Komödie in drei Akten vom 26. 04. 2023

27. April 2023

26. 04. 2023

Chi­ne­se Pre­si­dent Xi Jin­ping spo­ke with Ukrai­ni­an Pre­si­dent Volo­dym­yr Zelen­sky on the pho­ne on Wed­nes­day, Bei­jing and Kyiv said, the first call bet­ween the two lea­ders sin­ce the start of Russia’s invasion.

I had a long and mea­ning­ful pho­ne call with Pre­si­dent Xi Jin­ping,” Zelen­sky said on Twit­ter. “I belie­ve that this call, as well as the appoint­ment of Ukraine’s ambassa­dor to Chi­na, will give a power­ful impe­tus to the deve­lo­p­ment of our bila­te­ral rela­ti­ons,” he wro­te. Zelensky’s spo­kes­man Ser­giy Nyky­fo­rov said on Face­book that the two had “an almost one-hour-long tele­pho­ne conversation.”

After the call, Ukrai­ni­an Pre­si­dent Volo­dym­yr Zelen­sky appoin­ted a new ambassa­dor to Bei­jing. Pavel Rya­bi­kin, who pre­vious­ly hea­ded the minis­try of stra­te­gic indus­tries of Ukrai­ne, was named Kyiv’s new envoy to Chi­na, accord­ing to a decree on the presidency’s web­site. Ukrai­ne has not had an ambassa­dor to Chi­na sin­ce Febru­a­ry 2021.

Chi­ne­se sta­te broad­cas­ter CCTV repor­ted that during the call Xi told Zelen­sky “talks and nego­tia­ti­on” were the “only way out” of the war. “On the issue of the Ukrai­ne cri­sis, Chi­na has always stood on the side of peace and its core posi­ti­on is to pro­mo­te peace talks,” CCTV repor­ted Xi as saying.

Chi­na also announ­ced they will send a dele­ga­ti­on to Ukrai­ne with the aim of fin­ding a “poli­ti­cal sett­le­ment” to the con­flict. “The Chi­ne­se side will send a spe­cial repre­sen­ta­ti­ve of the Chi­ne­se government on Eura­si­an affairs to visit Ukrai­ne and other coun­tries to con­duct in-depth com­mu­ni­ca­ti­on with all par­ties for a poli­ti­cal sett­le­ment of the Ukrai­ni­an cri­sis,” China’s for­eign minis­try said at a press con­fe­rence on Wednesday.

Rus­sia accu­ses Ukrai­ne of under­mi­ning peace
Respon­ding to the call, Moscow on Wed­nes­day accu­sed Kyiv of under­mi­ning any peace attempts. “The Ukrai­ni­an aut­ho­ri­ties and their Wes­tern min­ders have alrea­dy shown their abi­li­ty to mess up any peace initia­ti­ves,” the Rus­si­an for­eign minis­try said, noting “the rea­di­ness of the Chi­ne­se side to make efforts to estab­lish a nego­tia­ti­on process.”

Accord­ing to a rea­dout of the call, repor­ted by CCTV, Xi said Chi­na “will neit­her watch the fire from the other side, nor add fuel to the fire, let alo­ne take advan­ta­ge of the cri­sis to profit.”

When dealing with the nuclear issue, all par­ties con­cer­ned should remain calm and restrai­ned, tru­ly focus on the future and desti­ny of them­sel­ves and all man­kind, and joint­ly mana­ge and con­trol the cri­sis,” Xi said. Bei­jing says it is neu­tral in the con­flict and Xi has never con­dem­ned the Rus­si­an invasion.

Zelen­sky has said repeated­ly he would be open to talks with his Chi­ne­se coun­ter­part Xi. In Febru­a­ry, Bei­jing unvei­led a 12-point paper cal­ling for a “poli­ti­cal sett­le­ment” to the cri­sis in Ukraine.

Chi­na as a neu­tral party

The docu­ment por­tray­ed Chi­na as a neu­tral par­ty and urged the two sides to enter into peace nego­tia­ti­ons. The paper’s first point was that “the sov­er­eig­n­ty, inde­pen­dence and ter­ri­to­ri­al inte­gri­ty of all coun­tries must be effec­tively upheld.” But Chi­na has con­sist­ent­ly refu­sed to expand upon how that rela­tes to the spe­ci­fics of the Ukrai­ne war, which was trig­ge­red when Moscow’s for­ces inva­ded their neighbor.

In the paper, Bei­jing cal­led on Rus­sia and Ukrai­ne to resu­me peace talks, sta­ting that “dia­lo­gue and nego­tia­ti­on are the only via­ble solution.”

src: click

Krim.

The docu­ment was met by skep­ti­cism from Ukraine’s allies, with NATO chief Jens Stol­ten­berg say­ing Bei­jing “does­n’t have much credi­bi­li­ty becau­se they have not been able to con­demn the ille­gal inva­si­on of Ukrai­ne.” Many at the time poin­ted to the fact Xi had met with Putin but not even cal­led Zelen­sky as evi­dence that Chi­na was not the impar­ti­al obser­ver it clai­med to be.

Die Ukrai­ne hat den Krieg nicht begon­nen, sie muss aber ihre Sou­ve­rä­ni­tät und ter­ri­to­ria­le Inte­gri­tät wie­der­her­stel­len. Das erklär­te Prä­si­dent Wolo­dym­yr Selen­skyj in einem Tele­fon­ge­spräch mit Staats­chef Chi­nas Xi Jin­ping am Mitt­woch, teilt das ukrai­ni­sche Prä­si­di­al­bü­ro mit.
„In den inter­na­tio­nal aner­kann­ten Gren­zen von 1991. Ein­schließ­lich der Krim. Das ent­spricht völ­lig den Zie­len und Grund­sät­zen der UN-Charta“, sag­te Selen­skyj wei­ter. Er schloss auch Kom­pro­mis­se bezüg­lich des ukrai­ni­schen Ter­ri­to­ri­ums aus.

Der ukrai­ni­sche Prä­si­dent infor­mier­te Xi Jin­ping über die Lage an der Front und beton­te, dass sie schwer ist. Die Ukrai­ner ver­tei­di­gen ihren Boden und wer­den das wei­ter tun, so Selenskyj.

Die Poli­ti­ker stell­ten im Gespräch die Wich­tig­keit der Bemü­hun­gen für den Frie­den fest, heißt es. Selen­skyj hob spe­zi­ell her­vor, wie wich­tig sei es, dass alle Staa­ten auf die Kriegs­un­ter­stüt­zung für Russ­land, dar­un­ter Waf­fen­lie­fe­run­gen, ver­zich­ten. Russ­land wer­de jede Unter­stüt­zung für sei­ne Aggres­si­on ver­wen­den. „Je weni­ger Unter­stüt­zung Russ­land erhält, des­to schnel­ler wird der Krieg zu Ende sein und die Ruhe in die inter­na­tio­na­len Bezie­hun­gen zurück­keh­ren“, sag­te er.

src: click

Fra­ge: Was denkst du dir jetzt als Lei­ter der chi­ne­si­schen Dele­ga­ti­on in der Ulrai­ne “with the aim of fin­ding a “poli­ti­cal sett­le­ment” to the conflict”.

A. Schon scheiße.
B. Jens Stol­ten­berg ist der Vor­sit­zen­de eines Ver­tei­di­gungs­bünd­ni­ses, das an die­sem Kon­flikt gänz­lich unbe­tei­ligt ist, oder
C. Die­ser ver­schla­gen­de Rus­se schon wie­der, der die gan­ze Zeit lügt, Kyiv und der Wes­ten wür­den alle Frie­dens­in­itia­ti­ven unterminieren.









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