This
is important news. The combined Chinese and Russian production ability
is considerable. It might be difficult for the West to compete with. The practical conclusion: Stop shooting those stupid balloons. Start looking for a diplomatic solution.
"The secretary of state said that if Beijing supplied Moscow
with “lethal aid,” it would further damage a U.S.-China relationship already
troubled since the spy balloon incident.
Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken said the United States
believed China was considering supplying weapons and other lethal aid to Russia
and that he had warned Beijing that doing so “would cause a serious problem”
for already strained relations with Washington.
The Biden administration has repeatedly warned Russia’s
allies against providing military support for Moscow. While the United States
has so far only seen Beijing supply nonmilitary aid to Russia, “the concern
that we have now is, based on information we have, that they’re considering
providing lethal support,” Mr. Blinken told CBS News’ “Face the Nation” in an
interview airing on Sunday.
Mr. Blinken did not elaborate on what the United States
believed China might supply, but said that it could include weapons and
ammunition. The comments underscored concerns in the Biden administration that
Moscow, heavily isolated by Western sanctions, was increasingly turning to
allies, including China, Iran and North Korea, for military supplies.
On Saturday, Mr. Blinken met with his Chinese counterpart,
Wang Yi, at an annual security conference in Munich, the first high-level
diplomatic exchange between the two sides since a Chinese spy balloon was found
flying over the United States, causing a crisis in bilateral relations. A
detailed readout of the meeting published by the Chinese state news agency
Xinhua did not mention Russia or Ukraine.
But what American officials described as a testy encounter
between the two diplomats highlighted how Russia has become the latest point of
friction between the United States and China. And it came at a Munich
conference that was dominated by Russia’s problem, with Western officials
doubling down on their resolve to support Kyiv as Russia tries to step up a new
offensive in eastern Ukraine.
The European Union’s top diplomat said on Sunday that
Western nations must quickly increase their military support for Ukraine,
rebuking the delays in providing weapons.
The diplomat, Josep Borrell Fontelles, the E.U.’s foreign
policy chief, told the gathering in Munich that praise and promises for
President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine were not enough. “There needs to be
less applause and better supply with arms,” Mr. Borrell said, adding that “much
more has to be done, and much quicker.”
Amid concerns over whether Western unity can endure as the
problem drags on, the United States and its European partners at the gathering
sought to project resolve, largely repeating pledges to support Ukraine for as
long as it takes. Mr. Blinken said he was “motivated by the accomplishments”
allies have made in support of Ukraine, writing on Twitter on Sunday: “We will
remain unified and see victory for Ukrainians fighting for their country’s
fate.”
President Biden is scheduled to travel to Ukraine’s
neighbor, Poland, to deliver a speech on Tuesday. President Vladimir V. Putin
of Russia is expected to deliver a speech on the same day.
With Russia trying to escalate an offensive in eastern
Ukraine, Kyiv’s allies have been working to come up with ways to provide
additional military support. After lengthy discussions, allies recently pledged
to begin sending battle tanks to Ukraine, a decision that Mr. Borrell said had
taken too much time.
Mr. Zelensky, in an opening address to the conference on
Friday, warned his allies against “fatigue” and emphasized that speed was
critical if his country were to hold off a renewed Russian onslaught. In an
address late Saturday, Mr. Zelensky said that he was “grateful” for the
“important statements” of support from Western officials in Munich.
Russia responded sharply to Vice President Kamala Harris,
who told the conference on Saturday that the United States had determined that
Moscow had committed “crimes against humanity” in Ukraine and pledged to hold
accountable “all those who have perpetrated these crimes,” as well as their
superiors.
In a statement later Saturday, Anatoly Antonov, Russia’s
ambassador to Washington, dismissed the comments “as an attempt, unprecedented
in terms of its cynicism, to demonize Russia.”
Experts warn that any legal process to investigate and prosecute
crimes against humanity would be long and tedious, with arrests or convictions
far from assured. And while Mr. Zelensky’s allies have supplied Ukraine with
ever more powerful weapons, it is not clear that his latest pleas — including
for fighter jets and long-range missiles — will be met by Western leaders wary
of provoking Russia.
China, Russia’s most influential partner, delivered a
typically calibrated message at the conference. Mr. Wang, China’s top diplomat,
told the gathering that “nuclear wars must not be fought,” a potential signal
to Moscow that China will not tolerate the use of nuclear weapons in Ukraine,
as Russian officials have at times threatened.
At the same time, Mr. Wang sought to deflect blame away from
Russia, arguing that “some forces might not want to see peace talks” and “might
have strategic goals larger than Ukraine itself.” That language echoed Kremlin
claims, rejected by the West, that Moscow was willing to engage in good-faith
peace talks and that NATO aimed to subjugate Russia.
Ukrainian officials have been warning of a potential Russian
escalation and heavy fighting was reported Sunday around the city of Kreminna,
a small but vital pocket of land in the Donbas region.
Serhiy Haidai, the head of the regional military administration,
called the situation around Kreminna “difficult” and said shelling was
constant. “Russians are trying to find a spot to penetrate our defenses,” he
told Ukrainian television.”
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