"Americans presented Chinese
officials with intelligence on Russia’s troop buildup in hopes that President
Xi Jinping would step in, but were repeatedly rebuffed.
WASHINGTON — Over three months,
senior Biden administration officials held half a dozen urgent meetings with
top Chinese officials in which the Americans presented intelligence showing
Russia’s troop buildup around Ukraine and
beseeched the Chinese to tell Russia not to invade, according to U.S.
officials.
Each time, the Chinese officials, including the foreign
minister and the ambassador to the United States, rebuffed the Americans,
saying they did not think an invasion was in the works. After one diplomatic
exchange in December, U.S. officials got intelligence showing Beijing had
shared the information with Moscow, telling the Russians that the United States
was trying to sow discord — and that China would not try to impede Russian
plans and actions, the officials said.
The previously unreported talks
between American and Chinese officials show how the Biden administration tried
to use intelligence findings and diplomacy to persuade a superpower it views as
a growing adversary to stop the invasion of Ukraine, and how that nation, led
by President Xi Jinping, persistently sided with Russia
even as the evidence of Moscow’s plans for a military offensive grew over the
winter.
This account is based on interviews
with senior administration officials with knowledge of the conversations who
spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of the
diplomacy. The Chinese Embassy did not return requests for comment.
China is Russia’s most powerful
partner, and the two nations have been strengthening their bond for many
years across diplomatic, economic and military realms. Mr. Xi and President
Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, two autocrats with some shared ideas about global
power, had met 37 times as
national leaders before this year. If any world leader could make Mr. Putin
think twice about invading Ukraine, it was Mr. Xi, went the thinking of some
U.S. officials.
But the diplomatic efforts failed,
and Mr. Putin began a full-scale invasion of Ukraine on Thursday morning after
recognizing two Russia-backed insurgent enclaves in the country’s east as
independent states.
Some American officials say the ties
between China and Russia appear stronger than at any time since the Cold War.
The two now present themselves as an ideological front against the United
States and its European and Asian allies, even as Mr. Putin carries out the
invasion of Ukraine, whose sovereignty China has recognized for decades.
The growing alarm among American and European officials at
the alignment between China and Russia has reached a new peak with the Ukraine
crisis, exactly 50 years to the week after President Richard M. Nixon made a historic trip to China
to restart diplomatic relations to make common cause in counterbalancing the
Soviet Union. For 40 years after that, the relationship between the United
States and China grew stronger, especially as lucrative trade ties developed,
but then frayed due to mutual suspicions, intensifying strategic competition
and antithetical ideas about power and governance.
In the recent private talks on
Ukraine, American officials heard language from their Chinese counterparts that
was consistent with harder lines the Chinese had been voicing in public, which
showed that a more hostile attitude had become entrenched, according to the
American accounts.
On Wednesday, after Mr. Putin
ordered troops into eastern Ukraine but before its full invasion, Hua Chunying,
a Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, said at a news conference
in Beijing that the United States was “the culprit of current tensions
surrounding Ukraine.”
“On the Ukraine issue, lately the U.S. has
been sending weapons to Ukraine, heightening tensions, creating panic and even
hyping up the possibility of warfare,” she said. “If someone keeps pouring oil
on the flame while accusing others of not doing their best to put out the fire,
such kind of behavior is clearly irresponsible and immoral.”
She added: “When the U.S. drove five
waves of NATO expansion eastward all the way to Russia’s doorstep and deployed
advanced offensive strategic weapons in breach of its assurances to Russia, did
it ever think about the consequences of pushing a big country to the wall?” She
has refused to call Russia’s assault an “invasion” when pressed by foreign
journalists.
Ms. Hua’s fiery anti-American
remarks as Russia was moving to attack its neighbor stunned some current and
former U.S. officials and China analysts in the United States. But the verbal
grenades echo major points in the 5,000-word joint statement that China and
Russia issued on Feb. 4 when Mr. Xi and Mr. Putin met at
the opening ceremony of the Winter Olympic Games in Beijing. In that document,
the two countries declared their partnership had “no limits” and that they
intended to stand together against American-led democratic nations. China also
explicitly sided with Russia in the text to denounce enlargement of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization.
Last Saturday, Wang Yi, the Chinese
foreign minister, criticized NATO in a video talk at the Munich Security
Conference. European leaders in turn accused China of working with Russia to
overturn what they and the Americans say is a “rules-based international
order.” Mr. Wang did say that Ukraine’s sovereignty should be “respected and
safeguarded” — a reference to a foreign policy principle that Beijing often
cites — but no Chinese officials have mentioned Ukraine in those terms since
Russia’s full invasion began.
“They claim neutrality, they claim
they stand on principle, but everything they say about the causes is anti-U.S.,
blaming NATO and adopting the Russian line,” said Evan Medeiros, a Georgetown
University professor who was senior Asia director at the White House National
Security Council in the Obama administration. “The question is: How sustainable
is that as a posture? How much damage does it do to their ties with the U.S.
and their ties with Europe?”
The Biden administration’s
diplomatic outreach to China to try to avert war began after President Biden and Mr. Xi held a video summit on Nov. 15. In the
talk, the two leaders acknowledged challenges in the relationship between their
nations, which is at its lowest point in decades, but agreed to try to cooperate
on issues of common interest, including health security, climate change and
nuclear weapons proliferation, White House officials said at the time.
After the meeting, American
officials decided that the Russian troop buildup around Ukraine presented the
most immediate problem that China and the United States could try to defuse
together. Some officials thought the outcome of the video summit indicated
there was potential for an improvement in U.S.-China relations. Others were
more skeptical, but thought it was important to leave no stone unturned in efforts
to prevent Russia from attacking, one official said.
Days later, White House officials
met with the ambassador, Qin Gang, at the Chinese Embassy. They told the
ambassador what U.S. intelligence agencies had detected: a gradual encirclement
of Ukraine by Russian forces, including armored units. William J. Burns, the
C.I.A. director, had flown to Moscow on Nov. 2 to confront the Russians with
the same information, and on Nov. 17, American intelligence officials shared their findings with NATO.
At the Chinese Embassy, Russia’s aggression
was the first topic in a discussion that ran more than one and a half hours. In
addition to laying out the intelligence, the White House officials told the
ambassador that the United States would impose tough sanctions on Russian
companies, officials and businesspeople in the event of an invasion, going far
beyond those announced by the Obama administration after Russia seized
Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula in 2014.
The U.S. officials said the
sanctions would also hurt China over time because of its commercial ties.
They also pointed out they knew how
China had helped Russia evade some of the 2014 sanctions, and warned Beijing
against any such future aid. And they argued that because China was widely seen
as a partner of Russia, its global image could suffer if Mr. Putin invaded.
The message was clear: It would be
in China’s interests to persuade Mr. Putin to stand down. But their entreaties
went nowhere. Mr. Qin was skeptical and suspicious, an American official said.
American officials spoke with the
ambassador about Russia at least three more times, both in the embassy and on
the phone. Wendy R. Sherman, the deputy secretary of state, had a call with
him.
Mr. Qin continued to express skepticism and said Russia had
legitimate security concerns in Europe.
The Americans also went higher on
the diplomatic ladder: Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken spoke to Mr. Wang
about the problem in late January and again on Monday, the same day Mr. Putin
ordered the new troops into Russia-backed enclaves of Ukraine.
“The secretary underscored the need
to preserve Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity,” said a State
Department summary of the call that used the phrase that Chinese diplomats like
to employ in signaling to other nations not to get involved in matters
involving Taiwan, Tibet, Xinjiang and Hong Kong, all considered separatist
problems by Beijing.
American officials met with Mr. Qin
in Washington again on Wednesday and heard the same rebuttals. Hours later, Mr.
Putin declared war on Ukraine on television, and his military began pummeling
the country with ballistic missiles as tanks rolled across the border."
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