Editor’s Note for Thursday, March 24, 2022

A note for Access newsletter readers from Lucas Niewenhuis.

Dear reader,

Our word of the day is โ€œno forbidden areas, but a bottom lineโ€ (ๆฒกๆœ‰็ฆๅŒบไฝ†ๆœ‰ๅบ•็บฟ mรฉiyว’u jรฌnqลซ dร n yว’u dวxiร n). Chinaโ€™s ambassador to the U.S., Qรญn Gฤng ็งฆๅˆš, used this phrase yesterday (in Chinese) to clarify the โ€œno limitsโ€ interpretation of China-Russia ties stemming from the two countriesโ€™ February 4 joint statement.

That joint statement was released in full in Chinese by the Chinese foreign ministry, and in English by the Kremlin, but China has never released its own English-language version. The line where the countries state โ€” just 20 days before Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine โ€” that โ€œFriendship between the two States has no limits, there are no โ€˜forbiddenโ€™ areas of cooperation,โ€ has undoubtedly proved a headache for Beijing. Joseph Webster wrote on The China Project that Beijing โ€œengaged in some damage controlโ€ throughout February, but Qin seems aware that the damage is sticking, particularly in Washington, where he is based.

Itโ€™s unclear if the PR effort will be effective, not least because Qin defines the bottom line as โ€œthe tenets and principles of the United Nations Charter, the recognized basic norms of international law and international relationsโ€ โ€” especially when 141 countries voted at the UN to condemn Russiaโ€™s invasion the week after it began.