
Former US envoy to China urges caution over Beijing involvement in Ukraine-Russia talks
As Russia-Ukraine peace talks resume this week, the former US ambassador to China said that while any possible role for Beijing should be welcomed, its participation must be taken with a grain of salt.
Advertisement
Speaking at the Brookings Institution in Washington on Tuesday, Nicholas Burns, the ambassador during the Joe Biden administration, cautioned that Beijing's growing interest in Ukraine's reconstruction was less a goodwill gesture than a strategic manoeuvre by a government that has aided Moscow throughout the war.
'They're not neutral – they're in Russia's corner, diplomatically, economically and militarily,' Burns said.
His warning came after top Russian and Ukrainian negotiators met on Monday in Istanbul for their second round of talks in recent weeks. The two sides agreed to a large prisoner exchange but made little headway on a peace deal.
Kyiv had submitted terms in advance, calling for an immediate ceasefire, while Moscow waited until the meeting to deliver demands that included Ukraine's recognition of Russian territorial claims as well as its renunciation of any ambitions to join Nato – conditions Ukraine swiftly rejected.
Advertisement
Burns' comments reflected Washington's growing concerns that China, by offering reconstruction aid to Ukraine, could buy its way into Kyiv's post-war future while avoiding accountability for supporting Russian President Vladimir Putin's war machine.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
4 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
New Chinese students barred from Harvard, how birds conquered skies: SCMP daily highlights
Catch up on some of SCMP's biggest China stories of the day. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider subscribing The administration of US President Donald Trump has formally barred Harvard University from enrolling international students, citing the institution's failure to address national security risks on campus. Russia's fresh bid to revive a strategic triangle with China and India as a counterbalance to the Western-led international order faces headwinds given the deep-seated distrust between the two Asian powers, according to observers. Fossils preserved in amber offer a unique opportunity to study soft structures, as objects stuck in the hardened tree resin remain trapped in time. Photo: AP/Science Dinosaur feathers found trapped in Burmese amber have shed new light on the evolution of flight feathers, an essential step that allowed early birds to surpass their dinosaur relatives in conquering the skies, a Chinese study has found.


RTHK
4 hours ago
- RTHK
Moscow warns retaliation coming over airbase attacks
Moscow warns retaliation coming over airbase attacks A satellite image shows destroyed TU 95 aircraft in the aftermath of a Ukrainian drone strike at Belaya air base, Irkutsk region. Photo: Reuters Moscow will decide how and when to respond to Ukraine's attacks on its airbases, the Kremlin said on Thursday, confirming that President Vladimir Putin told his US counterpart Donald Trump that Russia would retaliate. Kyiv's weekend strikes on Russian airfields deep inside Russia destroyed nuclear-capable aircraft and infuriated Moscow. "As and when our military deems it appropriate," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said when asked what Moscow's response would be. The planes were parked at air fields deep inside Russian territory, including in Siberia. After a phone call with Putin on Wednesday, Trump said on social media: "President Putin did say, and very strongly, that he will have to respond to the recent attack on the airfields." Putin has repeatedly rejected a 30-day ceasefire in Ukraine and on Wednesday said that Kyiv would use it to rearm and mobilise. Trump's efforts to end the more than three-year conflict in Ukraine have so far yielded few results. The Kremlin said that Putin and Trump did not agree on a time to meet during their phone conversation but that "there is an understanding that a meeting is necessary." Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky has repeatedly called for talks with Putin, but the Russian leader said on Wednesday: "What can we talk about with terrorists?" (AFP)


South China Morning Post
6 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Beijing sanctions company owned by father of Taiwanese lawmaker Puma Shen
Beijing has imposed sanctions on a company owned by the father of the founder of Kuma Academy in Taiwan, which runs civil defence education courses and was previously added to Beijing's sanctions list. Advertisement The move – the latest in Beijing's efforts to crack down on entities it deems as supporting Taiwanese independence and separatist activities – comes on the heels of media reports that revealed connections between the company and mainland Chinese businesses. On Thursday, Zhu Fenglian, spokeswoman for the mainland's Taiwan Affairs Office (TAO), said Beijing had identified Shen Tu-cheng – the father of Shen Pao-yang, also known as Puma Shen – as the leader of Sicuens International Co Ltd. The younger Shen, whom the office has called a 'stubborn Taiwan independence figure', already appears on the sanction list. According to Zhu, investigations confirmed that the Taiwanese company had engaged in trade relations and business cooperation with certain mainland Chinese enterprises to seek economic benefits. Advertisement 'The mainland will never permit businesses affiliated with staunch supporters of 'Taiwan independence' to seek profits on the mainland,' Zhu said.