The Atlantic

China’s Two-Faced Approach to Gaza

Xi Jinping poses as a peacemaker but stokes disorder.
Source: Illustration by The Atlantic. Source: Ken Ishii / Getty.

A new pattern is emerging in Chinese foreign policy that bodes poorly for global stability: Chinese leader Xi Jinping pretends to favor peaceful resolutions to international conflicts while actually encouraging the world’s most destabilizing forces.

In the Middle East, Beijing has vociferously called for an end to the fighting between Israel and Hamas and claims to take an evenhanded approach to the belligerents. But the Chinese government is, in effect, backing Hamas—and therefore terrorism. Xi’s position on Gaza is identical to his stance on the world’s other major conflict, the war in Ukraine. There, too, Beijing has asserted principled neutrality and even launched a peace mission, while at the same time deepening ties to Russia and its president, Vladimir Putin.

[Read: China plays peacemaker]

Beijing seeks to exploit both of with his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, while the Russian army was grinding up civilians in Ukraine.

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