logo
Xi hails ‘confident' China-Russia ties as Putin welcomes ‘dear friend' to Kremlin

Xi hails ‘confident' China-Russia ties as Putin welcomes ‘dear friend' to Kremlin

The Guardian08-05-2025

Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin exchanged warm words in the Kremlin on Thursday during a grand ceremony welcoming the Chinese leader for his 11th visit to Russia.
Xi said the Sino-Russian relationship was 'confident, stable and resilient' in the new era and that China was willing to work with Russia to promote a multipolar world.
Putin described his Chinese counterpart as a 'dear friend', while Xi described Putin as his 'old friend'.
Xi said: 'History and reality have fully proven that the continued development and deepening of China-Russia relations is a natural continuation of the longstanding friendship between our peoples.'
Xi is in Moscow for the 80th anniversary celebrations of the end of the second world war, which is commemorated in Russia as Victory Day on 9 May.
World leaders flying into Moscow for the event faced the threat of disruption from Ukrainian drone attacks, which forced most of the Russian capital's airports to close on Wednesday. The Serbian president Aleksandar Vučić's flight was rerouted.
Xi, whose plane was escorted by Russian fighter jets, was greeted on Wednesday by a military band playing the national anthems of Russia and China.
A three-day ceasefire declared by Russia to coincide with the celebrations appears to have held, with the Ukrainian air force saying no Russian missiles or drones had been detected in Ukrainian airspace as of 8am local time on Thursday.
Xi is expected to sign several cooperation agreements with Putin during his four-day visit, deepening China and Russia's already 'no limits' friendship.
In an article published in Russian media on Wednesday, Xi said China and Russia had fought side by side in the second world war. 'Today, 80 years later, unilateralism, hegemony and bullying are extremely harmful,' Xi wrote. 'We must learn from history … [and] resolutely oppose all forms of hegemony and power politics, and jointly create a better future for mankind.'
On Thursday he said the world was facing 'unilateralism and acts of hegemonic bullying in the international arena', a veiled reference to the US-China trade war, in which China has accused the US of coercive behaviour.
Hopes in some Washington circles that the Trump administration might have been able to perform a 'reverse Nixon' and persuade Russia to decouple with China by bolstering the US-Russia relationship appear to have failed as Xi and Putin declare their countries to be closer than ever before.
China has been an economic lifeline to Russia during the war in Ukraine, and in recent weeks Kyiv has been increasingly outspoken about what it says is China's direct aiding of Moscow's war effort.
The comments from Xi and Putin came a few hours after Lai Ching-te, the president of Taiwan, gave a punchy speech in Taipei calling on European leaders to stand with Taiwan in the face of 'a new totalitarian group', a veiled reference to China and its allies. Lai compared Taiwan's current predicament to that of European countries before the start of the second world war.
Xi has used this visit to underscore Russia's support for China's claims on Taiwan. 'Russia has repeatedly reiterated that it adheres to the one-China principle, that Taiwan is an inalienable part of China's territory, opposes any form of 'Taiwan independence', and firmly supports all measures taken by the Chinese government and people to achieve national reunification,' Xi wrote on Wednesday.
Western leaders are increasingly worried that China could launch some form of assault on Taiwan in the next few years, with the war in Ukraine providing a blueprint for how such an attack might play out on the world stage.
Additional research by Lillian Yang

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Russian attacks kill one in eastern Ukraine, one in the north
Russian attacks kill one in eastern Ukraine, one in the north

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Russian attacks kill one in eastern Ukraine, one in the north

June 22 (Reuters) - Russian strikes on Saturday on key towns in Donetsk region on the eastern front of the war in Ukraine killed at least one person while another died in a drone attack in the north near the Russian border, officials said. The Russian military said its forces had captured another village in its slow advance westward through Donetsk region. And reports from Kharkiv region in the northeast suggested Russian troops were closing in on the city of Kupiansk. Russian forces struck Sloviansk and Kramatorsk -- two cities that Moscow will target as its forces press on with their westward drive. Both towns have come under frequent attack since the Russian invasion of its neighbour in February 2022. Donetsk region Governor Vadym Filashkin said one person died and three were injured in Sloviansk, with pictures posted online showing buildings reduced to rubble. He said four multi-storey dwellings and 32 private homes had suffered damage. In Kramatorsk, pictures posted by the city council showed heavy damage to part of an apartment building. Officials said at least one person was trapped under rubble and a number of other residents were injured. A mass drone attack on the town of Nizhyn near the Russian border killed one person and damaged local infrastructure. The Russian Defence Ministry said its forces had seized the village of Zaporizhzhia, southwest of Pokrovsk, where Ukrainian forces have been holding back Russian attacks for months. Zaporizhzhia village is distinct from the Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia, the regional centre and large industrial hub located some 160 km (90 miles) to the southeast. The General Staff of Ukraine's armed forces on Friday listed the village as one of several where Kyiv's forces had repelled Russian attacks. On Friday, the Russian Defence Ministry said it had captured the village of Moskovka, just outside the city of Kupiansk, also the target of repeated Russian attacks in recent months. Both Russian and Ukrainian military bloggers have reported an upswing in fighting around Kupiansk this past week. The town was first occupied by Russian forces in the first weeks of the 2022 invasion, but recaptured by Ukrainian troops later in the year in a lightning counter-offensive.

It's time to ditch ruinous green delusions, cut bloated welfare and start taking Britain's defence seriously
It's time to ditch ruinous green delusions, cut bloated welfare and start taking Britain's defence seriously

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

It's time to ditch ruinous green delusions, cut bloated welfare and start taking Britain's defence seriously

UK needs to spend more on defence BRITAIN'S defence spending falls way short of what is demanded by the hostile advances of our enemies. On UK streets we've seen outrageous murders, poisonings and spying by Russia and China's brazen henchmen. Moscow fires chilling threats of retaliation at us on a regular basis over our support for Ukraine. The escalation of conflict in the Middle East has put our forces on high alert. Yesterday, a terror suspect believed to be spying for Iran was arrested at a key UK airbase in Cyprus. Meanwhile, security at RAF Brize Norton was exposed as a farce by Palestinian fanatics on Friday. In this climate the Government's commitment to hike our defence spending from 2.3 to 2.6 per cent of GDP by 2027 is not enough — not by a long chalk. As President Trump has pointed out, this level of investment is a relic of a past era. Even Germany forks out more than us in cash terms. This week's NATO summit will see Britain pressing to ratchet up our spending to a more realistic five per cent. But even if that is agreed, it will not kick in until the 2030s and some of the cash will go on security infrastructure. To meet the threats facing the UK now, Sir Keir Starmer must tear up our ruinous net zero ambitions and ballooning welfare budget. Missiles streak into downtown Israeli city as Iran breaches Iron Dome defences Then plough more of those funds into defence of the realm. In an increasingly dangerous world, we cannot afford to wait another ten years. 1 Grooming injustice WHAT insanity that convicted rapists can seek parental rights over kids born as a result of their evil acts. Rotherham grooming gang survivor Sammy Woodhouse is rightly campaigning for an end to this appalling injustice. Sammy, who gave birth aged just 15 after suffering horrific abuse, was told her attacker could apply from jail for contact with her child because of his rights to a family life. As she said, it was 'another nightmare I had to live through.' MP and fellow rape victim Natalie Fleet is also attempting to amend legislation to ban fathers from gaining parental responsibility over kids conceived during rape. She says: 'It's shocking that children are the only proceed of crime that a criminal can have lifelong access to.' This disgraceful legal loophole must be closed immediately.

Russia hands its own dead soldiers to Ukraine in sick move during body swap as Vlad's best pal frees prisoners for Trump
Russia hands its own dead soldiers to Ukraine in sick move during body swap as Vlad's best pal frees prisoners for Trump

The Sun

time2 hours ago

  • The Sun

Russia hands its own dead soldiers to Ukraine in sick move during body swap as Vlad's best pal frees prisoners for Trump

RUSSIA handed over 20 bodies it claimed were Ukrainian defenders - but they were actually its own dead troops, says Zelensky. It comes as Russian ally Belarus freed its top jailed opposition leader and other political prisoners - after Trump's envoy met the ex-Soviet state's iron-fisted leader. 7 7 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky revealed Russia's grim body-swap blunder on Saturday, as reported by Ukrainska Pravda. He said: "They (Russia) told us these were only Ukrainians and only service members. "But that's a lie, now documented. In some cases, these bodies even have Russian passports on them. "They can't even check who they're sending. We certainly want all of our warriors and the bodies of our heroes back. "But we definitely do not want Russians being handed over simply for the sake of quantity." Russia and Ukraine exchanged at least 1,200 prisoners of war over a week ago after the second round of direct talks in Istanbul. Meanwhile, Sergei Tikhanovsky, a prominent Belarusian opposition leader, was freed from jail along with 13 other political prisoners on Saturday. His release came after US special envoy Keith Kellogg met with Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko in the country's capital, Minsk. Svetlana Tikhanovskaya - Tikhanovsky's wife and also a Belarusian opposition politician - publicly thanked Donald Trump, Kellogg and "all European allies" for securing her husband's release. Lukashenko's press secretary said the prisoners were freed at Trump's request. Vladimir Putin rages 'all of Ukraine is ours' as he threatens to seize key city while Kyiv slams tyrant as 'deranged' Tikhanovskaya wrote on X: "My husband … is free! It's hard to describe the joy in my heart." She added: "We're not done. 1150 political prisoners remain behind bars. All must be released." Five Belarusian nationals, along with Japanese, Polish and Swedish citizens, were also released, according to Tikhanovskaya's office. The Lithuanian foreign minister said on X that the 14 political prisoners were receiving care in Lithuania. Tikhanovsky was jailed for 18 years in 2021. 7 7 7 His wife ran in his place and claimed victory - but fled into exile with their kids the day after. Many Belarusians believe the 2020 election was rigged by Lukashenko's regime to keep him in power - a position he's held since 1994. Hundreds of thousands of Belarusians have fled their homeland since the brutal crackdown on opposition protests in 2020. Belarus has faced heavy Western sanctions for its brutal crackdown and backing Russia's war - including allowing Russian troops to use its land and hosting tactical nukes. Tens of thousands have been arrested in Belarus for political reasons over the past five years, says rights group Viasna. It comes as Vladimir Putin and Alexander Lukashenko signed a security agreement in December, finalising the deployment of Russian tactical nuclear arms in Belarus. The signing followed an amendment in Russia's nuclear doctrine, which for the first time placed Belarus under the Russian nuclear umbrella. It effectively gives Lukashenko control over the potential use of Russian tactical nuclear weapons deployed to Belarus in response to aggression. Putin said in a televised remark: "I'm sure that the treaty will ensure the security of Russia and Belarus." After the two leaders signed the pact, Lukashenko asked Putin to deploy the Oreshnik intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM) that Russia used for the first time last month against Ukraine. 7

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store