Home » Russia is merging China: a political scientist named signs indicating this

Russia is merging China: a political scientist named signs indicating this

by alex

Russia has always played against China/Channel 24 Collage/Getty Images

In China, officials are systematically disappearing under mysterious circumstances. Thus, former Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang first disappeared after leaving his post in July 2023, and on December 6 it became known that he died in a military hospital in Beijing.

According to preliminary information, Qin Gang could have committed suicide or died as a result of torture. Political scientist Nikolai Davydyuk told Channel 24, how Russia could be involved and why Xi Jinping’s policies are connected to past grievances.

Russia has always played against China

According to Davidyuk, cooperation between any country and Russia always ends in “Russian roulette.” It all starts brightly, with a lot of promises and good words, but ends with sadness and the “random” disappearance of people.

These games that started are very are important for China to understand that Russia is not playing for them. Russia whines and comes running when they need something, but in foreign markets, in particular in the West, Russia plays against China, merging its interests and secrets, trying to prevent China from strengthening, the political scientist emphasized.

Whenever possible, Russia always pits the West and the Middle Kingdom against each other. Moscow creates chaos, has no friends and is jealous of Beijing. China is a socialist and communist project that succeeded, but in Russia it did not; the occupiers were unable to build a large and strong state.

The Russians created a country of losers and the past, on the remnants of which are trying to play with the Chinese. At the same time, China ranks second in the world in terms of economy, although it also started from the bottom.

The Celestial Empire did not play games, entering foreign markets and the conditional battlefield. Now Beijing has realized that it is possible to recruit Chinese ministers and blackmail officials with a mistress left over from their time at the institute. arena. Well, China is learning and wants to be in first place – we need to get used to such things, there will be a lot of them,” Davidyuk noted.

Xi’s policy – ​​complex past vicissitudes

According to Davidyuk, Xi Jinping is surprised that at a high political level a person can work for an ideological enemy from the first handshake.

As we see, Xi makes decisions and punishes not just with dismissals. Creates precedents so that others understand how the system and the machine work, suggested Nikolai Davidyuk. Deng Xiaoping was repressed. A former close ally of Mao Zedong was accused of anti-party conspiracy and expelled from Beijing to Henan Province (Chinese Siberia), and was kept under arrest during the years of the Cultural Revolution.

< strong>Davidyuk on relations between Russia and China: watch video

When Xi Jinping was growing up in the Chinese Communist Party, he remembered the grievance and was already punishing adherents from the line of Deng Xiaoping. Having led China, Xi concentrated party power in his hands and established control over the army. Since the beginning of his reign, Xi Jinping has launched a large-scale anti-corruption campaign, which led to the arrest of many officials. suffered from party vicissitudes. They interrogated and did not let me sleep. Xi is quite autocratic. He has his own understanding of “great China,” so he approaches this quite clearly, looking at people as a resource and materials. – summed up Nikolai Davidyuk.

In China, officials are increasingly being removed from their positions

  • Former Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang stopped appearing in public on June 25. The disappearance and further removal of the minister could be connected with Rudenko’s visit to Beijing. During this trip, the deputy head of the Russian Foreign Ministry allegedly conveyed information to Xi Jinping that Qin Gang and the relatives of several officials were passing on China's “nuclear secrets” to the intelligence services of Western countries.
  • Also this year Missing commander Li Yuchao, his deputy Liu Guangbin, and former deputy Zhang Zhengzhong disappeared. a rare occurrence, since senior missile force commanders were almost always promoted from within the service, the publication said.
  • Shortly after the purge of the missile forces was officially recognized, Li Shangfu also disappeared , whom Chinese President Xi Jinping appointed China's Minister of Defense in March this year. His official dismissal was announced at the end of October.

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