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Top US official says China-Russia partnership is growing and threatens Washington’s interests

US Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell says Xi Jinping’s alliance with and support of Vladimir Putin has strongly affected Ukraine war

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US Deputy Secretary of State Kurt M. Campbell (C) attends a US-ROK-Japan trilateral meeting at the foreign ministry in Seoul, South Korea in October. Photo: EPA-EFE
Kawala Xiein Washington

The No 2 US envoy warned on Friday that the ties between China and Russia are growing and threatening the interests of Washington and its allies, two months before the current administration turns over control of the government to Donald Trump.

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Speaking at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, US Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell also said that US President Joe Biden’s administration worked to avert the growing China-Russia partnership, which is “only coming into view” and could have a profound impact on the Ukraine war.

Chinese President Xi Jinping and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin have “chosen each other” in the current strategic environment, Campbell said, with China providing support to Russia’s defence industrial base.

“In many respects, these two leaders chose each other and believe they have a lot to offer to one another, and that partnership, while largely hidden and rarely fully unveiled, is animating itself in a number of ways that are going to be deeply concerning,” he said.

“I’m not sure that we could have averted or dented or disrupted this growing alliance, but I will also say we tried, and at the ultimate level China and Russia have chosen this path together in ways that will animate global politics that are only now coming into view.”

02:07

Xi and Putin vow stronger China-Russia cooperation to counter Western-led world order

Xi and Putin vow stronger China-Russia cooperation to counter Western-led world order

On the Biden administration’s handling of US-China relations, he said there is “a growing frustration” on the difficulty to make progress in areas with common interests because of “the profound distrust” from Beijing.

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