking Mr Putin in the eyes? Europe’s security, now as in the past, can only be achieved with Russia’s co-operation.
In recent months speculation abounded that Beijing and Moscow’s “unlimited” partnership—announced during Mr Putin’s visit to China in February for the Winter Olympics—might usher in a military alliance. But the war in Ukraine has inadvertently proved that Beijing and Moscow’s rapprochement is not an alliance. China didn’t provide military assistance to Russia. Instead it provided humanitarian aid and money to Ukraine twice, including food and sleeping bags, and has pledged to continue to “play a constructive role”.
One reason behind the Sino-Russian non-alliance is that it allows a comfortable flexibility between two partners. And in spite of the fact that China and Russia both call for a multipolar world, a non-alliance suits them because they see such a world differently. Mr Putin’s Russia is nostalgic for the heyday of the Soviet empire. (He lamented its demise as “the greatest geopolitical catastrophe” of the 20th century.) Russia sees itself as a victim of the existing international order. By contrast China is the largest beneficiary of the rules and regulations of global commerce and finance made by the West after the second world war. China has a huge stake in safeguarding the existing international order. This is why, despite ideological differences and even tensions sometimes, China has at least maintained robust economic ties with the West. Neither side wishes to sever them.
How America can focus simultaneously on two theatres—the Indo-Pacifc and war in Europe—remains to be seen. Joe Biden had hoped to put Russia policy on a “stable and predictable” footing in order to focus on America’s Indo-Pacifc strategy. The war in Ukraine undoubtedly will distract America’s attention and syphon away resources. It will further hollow out Mr Biden’s Indo-Pacifc strategy, which already has too many aims and too few tools and not enough supporters. The question is for how long Mr Biden will allow Ukraine to remain a distraction. In a region where China is the largest trading partner of most countries, even America’s greatest allies wouldn’t wish to sacrifice their relationship with China for the benefit of America.
Is the Russia-Ukraine war a turning point that heralds new global disorder? Rumor has it that when China’s Premier Zhou Enlai was asked what he thought of the French Revolution of 1789, he supposedly said that it was too early to tell. But perhaps it isn’t too early to say that the war in Ukraine will accelerate the geopolitical and economic shift from the West to the East. China standing in the centre matters all the more, and it should stand firm as a stabiliser.
(Senior Colonel Zhou Bo is a retired officer of the People’s Liberation Army and a senior fellow at the Centre for International Security and Strategy at Tsinghua University, Beijing and a China Forum expert.)
本文系观察者网独家稿件,文章内容纯属作者个人观点,不代表平台观点,未经授权,不得转载,否则将追究法律责任。关注观察者网微信guanchacn,每日阅读趣味文章。
- 原标题:周波:乌克兰战争将加速地缘政治自西向东转移 本文仅代表作者个人观点。
- 责任编辑: 李泠 
-
斯里兰卡:对打砸抢烧者“格杀勿论”
2022-05-11 08:24 -
阿根廷发生6.7级地震,震源深度200千米
2022-05-11 08:08 地震 -
普京为何说“先发制人反侵略”,下一步怎样打算?
2022-05-11 08:06 乌克兰之殇 -
中国裁军大使:超级大国应承诺不称霸外空
2022-05-11 07:59 中国外交 -
美国新增确诊154465例、死亡634例
2022-05-11 07:22 抗疫进行时 -
德国外长:乌克兰加入欧盟“没有捷径”
2022-05-11 07:07 乌克兰之殇 -
-
乌克兰首任总统克拉夫丘克去世
2022-05-11 06:52 -
欧盟高官:不会放弃“北爱尔兰议定书”
2022-05-11 06:50 -
不满OPEC拒绝增产,美国:立法起诉!
2022-05-10 22:47 -
立陶宛将俄列入“支恐国家”,俄议员警告
2022-05-10 22:41 乌克兰之殇 -
乌媒:乌克兰海军一副司令阵亡
2022-05-10 22:38 乌克兰之殇 -
1000响,为1000000人
2022-05-10 22:34 美国一梦 -
遭英媒匆忙打断,俄外交官:这就是驰名西方的“言论自由”
2022-05-10 22:00 乌克兰之殇 -
欧媒:中国一出手,孟加拉国全国通电
2022-05-10 21:56 -
他想另起炉灶:乌入欧要几十年,应建新欧洲政治共同体
2022-05-10 21:06 观察者头条 -
-
王岐山出席尹锡悦就职仪式,就中韩关系提5点建议
2022-05-10 19:05 中国外交 -
美国脱衣舞俱乐部招聘乌克兰舞娘,声称“和乌克兰站在一起”…
2022-05-10 18:05 乌克兰之殇 -
美媒:新冠死亡病例超百万,给数百万美国人生活带来永久性变化
2022-05-10 17:56 抗疫进行时
相关推荐 -
新一轮激烈互袭!伊朗:成功让以防空自己打自己 评论 20“以色列想杀死哈梅内伊,被特朗普否了” 评论 269来看卫星图,伊朗核设施受损有多大? 评论 118“美国是同谋!”,沙特打电话:以色列想拖美国下水 评论 213“以色列袭击伊朗将持续数周,美国默许了” 评论 186最新闻 Hot
-
新一轮激烈互袭!伊朗:成功让以防空自己打自己
-
“这是梦吗?”欧洲议员分享中国高铁之旅,外国网友惊了
-
哈萨克斯坦:计划将第二座核电站建设项目交由中方主导
-
“G7峰会,不与特朗普起冲突就算成功”
-
116年来首次,英军情六处迎来女间谍头子
-
登上格陵兰岛,马克龙蜜汁自信:美国不会的
-
“以色列袭击伊朗将持续数周,美国默许了”
-
特朗普警告伊朗:袭击与美无关,敢打美国就报复
-
内塔尼亚胡吓唬美国人
-
特朗普本人靠加密货币狂捞5770万美元
-
又一起!印度一直升机坠毁,机上7人全部遇难
-
英国向中东增派战机:为提供“应急支持”
-
李在明:将迅速恢复韩朝对话渠道,和平就是经济
-
全美数百万人涌上街头抗议,“白宫不要国王”
-
美明尼苏达两对州议员夫妇遭“假警察”入室枪击,2死2伤
-
以色列要求美国“参战”,但美国不太敢接茬…
-