-
周波:特朗普要求中國介入斡旋俄烏沖突,這真有點(diǎn)黑色幽默
以下為原文:
When I wrote in the Financial Times in 2023 that even though China has nothing to do with the Ukraine war, the longer it drags on, the more people will look to Beijing as a broker, I never expected Donald Trump to be re-elected as US president and ask China for help.
At the World Economic Forum in Davos, Trump said he had reached out to President Xi Jinping during a phone call and described China as having “a great deal of power over that situation”.
There is a grain of black humour when the man who vowed to end the war within 24 hours asks China to step in. However, Trump didn’t even need to ask. A year after Russia invaded, China proposed a 12-point peace plan.
Last year, Beijing in collaboration with Brazil also launched the Group of Friends for Peace on the Ukraine Crisis, which includes several other nations. However, these efforts haven’t been successful. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky even called the China-Brazil peace initiative “destructive”.
Beijing cannot help single-handedly. At a time when Moscow and Kyiv believe they must keep fighting, no outside proposals will work. Russian President Vladimir Putin wants to take back Kursk and have full control of four Ukrainian regions while Zelensky is bent on joining Nato even at the cost of losing some territory.
Can China and the US work together to end the war in Ukraine? The answer is yes. To do so, they should take the lead on a plan where major powers offer a collective security guarantee.
A collective security guarantee is indelible in the memory of Ukrainians. In the 1990s, states with nuclear weapons – the US, Russia, Britain and France – provided such an assurance to Ukraine in exchange for Kyiv returning Soviet-era nuclear weapons to Russia. And, in 2013, China pledged not to use nuclear weapons against Ukraine and to provide security assurances in the event of aggression, or the threat of aggression, against Ukraine using nuclear weapons.
Now, facing the largest nuclear power in the world, Ukraine fears that any ceasefire may not be durable. In March 2022, Zelensky said Ukraine must have a collective security agreement with all its neighbours and the participation of the world’s leading powers.
Russia also needs a collective security guarantee. It most certainly doesn’t want to look isolated vis-a-vis a Western security defence of Ukraine. At the Eastern Economic Forum in Vladivostok last year, Putin described Brazil, China and India as trusted partners who could act as intermediaries in possible negotiations with Ukraine. Putin has also repeatedly thanked China for its “balanced position” on the conflict.
Trump is a self-proclaimed deal maker. However, in any deal between the US and Russia, Putin ultimately holds the trump card. Russia outguns and outnumbers Ukraine. It arguably has the upper hand on the battlefield.
However, Trump does have a unique advantage. As president of the country sending the most weapons to Ukraine, he can use his leverage on both parties. If Russia doesn’t meet his conditions, he can provide more weapons to Ukraine to keep fighting. If Ukraine doesn’t agree to a deal, he can reduce or even threaten to stop military aid.
Trump has called for an immediate ceasefire followed by negotiations. This is putting the cart before the horse since a ceasefire is seldom, if ever, agreed on without negotiations. Worse still, when negotiations fail, war might break out again.
What conditions could guarantee a ceasefire and what would be the terms of the agreement? Furthermore, if an armistice came after a ceasefire, as widely anticipated, where would the demarcation lines lie?
Amid a grinding stalemate, there are no clear answers to these questions yet. For Ukraine, a ceasefire along the current lines of combat would mean losing nearly 20 per cent of its territory and tens of thousands of soldiers and civilians, only to be kept outside Nato, a military alliance perceived by the country’s leadership as the only trustworthy security guarantee.
Meanwhile, Russia fears not only potentially losing four annexed Ukrainian regions, but also Kursk, an indisputable part of Russian territory. However, any solution invariably relies on the mediation of major powers and the promise of collective security guarantees.
Another prospect would be a peacekeeping initiative. In dialogue with Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, French President Emmanuel Macron proposed a European peacekeeping mission composed of troops from Nato countries to ensure Moscow adheres to a potential ceasefire. Most recently, in Davos, Zelensky called for Europe to send at least 200,000 soldiers as peacekeepers.
This is a fool’s errand. Russia will most certainly take this to be a manifestation of Nato’s presence in Ukraine. Isn’t Nato’s expansion into Ukraine one of the stated reasons Putin gave for launching the war? If a peacekeeping mission is needed, it would be best to select troops from countries that are neutral, rather than from European countries.
There are now only 11 UN peacekeeping missions deployed around the world compared with 16 during the early days of Trump’s first term. So there is more than enough manpower for global peacekeeping. In this regard, countries such as China – the largest contributor of troops among the five permanent UN Security Council members – would be more acceptable.
In the fog of war, we only know what late US secretary of defence Donald Rumsfeld described as a “known unknown”, which means we know something exists that we don’t know. No one knows how long this war will last but it is good that a unilateralist American president knows now that he needs help.
本文系觀察者網(wǎng)獨(dú)家稿件,文章內(nèi)容純屬作者個(gè)人觀點(diǎn),不代表平臺(tái)觀點(diǎn),未經(jīng)授權(quán),不得轉(zhuǎn)載,否則將追究法律責(zé)任。關(guān)注觀察者網(wǎng)微信guanchacn,每日閱讀趣味文章。
標(biāo)簽 俄烏戰(zhàn)爭-
本文僅代表作者個(gè)人觀點(diǎn)。
- 責(zé)任編輯: 唐曉甫 
-
布林肯和沙利文的安全許可也撤了
2025-02-09 08:51 美國政治 -
加勒比海開曼群島附近海域發(fā)生8.0級(jí)地震
2025-02-09 07:56 地震 -
以軍將從加沙地帶內(nèi)察里姆走廊撤離
2025-02-09 07:32 巴以恩仇錄 -
萬人大裁員,又被叫停了…
2025-02-08 22:59 應(yīng)對(duì)特朗普沖擊波 -
又一出好戲:“FBI局長,就這??”
2025-02-08 22:44 應(yīng)對(duì)特朗普沖擊波 -
每分鐘1600通電話涌入,“美國政治體系瀕臨崩潰”
2025-02-08 22:07 美國一夢 -
“如此之快,震驚了”
2025-02-08 21:27 應(yīng)對(duì)特朗普沖擊波 -
“紙吸管根本不好使,下周我們重回塑料時(shí)代!”
2025-02-08 20:26 特朗普 -
日本第二個(gè)P4實(shí)驗(yàn)室建成,當(dāng)?shù)鼐用竦种疲罕仍訌椷€恐怖
2025-02-08 19:37 日本 -
“中國無法創(chuàng)新的迷思破滅,我們或錯(cuò)失下次產(chǎn)業(yè)革命”
2025-02-08 19:37 中美關(guān)系 -
“日本之恥”又沖上熱搜……
2025-02-08 17:01 日本首相 -
白宮下令:立刻取消,所有!
2025-02-08 16:31 應(yīng)對(duì)特朗普沖擊波 -
“中國進(jìn)攻性太強(qiáng)了,咱們得聯(lián)手…”
2025-02-08 15:54 應(yīng)對(duì)特朗普沖擊波 -
中國小包裹的勝利?“特朗普老謀深算,不要輕敵”
2025-02-08 15:26 應(yīng)對(duì)特朗普沖擊波 -
“生物醫(yī)藥也迎來DeepSeek時(shí)刻,中國比美國又快又便宜”
2025-02-08 15:04 -
特朗普指控南非“歧視白人”?!
2025-02-08 14:27 應(yīng)對(duì)特朗普沖擊波 -
特朗普:DeepSeek不會(huì)對(duì)國家安全構(gòu)成威脅
2025-02-08 14:04 人工智能 -
馬斯克對(duì)美國能源部動(dòng)手了
2025-02-08 13:59 -
他話音剛落,俄大使火速“打臉”:不改就免談!
2025-02-08 13:14 -
美媒挑撥,特朗普回應(yīng)
2025-02-08 12:30 美國政治
相關(guān)推薦 -
“中國猛龍首露利爪,實(shí)戰(zhàn)證明自身價(jià)值” 評(píng)論 34印巴的“火”停了,但水呢? 評(píng)論 103停火第一夜,印巴互相指責(zé) 評(píng)論 191王毅分別同印巴雙方通話 評(píng)論 229最新聞 Hot
-
“特朗普夜不能寐,搞定全球問題比想象難得多”
-
靠岸中國貨船數(shù)“歸零”,美西港口官員驚到了
-
“出軌女下屬”,英國海軍一把手被免職
-
“聽加州的,否則美國最大經(jīng)濟(jì)體地位不?!?/a>
-
流浪53年后,蘇聯(lián)金星探測器墜落地球
-
伊朗官員:美國不真誠,一開始就設(shè)陷阱
-
?;鸬谝灰?,印巴互相指責(zé)
-
為什么選出美國籍教皇?梵蒂岡消息人士:還不是因?yàn)樘乩势?/a>
-
普京提議:15日,俄烏直接談
-
王毅分別同印巴雙方通話
-
印度稱“不想升級(jí)”,巴方想“就此打住”
-
英法德波領(lǐng)導(dǎo)人訪問基輔,將與澤連斯基共同討論?;饐栴}
-
印軍否認(rèn)S-400防空系統(tǒng)被摧毀
-
印度前高官:勸巴基斯坦,中國的話好使
-
空中爆炸!巴軍通報(bào)7日空戰(zhàn)細(xì)節(jié),含擊落“陣風(fēng)”錄音
-
要松口了?印官員稱將“適時(shí)”公開
-