Katsuji Nakazawa is a Tokyo-based senior staff and editorial writer at Nikkei. He spent seven years in China as a correspondent and later as China bureau chief. He was the 2014 recipient of the Vaughn-Ueda International Journalist prize.
During a meeting in Moscow back in March, Russian President Vladimir Putin told his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping that Russia “will fight for [at least] five years” in Ukraine, sources have revealed.
This was apparently Putin’s way of summarizing a situation that at the time was not favorable to Russia and assuring Xi that Russia would emerge victorious in the end.The likely implication was that a protracted war would favor China’s well-armed partner.
Taken another way, the remark was also a warning to Xi not to change his pro-Russia stance.
The trip was Xi’s first to Russia after Moscow launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. It was also the first time Xi visited a leading nation after China lifted its strict zero-COIVD policy.
Whether Xi was convinced, Putin’s remark at the summit holds the key to understanding a series of mysterious developments in Russia-China relations, from a Chinese peace mission to Europe in May to China sacking its foreign minister months later.
Am I understanding the article correctly (especially italics) when I say the following?:
- Putin & Xi agree to be bff
- Putin between Olympics and Paraolympics invades Ukraine without telling him. Xi knew he was up to something, but didn’t know the timing or severity.
- Putin fails at getting it over with quickly like he had planned. He bragged that it would take 3 days.
- Ukraine gets international support and good will while taking back some areas.
- Putin’s hired assassin’s leader betrayed him and tried a coup.
- Putin says he’ll last through 5 years of fighting though.
- Putin keeps trying to get Ukraine to do a cease fire as long as he keeps Crimea. Ukraine doesn’t believe that he’ll cease fire or stop at Crimea
- China doesn’t believe he’ll last that long so they’re trying to make peace with all sides.
- China now thinks the Ukraine thing is interfering with him invading Taiwan.
- Everyone doesn’t know how to react with their weapons because it’s taking so long.
Actually… pretty much, yeah.