Xi hosts Putin in Beijing days after Trump
BEIJING
FILE - Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, and Chinese President Xi Jinping greet each other in Tianjin, China, on Aug. 31, 2025. (Sergei Bobylev, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP, File)
Russian President Vladimir Putin arrives in Beijing on Tuesday for a summit with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, looking to deepen a strategic partnership stretching from Scandinavia to Southeast Asia.
Underpinning the two nuclear powers' relations is China's economic heft complemented by Russia's vast oil production, likely at the forefront of talks this week.
Putin is a regular visitor to China and has met Xi dozens of times, with the two leaders often calling to extend messages, condolences and congratulations — including birthday wishes.
This week marks his 25th trip to China, Beijing's foreign ministry said Monday.
The Russian leader last visited China in September as Xi's guest of honour to a massive military parade.
Putin said this week he was "confident" he and Xi would "do everything possible to deepen the Russia-China partnership".
Beijing frames its relationship with Moscow as "ironclad" — and after welcoming Trump with pomp and ceremony, Xi will be keen to show China-Russia ties remain strong as ever, experts said.
It is a "reminder to Washington that this is a solid relationship of 30 years-plus standing", said Natasha Kuhrt of King's College London.
That image is a priority for Putin, who calls Xi a "dear friend", added Zhao Long, from the Shanghai Institutes for International Studies.
"Moscow wants reassurance that Russia still occupies a privileged place in China's strategic calculus," he said.
The China-Russia relationship, however, is far from equal.
Bilateral trade has surged since Russia's invasion of Ukraine to more than double the level seen in 2020, according to data from the Mercator Institute for China Studies (MERICS).
More than 70 percent of China's imports from Russia consisted of mineral fuel, it added, with Russian oil exports to China rising around 30 percent since 2022.
However, imports from Russia accounted for only around 5 percent of China's imports in 2025, according to Chinese customs data.
Conversely, China accounted for more than a third of Russia's imports and more than a quarter of its exports in 2025, according to the Russian news agency TASS.
Nevertheless, the two countries, whose border spans 4,000 kilometres (2,500 miles), share common opposition to a world order dominated by the United States and the West.
They are also long-standing partners of Iran and North Korea.
Days after Trump
Putin's trip — his first abroad this year — comes days after Trump visited Beijing and experts say the back-to-back nature of the meetings is "significant" — despite schedules set long in advance.
The order of the visits means "Xi can obviously brief Putin on the takeaways from the Trump meeting", Kuhrt said.
In Beijing, Trump lavished Xi with praise, calling him a "great leader", and touted "fantastic trade deals" and shared desires for deals in Ukraine and Iran.
"China and Russia do often coordinate strategically before and after interactions with other major powers, which itself reflects a high level of mutual trust," said Zhao.
But, he said, the timing "should not be overinterpreted".
Xi held calls with the U.S. and Russian leaders on the same day in February, speaking first to Putin via video before phoning Trump hours later.
Ukraine sidelined?
Russia's four-year invasion of Ukraine was among a list of thorny issues Trump and Xi discussed last week.
"It's one that we'd like to see settled," Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One after departing the Chinese capital.
But while reaching a conclusion on Ukraine is a priority for Putin, China "is unlikely to become the principal architect of the settlement process", Zhao said.
"Any concrete ceasefire arrangements or political roadmap will ultimately depend on the initiative of the key actors involved."
This week, Putin and Xi will discuss "international and regional issues of common concern", a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman said Monday.
China has regularly called for talks to end the fighting, but it has never condemned Russia for sending troops into Ukraine and presents itself as a neutral party.
Beijing also denies providing Moscow with weapons and military components for its defence industry.
Pipeline progress
China is the world's top buyer of Russian fossil fuels, making it a key economic partner of Moscow, which is facing Western sanctions on oil and gas over the Ukraine war.
The two countries are in discussion over the building of a major "Power of Siberia 2" natural gas pipeline from Russia to China through Mongolia, a land alternative to crude imported by sea from the Middle East.
"For Putin the relationship is clearly more important than ever, especially in economic terms," Kuhrt said.
The Iran war could boost Russia's chances of the pipeline being built, she added, with China directly affected by the lack of petroleum crossing the Strait of Hormuz since strikes began on February 28.
But, she said, Beijing "tends to prefer diversity of supply".
"China would not want to be too dependent on Russia for energy," Kuhrt said.
In last week's talks, Xi agreed to help Washington re-open the Strait of Hormuz, Trump told Fox News.