"The previously unreported shipments
between a state-owned Chinese company and a Russian munitions factory last year
raise new questions about Beijing’s role in Ukraine.
On two separate occasions last
year, railroad cars carrying tens of thousands of kilograms of smokeless powder
— enough propellant to collectively make at least 80 million rounds
of ammunition — rumbled across the China-Russia border at the remote town
of Zabaykalsk.
The powder had been shipped by Poly
Technologies, a state-owned Chinese company on which the United States had previously imposed
sanctions for
its global sales of missile technology and providing support to Iran. Its
destination was Barnaul Cartridge Plant, an ammunition factory in central
Russia with a history of supplying the Russian government.
These previously unreported
shipments, which were identified by Import Genius, a
U.S.-based trade data aggregator, raise new questions about the role China has
played in supporting Russia. U.S. officials have expressed concerns that China
could funnel products to Russia that would help it — what is known as “lethal
aid” — though they have not said outright that China has made such shipments.
Speaking from Beijing on Monday,
Antony J. Blinken, the U.S. secretary of state, said China had assured the
United States that it was not providing lethal assistance to Russia for use in
Ukraine, and that the U.S. government had “not seen anything right now to
contradict that.”
“But what we are concerned about is
private companies in China that may be providing assistance,” Mr. Blinken said.
Some experts said the shipments Poly
Technologies had made to Barnaul Cartridge Plant since the start of the
conflict, which totaled nearly $2 million, according to customs records,
constituted such lethal assistance. According to the customs records, Poly
Technologies intended its shipments to be used in the kinds of ammunition fired
by Russian Kalashnikov assault rifles and sniper rifles.
William George, the director of
research at Import Genius, said that Poly Technologies “may be toeing the line
on exactly what constitutes lethal aid to Russia,” but that the implications of
the shipments were clear.
“When shipping large quantities of
gunpowder intended for the creation of military cartridges, it’s unreasonable
to imagine that the finished product won’t be used to lethal effect on the
battlefield,” Mr. George said.
“It is lethal support,” said
Alexander Gabuev, director of the Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center. “The question
is, how impactful and large scale is that?”
Mr. Gabuev said that China had
generally refrained from any actions that would “in a visible, forceful way”
cross red lines the U.S. government had detailed about what would constitute a
violation of Western sanctions. Since Poly Technologies has a history of
shipments to the Barnaul plant before the events though, China might see
those shipments as part of regular trade flows.
“By and large, China tries to stick
to those red lines,” he said. “Having said that, we see that there are some
contracts and transactions going on.”
Poly Technologies is a subsidiary of
China Poly Group Corporation, which is owned by the Chinese government.
Previous reports by The Wall Street Journal
and CNN documented
shipments of navigation equipment and helicopter parts from Poly Technologies
to Russian state-backed firms.
Barnaul Cartridge Plant, the
recipient of the powder shipments, is privately owned. But Russian procurement
records provided to The New York Times by C4ADS, a Washington, D.C.-based
global security nonprofit, show the company had numerous contracts with
divisions of the Russian government and military over the past decade,
including the Russian Ministry of Defense.
Barnaul Cartridge Plant was added to a list of companies
sanctioned by the European Union in December. Open source information suggests
the plant may have served as a training camp linked with the Wagner Group, a private Russian military force
with ties to President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia.
There is no known direct link
between these particular shipments of smokeless powder and Ukraine, and in
customs paperwork Poly Technologies described the powder as being “for assembly
of foreign-style hunting cartridges.”
But Brian Carlson, a China-Russia
expert and the head of the global security team of the think tank at the Center
for Security Studies, said that while such cartridges could be used for
hunting, this was rare. “These are military cartridges,” he said.
Most modern firearms and other weapons
used by soldiers and civilians alike rely on smokeless powder to propel a
bullet to its target. When the trigger is pulled, a firing pin strikes the rear
of the ammunition cartridge, igniting the powder, which burns extremely fast
and forces the bullet down the barrel of a firearm.
This kind of powder is also used by
militaries as the propellant for mortar ammunition, launching explosive-laden
projectiles weighing from four pounds to 30 pounds or more.
Poly Technologies and Barnaul
Cartridge Plant did not respond to requests for comment.
The events in Ukraine, now in 17th
month, has intensified in recent weeks.
The ability of both militaries to obtain munitions and equipment has become a
crucial factor that could influence the conflict’s outcome.
Western countries clamped down on
their trade with Russia following the events, to try to starve the country of
military goods as well as supplies that feed their economy and help the
government generate revenue.
But countries like China, India, the United Arab Emirates,
Kyrgyzstan and Turkey stepped in to provide Russia with goods ranging from
mundane products like smartphones and cars to aircraft parts and ammunition.
Both state-owned and private Chinese companies have sold
Russia products that could plausibly be used by either civilians or the
military — including drones, semiconductors, hunting rifles, navigation equipment
and airplane parts.
China has remained officially
unaligned in the conflict. Officials there argue Beijing is a neutral party
and a peacemaker. In practice, however, China has become an important
diplomatic, economic and security partner for Russia, after proclaiming a “no
limits” partnership early last year.
In a speech in April in Washington,
Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen called that partnership a “worrisome
indication” that China is not serious about ending the conflict. And she warned
that the consequences for China of providing Russia with material support or
assisting in evading sanctions “would be severe.”
In recent months, U.S. officials
have also privately reached out directly to Chinese financial institutions to
discuss the risks of facilitating the evasion or circumvention of sanctions and
export controls.
Chinese companies “have a choice to
make,” Wally Adeyemo, the deputy Treasury secretary, said in an interview on Fox Business TV
earlier this month. “They can provide Russia with material support for their
military and continue to do business with an economy that represents maybe $1.5
trillion and is getting smaller, or you can continue to do business with the
rest of the world.”
Poly Technologies is one of China’s
largest arms exporters. It produces equipment for police and military forces,
including weapons, personal protective gear, explosives and missile systems. It
attracted censure in past decades for shipping small arms to Zimbabwe. In the last few
years, it has sent weapons shipments to Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Nigeria,
according to records accessed through Sayari Graph, a mapping tool for
corporate ownership and commercial relationships.
Poly Technologies’ parent company
has dozens of subsidiaries engaged in industries like real estate and film
production, including operating one of the world’s largest
auction houses.
Barnaul products have been common on
American shelves in recent years, including ammunition for military-style
rifles, hunting rifles and American handguns. The goods came to America through
several importers, including MKS Supply, LLC, a wholesale ammunition
distributor in Dayton, Ohio.
According to an MKS Supply official,
the company stopped working with Barnaul Cartridge Plant early last year
following a U.S. government ban on imports of Russian ammunition."
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