Xi - Putin stage high-stakes Beijing summit as China positions itself at centre of global disorder

WorldPolitics
20 May 2026 • 9:14 AM MYT
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Xi - Putin stage high-stakes Beijing summit as China positions itself at centre of global disorder

CHINA’S President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin are set to hold a closely scrutinised summit in Beijing on Wednesday aimed at reinforcing their expanding strategic partnership amid intensifying global geopolitical divisions and mounting tensions with the West.

The high-profile meeting comes just days after U.S. President Donald Trump concluded a heavily watched visit to the Chinese capital, placing Beijing once again at the centre of global diplomatic attention as rival world powers compete for influence in an increasingly fragmented international order.

Reuters reported on Wednesday that the summit is expected to feature formal bilateral discussions, the signing of approximately 40 agreements and an informal private tea session between Xi and Putin — a symbolic diplomatic gesture that Chinese political observers often interpret as a sign of personal trust and political closeness.

The Kremlin said it held “serious expectations” for the visit, which will also include a state banquet and the release of a lengthy joint statement reaffirming the strengthening relationship between Moscow and Beijing.

Putin, who has repeatedly referred to Xi as a “dear friend”, arrived in Beijing on Tuesday evening and was welcomed by Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi alongside an honour guard and groups of youths waving Chinese and Russian national flags.

The carefully choreographed visit is widely viewed as an opportunity for China to showcase its growing influence as a global diplomatic power capable of balancing relationships with major rivals and allies alike.

“Beijing is loving the optics of this. They're loving being the centre of world attention, and they will be playing it for their domestic audience for all that it's worth,” said Graeme Smith, senior fellow at the Australian National University’s Pacific Affairs department.

“In some ways, Xi is benefiting from the emotional instability of both those world leaders,” he said, referring to Trump’s preference for political spectacle and Putin’s long-standing public camaraderie with Xi.

The symbolism surrounding Xi’s diplomatic engagements has also drawn attention. During Putin’s previous visit to Beijing in May 2024, the two leaders reportedly removed their ties while holding outdoor tea discussions in Zhongnanhai, the former imperial garden compound that now houses China’s Communist Party leadership and government offices.

In contrast, Trump’s recent tour of the same compound and his visit to the Temple of Heaven were viewed by analysts as more formal and carefully managed public displays.

The summit also arrives at a significant moment for China-Russia economic relations, with bilateral trade recovering after last year’s decline. Trade between the two countries reportedly rose by 16.1 per cent during the first four months of 2026 compared with the same period in 2025.

Total trade between the two countries reached 1.63 trillion yuan (US$240 billion) in 2025, although that represented a 6.5 per cent decline from the record levels achieved in 2024 and marked the first downturn in five years.

Facing mounting economic pressure from Western sanctions linked to the war in Ukraine, Moscow increasingly views China as a crucial economic lifeline. Putin has acknowledged the need to reverse the decline in bilateral trade and arrived in Beijing accompanied by deputy prime ministers, ministers and senior executives from major state corporations and banks.

Analysts expect energy cooperation to dominate part of the discussions, including renewed negotiations surrounding the proposed Power of Siberia 2 gas pipeline linking Russia to northern China.

The project has gained renewed strategic relevance amid global energy supply concerns and instability linked to conflict in Iran, although experts believe Beijing may continue pursuing a diversified energy supply strategy rather than becoming overly dependent on Russian gas.

Xi and Putin are also expected to issue a joint declaration promoting a “multipolar world order” and what the Kremlin described as a “new type of international relations”, reinforcing their shared opposition to Western-led global dominance.

The meeting further underscores the growing depth of the so-called “no limits” partnership between China and Russia, which has strengthened significantly since the West imposed sweeping sanctions on Moscow following the invasion of Ukraine. - May 20, 2026