Chinese officials have told Newsweek that Beijing wants a deescalation of the Ukraine war amid concerns that North Korean troops could be deployed there within days.

The calls come after Pyongyang was found to be sending soldiers to assist in Russia’s invasion, with Ukraine’s President Zelensky claiming Friday that boots could be on the ground in Ukraine as soon as October 27.

U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin III this week confirmed previous reports that North Korea had sent its troops to Russia, who he said could potentially become “co-belligerents” in the conflict alongside Moscow’s Armed Forces.

The comments could be taken as a warning to Pyongyang, whose newfound involvement in the European conflict and aggressive posturing toward its southern neighbor threatens to implicate its Indo-Pacific ally in two geopolitical crises.

Xi JinPing KIm Jong Un

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, left, and Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping, shake hands at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, March 26, 2018. A representative of Beijing’s U.S. embassy told Newsweek that…
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, left, and Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping, shake hands at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, March 26, 2018. A representative of Beijing’s U.S. embassy told Newsweek that it was urging de-escalation in both Ukraine and on the Korean Peninsula, following reports that North Korean troops had been sent to Russia.
More
Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP

“On the Ukraine crisis, China’s position is consistent and clear. We hope all parties will promote the deescalation of the situation and strive for a political settlement,” China’s U.S. Embassy told Newsweek on Thursday, echoing previous comments made by Lin Jian of Beijing’s Foreign Ministry on Thursday.

The statements are indicative of Beijing’s attempts to cast itself as an neutral actor in the situation, at once constrained by its informal alliance with Moscow and its desire to avoid entangling itself in what is transforming into a confrontation between Russian and united Western powers.

While China has in the past attempted to broker a peace agreement between Ukraine and Russia, it has been accused of providing Putin with weapons used in the conflict, and has repeatedly refused to condemn the invasion.

“On the situation on the Korean Peninsula, we hope that relevant parties will face squarely the crux of the Korean Peninsula issue and play a constructive role for deescalating tensions, advancing dialogue and upholding peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula,” Newsweek was told.

Jonathan Ward, a senior fellow with the Hudson Institute, a Washington think tank, said Russia’s war in Ukraine “would have failed already without direct economic and industrial support from Xi Jinping and the Chinese Communist Party.”

“North Korean support through munitions and now personnel is just one further act by a Russia-China-Iran-North Korean axis that has come together to contribute to Putin’s war in Europe. False narratives about Beijing’s consternation with North Korean involvement ignore clear realities about Chinese Communist Party support for this war, for the axis that enables it, and for the anti-western rogue states that are fundamental to its broader campaign against the United States and free world alliance system,” Ward told Newsweek.

Xi Jinping Putin

Russian President Vladimir Putin greets Chinese President Xi Jinping during their bilateral meeting prior to the opening of the BRICS Leader’s Summit, October 22 2024, in Kazan, Tatarstan Republic, Russia.
Russian President Vladimir Putin greets Chinese President Xi Jinping during their bilateral meeting prior to the opening of the BRICS Leader’s Summit, October 22 2024, in Kazan, Tatarstan Republic, Russia.
Contributor/Getty Images

The past few weeks have seen tensions between North and South Korea reach their highest level in years.

Pyongyang has formally renounced is desire to unify with South Korea, amending its constitution in January to define Seoul as the country’s “principal enemy.”

More recently, the country has begun fortifying its positions near the Demilitarized Zone, stationing troops near the border, and threatened Seoul with military retaliation following reports that a South Korean drone had entered its airspace.

These actions, as well as the recently confirmed reports that Pyongyang is sending troops to Russia, creates a difficult balancing act for China, one of the country’s few global allies.

On Wednesday, The New York Times reported on claims that Russia could be providing Pyongyang with weapons in exchange for the troop transfers, and said that this “could embolden the North to act more aggressively,” which it added would “diminish Beijing’s ability to influence the reclusive state.”

Do you have a story we should be covering? Do you have any questions about this article? Contact LiveNews@newsweek.com.

Comments are closed.