China is gaining the upper hand in its much
vaunted friendship with Russia due to Beijing's shift away from relying on
Moscow for advanced weapons and deep problems with energy cooperation, a report
released on Monday said.
While leaders of both
countries play up the extent of their alliance and strategic ties, this
partnership is unlikely to develop into anything more significant, the
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) said.
"In the coming years,
while relations will remain close at the diplomatic level, the two cornerstones
of the partnership over the past two decades -- military and energy cooperation
-- are crumbling," the think-tank wrote. "As a result, Russia's
significance to China will continue to diminish."
China and Russia's ties have
careened between cooperation and near war in past decades, veering from firm
Communist friends in the 1950s to fighting over a border dispute in 1969.
While both work closely at the
United Nations and frequently oppose U.S. policies or Western demands for
sanctions on countries like Syria, China and Russia also
value their relationship with Washington, the report said.
"Furthermore, there are
strategic planners in Beijing and Moscow who view the other side as the
ultimate strategic threat in the long term."
China once relied
significantly on Russia for weapons. But dramatic advances over the past few
years mean that China will actually become a competitor to Russia on the world
stage.
That is one reason why Russia
does not wanted to export its most high-tech equipment to China, the report
said.
"A more advanced Chinese
defense industry is increasingly able to meet the needs of the PLA (People's
Liberation Army), limiting the need for imports of large weapon
platforms," it said.
"At the same time, it is
unclear if Russia is able and willing to meet Chinese demands because of
problems with its own arms industry and concerns that China will copy
technology and compete with Russia on the world market."
In energy cooperation, ties
have frayed, as the sides argue about details of oil and gas imports into China
and as Beijing turns to other suppliers, notably in central Asia, SIPRI said.
A $1 trillion deal to
supply Russian gas to China over 30 years, supposed to be the high point of
President Hu Jintao's visit to Russia in June, has failed to materialize.
Sources close to talks said price differences between the world's largest
energy producer and Beijing were still too big.
"China is now in a
position to have greater expectations of and place demands on Russia, while
Russia is struggling to come to terms with this new power dynamic," the
report said.
"In both countries,
strategic planners warn that the present competition could escalate to a more
pointed rivalry, entirely undermining the notion of a strategic partnership.
"Consequently, China and
Russia will continue to be pragmatic partners of convenience, but not partners
based on deeper shared world views and strategic interests."
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Ron Popeski)
Source : Reuters
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