China says NATO poses ‘enormous danger’ after alliance labels it an ‘enabler’ of Russia’s war

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China on Thursday came out swinging at NATO, accusing it of posing an "enormous danger to the world" after the alliance labeled Beijing a "decisive enabler" of Russia’s war in Ukraine.

The communiqué, approved by all 32 NATO member nations and released Wednesday, was the most strongly worded stance the alliance has taken against Beijing and its position backing Russia since the war began more than two years ago.

But Beijing did not take lightly being listed in the NATO document as a "large-scale support[er] for Russia’s defense industrial base."

Biden NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg
President Biden, left, and NATO Secretary Jens Stoltenberg participate in a meeting of the heads of state of the North Atlantic Council at the 2024 NATO Summit July 10, 2024, in Washington, D.C.

"Wherever NATO shows up, turmoil and chaos will follow," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said in a briefing Thursday. "NATO’s so-called security is more often than not built on others’ insecurity, and a lot of its security anxieties are self-made.

"The ‘success’ and ‘strength’ boasted by NATO means enormous danger to the world," he added, further accusing the alliance of creating "imaginary enemies."

Words like scaremongering, belligerent, bias and provocative were also used by the spokesperson to describe the NATO communiqué.

China broke with the U.S. and Europe during that onslaught of the war when it refused to condemn Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, and it has since backed Moscow by helping to offset Western sanctions through trade.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has also met with Russian President Vladimir Putin several times since the war broke out to solidify their partnership against the West.

NATO listed China’s "no-limits partnership" with Russia as fueling Putin’s war efforts through "material and political support."

Xi, Putin

"This includes the transfer of dual-use materials, such as weapons components, equipment, and raw materials that serve as inputs for Russia’s defense sector," the NATO communiqué said.  "The [People’s Republic of China] PRC cannot enable the largest war in Europe in recent history without this negatively impacting its interests and reputation."

The Chinese spokesperson in turn accused NATO of "fueling the flames" of war by aiding Ukraine and accused the alliance of disrupting "peace and stability" in not only Europe but in Asia by collaborating with the U.S. on its Indo-Pacific policies. 

Leaders from Australia, New Zealand, Japan and South Korea all traveled to Washington, D.C., for the NATO summit to collaborate on security concerns outside of Europe, particularly in the Indo-Pacific region, as relations with China escalate.

Despite China’s claims that NATO is attempting to "vilify China’s domestic and foreign policies," Beijing on Tuesday launched military drills on the border of Poland with Belarus, which was used as a launch pad for the invasion of Ukraine and which has remained an ardent supporter of Russia.

Belarus and China hold joint drills
Service members take part in joint military exercises of the armies of Belarus and China at an undisclosed location in Belarus in this handout picture released July 9, 2024.

The Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson claimed the exercises were "normal" military activities that do "not target any particular country."

Though, the chief of the Belarusian special operations command, Major General Vadim Denisenko, said that "events taking place in the world are alarming" and called the security situation "uneasy."

"Therefore, we are going to practice new forms and methods of performing tactical tasks," he added

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NATO allies call China a ‘decisive enabler’ of Russia in Ukraine war as bloc eyes Asia security threats

China is a “decisive enabler” of Russia’s war against Ukraine, NATO leaders said Wednesday, as the defense alliance hardens its stance on Beijing and the “systemic challenges” they say it poses to their countries’ security.

The joint declaration marks NATO’s most pointed tone yet on China’s role in a war that has galvanized the 75-year-old bloc, which celebrated its anniversary this week at a three-day leaders’ summit in Washington hosted by US President Joe Biden.

China’s “no limits” partnership with Russia and its “large-scale support for Russia’s defense industrial base” are enabling Moscow to wage its war, the NATO leaders’ statement said, as they urged Beijing to “cease all material and political support to Russia’s war effort.”

The US and European leaders in recent months have accused China of bolstering Russia’s defense sector with the export of dual-use goods. Beijing has denied supplying weaponry and maintains it keeps strict controls on such goods.

The NATO leaders also elaborated to a greater extent than in the past on concerns over China’s growing capabilities and activities in outer space, and reiterated their previous unease about what they called Beijing’s “malicious cyber and hybrid activities,” including disinformation, and “rapidly” expanding nuclear arsenal.

“We remain open to constructive engagement with the PRC, including to build reciprocal transparency with the view of safeguarding the Alliance’s security interests,” the statement said, referring to China by the initials of its official name.

“At the same time, we are boosting our shared awareness, enhancing our resilience and preparedness, and protecting against the PRC’s coercive tactics and efforts to divide the Alliance.”

The NATO leaders’ declaration Wednesday comes as the 32-member alliance - historically focused on security in North America and Europe - has in recent years upped its engagement with US allies in Asia and increasingly seen its security as linked to the region, even as member countries have pursued divergent policies toward China.

For the third consecutive year, leaders of New Zealand, Japan and South Korea attended the NATO leaders’ summit in another sign of closer ties between the bloc and those countries, as well as Australia.

Chinese leader Xi Jinping welcomes Russian President Vladimir Putin for a state visit to China on May 16, 2024. - Sergei Bobylov/Pool/AFP/Getty Images
Chinese leader Xi Jinping welcomes Russian President Vladimir Putin for a state visit to China on May 16, 2024. - Sergei Bobylov/Pool/AFP/Getty Images

China and Russia’s tightening ties

Beijing has deepened political, economic and military ties with Moscow since President Vladimir Putin and Chinese leader Xi Jinping in February 2022 declared a “no limits” partnership – and their shared opposition to what they said was NATO’s expansion – during the Russian leader’s visit to the Chinese capital, weeks before his full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

China has surpassed the European Union to become Russia’s top trade partner, offering a crucial lifeline to its economy, which has been heavily sanctioned in the wake of that invasion, while the two nuclear-armed neighbors have continued to hold joint military exercises.

Meanwhile, China has claimed neutrality in the war and sought to posit itself as a potential peace broker, even as the US and European leaders have become increasingly alarmed about what they say is Beijing’s backing of Moscow through its economic and diplomatic support, as well as the provision of dual-use goods.

On Thursday, China criticized the NATO statement as “filled with Cold War mentality and belligerent rhetoric,” and said it was “provocative with obvious lies and smears.”

“China is not the creator to the Ukraine crisis. China’s position on Ukraine is open and aboveboard. We aim to promote peace talks and seek political settlement,” a statement from its mission to the European Union said.

The Chinese statement also reiterated Beijing’s position that it has never provided lethal weapons in the conflict and has strict dual-use export controls, defending its trade with Russia as “normal.”

The US and European leaders have in recent months raised alarm that such exports are revitalizing Russia’s defense sector and allowing it to survive despite hefty international sanctions. The US has said that dual-use exports have specifically enabled the production of tanks, munitions and armored vehicles.

Both the US and the EU have sanctioned Chinese entities they allege are supporting the war effort.

Later Thursday, China’s Foreign Ministry also condemned the declaration, with a spokesperson framing NATO as a “great threat” to the world and reiterating Beijing’s claim that the alliance was “fanning the flames” of the war in Ukraine.

NATO’s increasing focus on Asia

The NATO leaders’ declaration is the latest step in what has been the bloc’s gradual hardening of tone on China in recent years.

NATO leaders first mentioned the need to jointly address “opportunities and challenges” posed by China in a 2019 declaration, before moving to refer to “systemic challenges” the country poses in 2021.

That shift has come alongside an increased US policy focus on the Indo-Pacific amid a deepening rivalry with Beijing as China under Xi’s leadership has grown increasingly aggressive in the region and in its broader foreign policy.

NATO’s attention on Asia has also been accelerated over the past two and a half years by hardening geopolitical fault lines in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the Kremlin’s tightening relationship with not only China but also North Korea and Iran.

NATO leaders on Wednesday also said Pyongyang and Tehran were “fueling” Russia’s war through “direct military support,” and condemned North Korea’s exports of “artillery shells and ballistic missiles” to Russia – which multiple governments say they have tracked since last year when Putin hosted North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in the Russian Far East.

“The Indo-Pacific is important for NATO, given that developments in that region directly affect Euro-Atlantic security,” the leaders said in their declaration.

“We are strengthening dialogue to tackle cross-regional challenges and are enhancing our practical cooperation, including through flagship projects in the areas of supporting Ukraine, cyber defense, countering disinformation, and technology,” it said.

Beijing has watched warily as NATO’s engagement grows with other powers in the Asia-Pacific. China is widely seen by observers as hoping to be the dominant force in the region and to push back on the US presence there, as Washington bolsters its longstanding Indo-Pacific security partnerships and interests.

China and Russia have also converged over their shared opposition to NATO, part of a broader aspiration from both to reshape a world order they see as unfairly dominated by the US, and both have blamed the Western security alliance for provoking Moscow to invade Ukraine.

In its statement Thursday, Beijing’s EU mission called on NATO to “correct its wrong perception of China,” and “abandon the Cold War mentality and zero-sum game.”

“The Asia-Pacific region is a place for peaceful development, not a wrestling ground for geopolitical competition … NATO should not become the disrupter of peace and stability in the Asia-Pacific,” the statement said.

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