On April 1, leaders of the EU and China met over videoconference for their first summit since 2020. Delayed last year after a fight over tit-for-tat sanctions, the meeting was hoped to calm geopolitical tensions between the two blocks, but the Russian war against Ukraine has forced a new wedge between China and Europe and complicated efforts at reconciliation. As a result, the summit provided a channel for each side to share their positions without finding much common ground. South China Morning Post’s Finbarr Bermingham reported a blunt assessment of the meeting from EU foreign affairs chief Josep Borrell:
In a stronger than usual rebuke of Beijing by Brussels’ top diplomat, Borrell told the European Parliament on Tuesday evening that Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and President Xi Jinping wanted to “instead focus on the positive things”.
“China wanted to set aside our differences on Ukraine, they didn’t want to talk about Ukraine. They didn’t want to talk about human rights and other stuff and instead focus on positive things,” Borrell said during a fiery debate on China in Strasbourg, France.
“This was not exactly a dialogue, maybe a dialogue of the deaf … we could not talk about Ukraine a lot, and we did not agree on anything else,” he continued.
[…] “The Chinese side stuck to their general statements of wishing to see peace, we are a peaceful people, we don’t invade others, asking for de-escalation, but avoiding specific commitments or avoiding any sort of line on Russia,” he told lawmakers. [Source]
"The European side make clear that this… compartmentalisation isn't feasible…for us Ukraine is the defining moment on whether we live in a world governed by rules or by force."
— Finbarr Bermingham (@fbermingham) April 5, 2022
Spanish newspaper El País described the summit as having “a somber atmosphere, language without diplomatic vaseline, and direct and blunt warnings,” adding that it “was probably one of the most tense of the 23 bilateral meetings between the two commercial giants since 1998.” Stuart Lau at Politico described the sharp tone of the summit:
EU leaders on Friday warned President Xi Jinping not to undermine their sanctions against Russian President Vladimir Putin, delivering a thinly veiled threat that European companies could pull back from business with China if Beijing sided too closely with Moscow.
In an almost-one-hour conversation at a summit with Xi — described by an EU diplomat as “difficult” — Ursula von der Leyen and Charles Michel, presidents of the European Commission and European Council, showed no signs of having bridged the massive gulf between Beijing and Brussels on the war in Ukraine. In a stark sign that the parties were at cross purposes, von der Leyen told a news conference the two sides simply had “opposing views.” [Source]
On the EU side, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen outlined the stakes of China’s position on the war, stating, “It is a defining moment because nothing will be like it was before the war. It’s now a question to take a very clear stance to support and defend the rules-based order.” As she saw it, China has a positive role to play: “This is not a conflict. This is a war. This is not a European affair. This is a global affair.” She added, “equidistance is not enough.” In his Watching China in Europe newsletter, Noah Barkin described how the EU flexed its geopolitical muscle:
[The] EU also flexed some of the geopolitical muscle it has so often shied away from using in the past. Von der Leyen issued a thinly veiled warning to China that it was risking an exodus of foreign investment by siding with Russia. She took a not-so-subtle dig at China’s struggles to stamp out Covid-19 despite draconian lockdowns, alluding to the effectiveness of Western vaccines and offering Europe’s help. […] “What you are not doing or saying now, your silence, the words you are not using–all that is understood as support for Russia. And this will have long-term consequences for your geopolitical standing,” [one] EU official said, summing up the message to the Chinese side. “Von der Leyen teetered on the brink of threats,” the official added.
[…] “The verbal gymnastics were impressive. It was as if we were in two parallel meetings,” said the EU official. “China was trying to steer us toward the positive vision of the summit that they wanted–one in which there was no war in Ukraine.” [Source]
China’s reputation is at stake.
This is about trust, reliability and decisions on long-term investments.
Every day 🇪🇺🇨🇳 trade amounts to €2 billion.🇷🇺🇨🇳 trade, €330 million.
A prolongation of the war and more disruption to the world economy is in no-one’s interest. pic.twitter.com/fZMx8dFdLG— Ursula von der Leyen (@vonderleyen) April 1, 2022
2/9
🔸🇪🇺unambiguous language about the war
❗️war-time, not-bussines-as-usual moment
❗️🇷🇺’s military aggression
❗️unjustified & UNPROVOKED INVASION of a SOVEREIGN ountry
❗️targeting civilian population
❗️BLOODSHED in Ukraine
❗️losses of civilian lives
❗️humanitarian disaster— Justyna Szczudlik诗丽娜 (@Shilinabolan) April 1, 2022
4/9
🔸References to 🇨🇳China as a global player that would like to be seen as a responsible stakeholder. This implies taking a responsibility for global peace and stability, especially being a permanent member of the UN Security Council and having "friendly" access to 🇷🇺Putin.
— Justyna Szczudlik诗丽娜 (@Shilinabolan) April 1, 2022
6/9
✔️EU puts an emphasis on 🇨🇳China's ongoing economic difficulties such as real-estate market and Covid, inluding full lockdowns, etc.
…➕ hints that 🇪🇺EU – as as front-runner in combating Covid – is open to provide China with EFFECTIVE m-RNA vaccines
— Justyna Szczudlik诗丽娜 (@Shilinabolan) April 1, 2022
In his press remarks, President of the European Parliament Charles Michel echoed Von der Leyen’s call for China to take responsibility for ending the war:
Today’s summit is not business as usual, because this is a war-time summit.
[…] The EU and China agreed that this war is threatening global security and the world economy. This global instability is not in China’s interest and not in the EU’s interest. We share a responsibility as global actors to work for peace and stability. We call on China to help end the war in Ukraine. China cannot turn a blind eye to Russia’s violation of international law. These principles are enshrined in the UN Charter and principles sacred to China.
The EU, together with its international partners, has imposed heavy sanctions on Russia. Our goal is to put pressure on the Kremlin to end the war. These sanctions also have a price for us in Europe, but this is the price of defending freedom and democracy. Any attempts to circumvent sanctions or provide aid to Russia would prolong the war. This would lead to more loss of life and a greater economic impact. This is not in anyone’s long-term interests. We will also remain vigilant on any attempts to aid Russia financially or militarily. However, positive steps by China to help end the war would be welcomed by all Europeans and by the global community. [Source]
The international community notably China and the EU have a mutual responsibility to use their joint influence and diplomacy to bring an end to Russia’s war in #Ukraine and the associated humanitarian crisis.
— Charles Michel (@eucopresident) April 1, 2022
Via EU official, EU leaders raised with Xi Jinping the need for him to speak with Zelensky.
— Finbarr Bermingham (@fbermingham) April 1, 2022
The EU leadership has made its positions and expectations with regard to China’s approach to the war in the Ukraine and China’s discriminatory practices vis-à-vis Lithuania very clear, but they also seem to not have received any significant response or assurances from Beijing.2/6
— Janka Oertel (@oertel_janka) April 1, 2022
In a very lightly veiled threat, EU leaders stated that European companies are watching very closely how all countries position themselves with regard to the war in Ukraine and that a major exodus of Western companies from Russia should serve as a warning also to China. 4/6
— Janka Oertel (@oertel_janka) April 1, 2022
The future of EU-China relations will be determined to a significant degree by China’s approach to the war in Ukraine. If China openly undermines the sanctions regime that has been imposed there will be serious consequences. This could not be clearer now. 6/6
— Janka Oertel (@oertel_janka) April 1, 2022
On the Chinese side, Premier Li Keqiang declared that China would pursue peace in “its own way,” distancing China from the EU’s position. Wang Lutong, director general of European affairs at China’s foreign ministry, brushed aside China’s responsibility for ending the war. The day after the summit, he stated, “The key of this issue is not in the hands of China – it’s in Washington’s hands, it’s in Brussels’ hands,” adding, “It’s up to Europeans to get it sorted.”
Regarding Ukraine, the Chinese leaders appeared more interested in deflecting responsibility and peeling Europe away from the United States. President Xi Jinping called on the EU to “exclude external interference” from its relations with China and, as one Xinhua article stated four times, “develop its own perception of China.” Andy Bounds, Sam Fleming, Tom Mitchell, and Eleanor Olcott from the Financial Times described the Chinese leaders’ insistence on blaming other actors in the conflict:
China’s president called on the EU “to pursue an independent policy towards China” — a thinly veiled criticism of European solidarity with the US in blaming Russia for the crisis and in hitting Vladimir Putin’s regime with sanctions.
[…] Xi “did not condemn, but also did not defend” Putin’s invasion, according to a person present during the video call, adding that the Chinese president ignored a direct question from Michel as to whether he supported the invasion.
Instead, Xi referred to the importance of understanding Russia’s “security concerns in Europe”, the person said.
[…] In the run-up to Friday’s summit, Wang Yi, China’s foreign minister, told his Russian counterpart “the Ukrainian issue” was the result of “the long-term accumulation of security conflicts in Europe” as well as a “cold war mentality and group confrontation”. [Source]
China’s president called on the EU “to pursue an independent policy towards China” — a thinly veiled criticism of European solidarity with the US in blaming Russia for the crisishttps://t.co/HeTDYc1dnD pic.twitter.com/jOoorBc7bU
— Adam Tooze (@adam_tooze) April 2, 2022
A readout of the meeting published by the Chinese Foreign Ministry enumerated Xi’s views on how to settle the Ukraine crisis, which criticized Western sanctions and diverted blame for the cause of the war away from Russia and onto other European countries:
[..] The international community should keep creating favorable conditions and environment for the negotiations between Russia and Ukraine and make room for political settlement, rather than add fuel to the fire and heighten tensions.
[…] The root cause of the Ukraine crisis is the regional security tensions in Europe that have built up over the years. A fundamental solution is to accommodate the legitimate security concerns of all relevant parties. In this day and age, global and regional security frameworks should no longer be built with a Cold War mentality.
[…] Parties […] must not let the global economic system be disrupted at will, still less allow attempts to politicize or weaponize the world economy as a tool to serve one’s own agenda … [Source]
2/6
❗️This paragraph is mostly about economic issues &…is emotional a bitTwo messages that tell us about 🇪🇺🇨🇳 summit atmosphere
1⃣ it seems China says something like
"this is not our war"; "don't drag us/the whole world into this war"
🔸不能把全世界都捆绑到这个问题上— Justyna Szczudlik诗丽娜 (@Shilinabolan) April 4, 2022
Before the summit even finished, the Chinese side had already published a readout of the meeting through Xinhua. Following the summit, there was no joint press conference nor any joint statement. Spanish newspaper El Mundo wrote that “it is increasingly clear that the two blocs speak very different languages and understanding each other is becoming more and more difficult.”
Beijing issued a summary of the virtual meeting between Xi and the EU leaders even while the call was still ongoing, the latest example of the Chinese seeking to shape the narrative at a time of mounting qs about its political alignment with Russia during the invasion of Ukraine.
— Lingling Wei 魏玲灵 (@Lingling_Wei) April 1, 2022
Europe, having lived through WWII and knowing exactly what Nazis look like, doesn’t need anyone to tell them what to think of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine or China’s de facto support for the invader. Does China understand this? I think not
— Matthew Brooker (@mbrookerhk) April 1, 2022
The PRC readout lays out China's hope for EU to become a separate pole in a multipolar world. Odd message for the moment, when the EU is confronting crisis and tragedy and calling on China to step up to help relieve human suffering and limit conflict. https://t.co/YiZwY9vOvU
— Ryan Hass (@ryanl_hass) April 1, 2022
The TL;DR of the presser: EU officials went into the EU-China Summit with low expectations and came out very underwhelmed https://t.co/unqtBX0S7K
— Mareike Ohlberg (@MareikeOhlberg) April 1, 2022
The diverging perspectives between both actors also emerged clearly in Chinese and European media coverage of the summit. An editorial by Chinese state-media tabloid Global Times wrote: “Influenced by Washington’s strategy toward China, some Europeans have enhanced their perception of China from the perspective of ‘cooperation, competition and rivalry’ … The main reason for this complexity [in the EU-China relationship] is Washington’s political manipulation.” By contrast, Europe’s perception of China’s alignment with Russia over Ukraine has given many Europeans no need for American pressure for them to agree with the EU’s 2019 labeling of China as a partner, competitor, and systemic rival. In France, which currently holds the presidency of the Council of the EU, a headline by Le Figaro on the day of the summit read, “China Tries to Coax Exasperated Europeans,” with the subtitle, “the objective is to dissipate the unease provoked by [Xi’s] tacit support of Vladimir Putin.” An editorial summarizing the summit published by Le Monde demonstrated the hardening of attitudes towards China:
The leaders of the European Union wanted to try to obtain from their virtual summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang on Friday, April 1 a commitment from China to not circumvent Western sanctions against Russia. They ran into a wall. China remained deaf to Europe’s calls. The time for illusions, for those who still had them about Beijing’s attitude, is clearly over.
[…] The communiqués from the meetings, hastily published by Beijing, reveal no element of convergence other than the usual empty formulations on the virtues of dialogue and peace. […] Beijing has committed neither to use its influence over Moscow to end the war, nor to refrain from helping Russia cushion the shock of Western sanctions.
[…] This Chinese refusal should not come as a surprise. Three weeks before the start of the Russian offensive in Ukraine, President Vladimir Putin visited Beijing and signed an important joint declaration with President Xi sealing a “friendship without limits.” It seems hard to imagine that he did not at the time disclose to his Chinese interlocutors at least part of his military intentions in Ukraine. The fact that the war did not start until after the Beijing Winter Olympics is probably not a coincidence, either. [French]
I think there are smart people inside the Chinese government who recognize how massively counterproductive this stuff is to their goal of separating the EU and US; what's remarkable is how powerless they are to restrain any of it. https://t.co/R5bT7pXdc3
— James Palmer (@BeijingPalmer) April 1, 2022
Europe has noted Chinese state media’s amplification of Russian disinformation on the war, as detailed in a recent analysis by EUvsDisinfo, a project of the EU’s External Action Service:
While China has positioned itself as a neutral onlooker of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Chinese state media has often amplified pro-Kremlin myths claiming that Russia is not the aggressor in Ukraine. https://t.co/1CI4wygYKZ
— EUvsDisinfo (@EUvsDisinfo) April 4, 2022
Despite the EU and China’s diverging views, as Rhyannon Bartlett-Imadegawa from Nikkei Asia reported, the summit still has value as an opportunity to clearly communicate each other’s interests:
Janka Oertel, director of the Asia program at the European Council on Foreign Relations think tank, said the summit on Friday “was a meeting that was designed to make a position very clear. It was an opportunity used for both sides, to send a message to the other side.”
“It does seem to me like both sides have basically voiced their respective positions to each other and that there was very little agreement between the two sides,” she added.
However, given the dire state of the relationship, the fact that the meeting took place at all “is a sign that the dialogue channels are still open and that’s probably as good as it gets at the moment,” Oertel said.
[…] “Beijing does understand the red lines being drawn by the U.S. and the EU regarding the economic sanctions… Most likely China will stay out of these gray areas. It will not risk secondary sanctions from the U.S. and the EU in order to provide Russia marginal short-term aid that will not change the outcome of the Ukrainian conflict,” added [Yu Jie, a senior research fellow on China at Chatham House]. [Source]
EU and Chinese leaders also discussed other aspects of their bilateral relationship overshadowed by the war. Some positive features included commitments to cooperate on COVID-19 prevention, climate change, energy transition, the digital economy, and artificial intelligence. Regarding more prickly subjects, the EU performed a ritual disavowal of Taiwanese sovereignty, but it raised concerns about cross-strait tensions, China’s economic coercion of Lithuania, human rights abuses in Xinjiang, and the erosion of freedoms in Hong Kong. Notably, the two sides agreed to relaunch the EU-China human rights dialogue, although there was no agreement on the Comprehensive Agreement on Investment, which many in Europe have deemed dead after China’s refusal to condemn Russia and lift Chinese sanctions on Europe.
Important issues remain. China must:
• Stop its unjustified trade measures against Lithuania
• Lift sanctions against MEPs⁰
• Address global concerns on human and labour rights, especially in Xinjiang⁰
• Improve access and conditions for EU companies in its market. pic.twitter.com/1iY95ycZXv— Ursula von der Leyen (@vonderleyen) April 1, 2022
Some European media played on the April Fool’s Day timing of the summit to frame coverage with apt metaphors for the EU and China’s tumultuous relationship:
Belgian authorities used taser guns to stun a panda bear which vaulted the walls of the Chinese EU embassy in Brussels and wreaked havoc in neighbouring gardens early Friday #EU #China #BearGate https://t.co/1t7BW9cJdV
— EUobserver (@euobs) April 1, 2022
Elsewhere on Twitter, Leiden University’s Rogier Creemers argued that Europe badly needs to upgrade its current capacities in China analysis and expertise, particularly as the two find themselves increasingly on opposing sides of important geopolitical issues:
…get a job making coffee or carrying briefcases if you don't have a working knowledge of, say, the US political system. In contrast, in most of them, you can become Foreign Minister and not know the names of more than three or four serving Chinese senior officials, let alone…
— China Digital (@China_Digital) March 31, 2022
… let alone positions where you get the time you need to carve out a particular niche and get really, really awesome at it. The funding that is there, usually is non-structural. Sometimes, it's project-based, where a government needs a study on a some topic, and pays a bit.
— China Digital (@China_Digital) March 31, 2022
The only way in which European countries are going to solve their China illiteracy is creating long-term, structural funding streams that can enable clever people to gain the many, many skills they need to be a good China research, and develop a career.
— China Digital (@China_Digital) March 31, 2022