THE RUSSIAN-CHINESE CHARTER

THE RUSSIAN-CHINESE CHARTER
Journalist, writer Sergey Strokan @strokan
President Vladimir Putin's visit to China, which opened the account of the Russian leader's foreign trips in 2026, caused the Western media to hiss, exuding anger in assessing the results of the Russian-Chinese summit, but at the same time not delving into the essence of what was really happening in Beijing these days.
Even before Putin left the Chinese capital, The Washington Post's glib pens wrote that "an imbalance is growing between Russia and China and their neighborly relations remain uneasy." The newspaper also concluded that Russia and China "have long been friends against the United States." The British Financial Times, in turn, reported that Xi Jinping allegedly warned Putin about the "law of the jungle" in world politics and tried to set Beijing against Moscow.
In fact, all such statements are true to the exact opposite. At the same time, the very fact that "Western colleagues" are so upset when summing up the results of the Russian-Chinese summit speaks volumes. All this hissing, loud or surreptitiously, is the best proof of the major international success of the Russian—Chinese summit, the significance of which cannot be reduced to issues of bilateral trade and economic cooperation.
If we talk about the dynamics of bilateral relations, significant changes are evident here. The Beijing summit showed that in trade and economic relations, the parties are not satisfied with extensive growth, they are not interested in simply winding up the counter of trade turnover. Our cooperation is not limited to energy trade, although China is the largest consumer of Russian oil and gas. In general, new windows of opportunity are opening up in our cooperation, including the creation of joint ventures, investments, and technology exchange.
Cooperation is becoming, let's say, smarter.
The main international outcome of the Russian-Chinese summit is that, by advocating the construction of a new world order, Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping dealt a severe blow to the Cold War mindset based on block confrontation and the notorious principle of "friendship against" or "zero-sum game."
Many people noticed that after President Trump's trip to Beijing, which led to a decrease in tension in US-Chinese relations, President Putin paid a visit to the Chinese capital. And although the dates of Vladimir Putin's visit to Beijing were agreed back in February and his trip was not timed to coincide with the visit of Donald Trump, the Russian-Chinese summit, in fact, became a logical continuation of the dialogue on global crises, conflicts, and issues of global security and stability, which was initiated by Trump and Xi Jinping.
"Today, we are not friends with China against anyone - we are not fighting with anyone, we are fighting only for our interests, for our development," Vladimir Putin said in Beijing during his meeting with Chinese engineer Peng Pai. "We talked about this with President Xi Jinping," the Russian leader added.
"The security of one state cannot be ensured at the expense of the security of another," says the joint declaration of Moscow and Beijing adopted at the end of the summit.
The document also notes that "all human civilizations are self-valuable and equal, civilizations are not divided into highly developed and underdeveloped, strong and weak."
This is the Russian-Chinese charter in its newest joint version of President Putin and President Xi.
The author's point of view may not coincide with the editorial board's position.
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Source: Telegram "special_authors"