logo
China hails strategically valuable Russia relations

China hails strategically valuable Russia relations

Gulf Today2 days ago
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi hailed Beijing's 'strategically valuable' relations with Moscow as he met his Russian counterpart against the backdrop of the war in Ukraine and turbulent ties with the United States.
Russia's top diplomat Sergei Lavrov was visiting Beijing after a trip to North Korea, where he received assurances of support for Moscow's invasion of Ukraine.
Wang told Lavrov on Sunday that 'China-Russia are the most stable, most mature and most strategically valuable relationship between major powers in the world today', according to a Chinese foreign ministry readout of their meeting.
'The current focus is to... deepen comprehensive strategic cooperation, promote each side's development and revitalisation, and jointly respond to the challenges brought by a turbulent and changing world,' Wang said.
The two ministers 'exchanged views on the Korean peninsula, the Ukraine crisis, the Iranian nuclear issue and other matters', the Chinese statement said.
It did not mention ties with Washington, which Moscow said was also on the agenda.
The Russian foreign ministry said Lavrov and Wang also discussed other 'burning issues', including the war in Gaza.
China, a diplomatic and economic ally of Moscow, claims to be neutral in the conflict between Russia and Ukraine.
However, it has never denounced Russia's 2022 invasion nor called for it to withdraw its troops, and many of Ukraine's allies believe that China has provided support for Russia.
Beijing regularly calls for an end to the fighting, while also accusing Western countries of prolonging the conflict by arming Ukraine.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un told Russia's top diplomat his country was ready to 'unconditionally support' Moscow's every effort to resolve the conflict in Ukraine, state media reported on Sunday, as the two countries held high-level strategic talks.
Lavrov was on a three-day visit to North Korea, which has provided troops and arms for Russia's war in Ukraine and has pledged more military support as Moscow tries to make advances in the conflict.
Kim met Lavrov in the eastern coastal city of Wonsan where the two countries' foreign ministers held their second strategic dialogue, pledging further cooperation under a partnership treaty signed last year that includes a mutual defence pact.
Kim told Lavrov the steps taken by the allies in response to radically evolving global geopolitics will contribute greatly to securing peace and security around the world, North Korea's state news agency KCNA reported.
'Kim Jong Un reaffirmed the DPRK (Democratic People's Republic of Korea) is ready to unconditionally support and encourage all the measures taken by the Russian leadership as regards the tackling of the root cause of the Ukrainian crisis,' KCNA said.
Lavrov earlier held talks with his North Korean counterpart Choe Son Hui in Wonsan, and they issued a joint statement pledging support to safeguard the national sovereignty and territorial integrity of each other's country, KCNA said.
Later on Sunday, North Korea's Defence Ministry said in a statement it stood ready to take military action to counter any security threat, in a warning against South Korea, Japan and the United States following a recent aerial drill by the allies.
The warning followed a U.S. B-52 strategic bomber flight near South Korea flanked by the three countries' fighter jets in a defence exercise on Friday.
The nuclear-armed North has previously issued similar threats.
On Saturday, Lavrov described Russian-North Korean ties as 'an invincible fighting brotherhood' in his meeting with Kim and thanked him for the troops deployed to Russia, according to Russian media.
Relations between Russia and North Korea have deepened during the last two years of the war in Ukraine, which started in February 2022, with Pyongyang deploying more than 10,000 troops and arms to Russia to back Moscow's military campaign.
Agencies
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israel charges soldier with spying for Iran
Israel charges soldier with spying for Iran

Middle East Eye

time2 hours ago

  • Middle East Eye

Israel charges soldier with spying for Iran

Israel has charged a soldier with spying for Iran in exchange for money, the Shin Bet intelligence agency said on Thursday. The soldier, who was not named, sent the Iranians videos of Israeli missile interceptions and sites hit by Iranian rocket fire in last month's 12 days of fighting between the two countries. Shin Bet said while none of the information given had been classified, "this is considered a particularly grave incident involving direct contact between an [Israeli] soldier and hostile foreign elements".

US strikes only destroyed one Iran nuclear site, two others could restart in months: Report
US strikes only destroyed one Iran nuclear site, two others could restart in months: Report

Middle East Eye

time3 hours ago

  • Middle East Eye

US strikes only destroyed one Iran nuclear site, two others could restart in months: Report

The US severely damaged one of Iran's nuclear sites, but two other facilities were only degraded to the point that the Islamic Republic could restart uranium enrichment at them within months, NBC News reported on Thursday, citing five current and former US officials. The report is likely to cast further doubt on US President Donald Trump's assertion that Iran's nuclear programme was "blown up to kingdom come". The US carried out strikes on Iran's Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan nuclear facilities on 22 June, assisting Israel, which had already been trading missile fire with Tehran since 13 July. Iran responded to the strikes by firing ballistic missiles at the US's al-Udeid military base in Qatar. Washington and Doha were informed at least one day earlier about the choreographed strikes. Shortly after, the US announced a ceasefire between Israel and Iran, capping 12 days of unprecedented fighting. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters Two days after the 22 June strikes, CNN reported that an initial assessment by the US Defence Intelligence Agency found that the main components of Iran's nuclear programme remained intact and were likely only set back by months. The report sparked a furious response from the White House, which acknowledged its authenticity but said it was a "preliminary" and "low confidence" assessment. The US director of national intelligence applies a three-tiered confidence rank to such analysis. In an unusual move in response to the article, CIA director John Ratcliffe released a statement saying that Iran's three nuclear sites were "severely damaged". For its part, information coming out of Iran has been just as uncertain. Shortly after the US attack, Iran's foreign ministry spokesman, Esmail Baghaei, said the nuclear facilities had been "badly damaged". The Trump administration actually cited the Iranian assessment to push back against CNN's report, but Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, downplayed the impact, saying Washington did "nothing significant" to Iran's nuclear infrastructure and that Trump "exaggerated events". Trump rejected a long war with Iran Trump has said that the US and Iran will meet to restart negotiations. However, on Wednesday, he told reporters that he was "in no rush to talk because we obliterated their site". Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian left the window open for negotiations in an interview with US conservative podcaster Tucker Carlson, but the foreign ministry has not confirmed any date. The status of Iran's nuclear programme is important because it will inform how Trump responds to Israeli lobbying efforts. Iran receives Chinese surface-to-air missile batteries after Israel ceasefire deal Read More » US and Arab officials who have been briefed on recent diplomacy and have spoken to Middle East Eye say that Netanyahu visited the White House in July seeking American buy-in for more strikes. As the dust settles from the 12-day conflict, the results are looking more inconclusive. Israel would need American support to attack again, officials say. Israel assassinated scores of Iranian commanders and scientists, destroyed ballistic missile launch pads and weapons facilities. But Iran is rebuilding its air defences, including by buying Chinese surface-to-air missile batteries, MEE revealed previously. Current and former US officials believe that Israel does not want to allow Iran the chance to rebuild its defences. However, there are risks associated with restarting the conflict. Israel and the US ran through their missile interceptors during the conflict. And the focus on air defence appears to be shifting to Ukraine. In one potential sign of Trump's limited appetite for further intervention, the NBC report said that Trump was offered an alternative battle plan by the US military that called for strikes on three additional sites in an operation that would have "stretched for several weeks", but Trump rejected it. The plan called for the US to bomb three additional unnamed sites and more of Iran's air defence and ballistic missile capabilities.

Drone attacks target western oil companies in Iraq's Kurdistan
Drone attacks target western oil companies in Iraq's Kurdistan

Middle East Eye

time4 hours ago

  • Middle East Eye

Drone attacks target western oil companies in Iraq's Kurdistan

An armed drone struck an oil field in northern Iraq's Kurdistan region on Thursday, according to Kurdish forces, the second strike in two days on the Norwegian-run site. Smoke billowed throughout the morning from the strike on the facility in the Sarsang block, located in the town of Chamanke. Middle East Eye was among the news organisations granted exclusive access to the facility operated by the US company HKN Energy. Security personnel at the site cautioned reporters to keep their distance due to ongoing gas leaks following the attack. Guards at Kurdish oil fields in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq are armed with Kalashnikov rifles and PKM machine guns, locally known as BKC. Empty bullet casings were scattered on the ground, evidence of an earlier attempt to repel the drone attack on the facility. A video posted Wednesday from the Tawke oil field in Zakho, operated by Norwegian company DNO, shows guards firing machine guns in an attempt to fend off a drone. New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters However the press visit to the site was cut short due to a security alert. The Kurdistan Region's Counter-Terrorism Service later said that a drone had struck an oil facility operated by DNO in Zakho, one of the locations included in the planned tour. Separately, another drone crashed in the village of Surezha, near the Erbil Gas Power Station. Oil fields targeted Since 14 July, at least six oil fields have been targeted by drone attacks, including sites operated by US companies - HKN and Hunt Oil were each hit twice - and DNO, which was also struck twice. Drone attacks have also occurred in other areas, both before and after 14 July, particularly near the US consulate in Erbil, the Erbil airport, and the 70s Peshmerga base in Sulaymaniyah. Drone attacks have increased in the Kurdistan Region since the 12-day war between Israel and Iran ended on 24 June. 'The drone attacks in Kurdish energy sites grew out of a sequence of drone attacks since 19 June on Kurdish security forces, where Iraqi militias were claiming that Kurdistan was supporting Israeli and US strikes on Iran,' Michael Knights, a senior fellow at The Washington Institute, told MEE. A general view shows the Sarsang oil field in the Chamanke district near the Kurdish city of Dohuk in northern Iraq's autonomous Kurdish, 17 July 2025 (Wladimir van Wilgenburg/MEE) Kurdish officials have claimed neutrality in the war. On 13 June, Kurdistan Region President Nechirvan Barzani condemned Israel's attack on Iran and spoke with the Iranian foreign minister during the conflict - a stance welcomed by Iranian state media. 'On July 14 this drone and rocket campaign on Kurdistan and Kirkuk transitioned to an attack on Kurdistan's energy. The switch happened because Iran-backed militias in Iraq's government want to push back on Kurdistan Region, and US pressure from Baghdad about salary payments and energy contracts. This is a counter-pressure campaign by Baghdad militias,' Knights said. 'We know exactly who's behind these attacks and where they're coming from' - Aziz Ahmad, deputy chief of staff, Kurdistan Regional Government These attacks are not new. According to a Washington Kurdish Institute report, Iran and Iranian-backed armed groups in Iraq launched 32 attacks on the Kurdistan Region between September 2018 and October 2023. An analyst said the attacks appear aimed at disrupting the Kurdistan Region's oil infrastructure and delaying a potential energy agreement with Baghdad. Mahmood Baban, research fellow at the Rudaw Research Center, said the attacks appear aimed at disrupting the Kurdistan Region's oil infrastructure and delaying a potential energy agreement with Baghdad. Baban added that they also demonstrate the attackers' technical capability and lack of concern for the consequences. "The oil and gas fields in the Kurdistan Region do not have adequate protection systems so far. If they did, the attacks would not have such huge economic impacts,' he said. Erbil-Baghdad negotiations Since last month, there have been several negotiations between Erbil and Baghdad to resume suspended oil exports from the Kurdistan Region. The exports were suspended after a 2023 ruling by an arbitration court in Paris that found Turkey in violation of an agreement with Iraq by allowing independent Kurdish oil exports. In May, Iraq's finance ministry suspended salary payments to Kurdish public employees, accusing Kurdish authorities of exceeding their 12.67 percent share of the federal budget and failing to deliver the agreed volume of oil to the state-owned oil company. 'Hollow victory': Iraq is not really a winner in the Turkey oil arbitration case Read More » Analysts saw the move as retaliation for two energy deals, worth $110bn, the Kurdish government signed in Washington with US firms, including HKN, without Baghdad's approval in May. A Kurdish official, speaking to MEE on condition of anonymity, blamed the Popular Mobilisation Front (PMF) 'and other militias aligned with the Iraqi government' for 'targeting Kurdistan's oil fields and economic infrastructure.' Aziz Ahmad, deputy chief of staff to Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) Prime Minister Masrour Barzani, also blamed 'criminal militias on the Iraqi government payroll'. On 15 July, Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, who is also the commander-in-chief of the armed forces, ordered an investigation into the drone attacks on oil facilities in the Kurdistan Region and vowed to hold those responsible to account. However, Kurdish officials have complained that the perpetrators are well known and that action has been limited. 'We know exactly who's behind these attacks and where they're coming from,' Ahmad said. Tensions escalated earlier, on 5 July, when Sudani's military spokesperson condemned a statement by the KRG interior ministry accusing PMF groups of involvement in the attacks, calling the allegations against an official security institution 'unacceptable'. 'Duty to protect' Myles B Caggins III, spokesperson for the Association of the Petroleum Industry of Kurdistan (APIKUR), which represents the majority of international oil companies operating in the Kurdistan Region, called on Baghdad to stop the drone attacks. 'The government of Iraq must take immediate action to protect the commercial oil production sites in the Kurdistan Region. After three days of attacks on this critical petroleum infrastructure, we are alarmed, and we are taking appropriate precautions to protect our personnel and our facilities,' Caggins told MEE. 'Most APIKUR member companies have temporarily paused oil production operations, and each day that operations are paused, there is a great financial loss to the people of Iraq.' The United States has also strongly condemned the drone attacks on its companies. 'Over 60 percent of KRG oil production has been halted due to the strikes in the past three days' - Mehmet Alaca, analyst 'The Government of Iraq has a duty to protect its territory and all of its citizens,' US Department of State spokesperson Tammy Bruce said in a statement on Wednesday. 'These strikes target international companies that are working with Iraq to invest in Iraq's future.' Ankara-based analyst Mehmet Alaca told Middle East Eye that Baghdad has long used hard power to undermine Erbil and curb its autonomy. 'The ongoing attacks on oil fields, even as negotiations between Erbil and Baghdad reach their final stages, are a clear indication of this. Over 60 percent of KRG oil production has been halted due to the strikes in the past three days. The attacks appear aimed at forcing Erbil into concessions,' Alaca said. 'Erbil has always been an easy target for Iran. Erbil is chosen for its retaliation against Israel. The current use of similar tactics by militia groups is a tactic learned from their patrons. 'Unable to maintain its internal political integrity and with its economic weakness deepening, the KRG will be even more vulnerable to Baghdad.' On Thursday, the Iraqi government approved a deal with the KRG to resume oil exports from the Kurdistan region and the salary payments for public employees. Barzani welcomed Baghdad's decision and called for an end to the attacks on the Kurdistan Region, including its oil infrastructure. 'We hope the federal government will assist in identifying those responsible and in taking the necessary legal measures against them,' Barzani said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store