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Di Giannantonio takes Brazil MotoGP pole ahead of Bezzecchi, Marquez
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Welbeck scores twice to dent Liverpool's top-five hopes
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US strikes Iran bases threatening blocked Hormuz oil route
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Pirovano wins World Cup downhill title, Aicher puts pressure on Shiffrin
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Doroshchuk wins Ukraine's second world indoor gold, Hodgkinson and Alfred coast
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K-pop kings BTS stun Seoul in '2.0' comeback concert
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French prosecutors suspect Musk encouraged deepfakes row to inflate X value
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Kenya, Uganda open rail extension burdened by Chinese debt
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K-pop kings BTS rock Seoul in comeback concert
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Invincible Japan edge Australia to win Women's Asian Cup
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Italy's Paris claims first win of season in World Cup downhill finale
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Dortmund extend injured captain Can's contract
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Iranians mark Eid as Trump mulls winding down war
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BTS fans take over central Seoul for K-pop kings' comeback
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Top-ranked Alcaraz, Sabalenka win Miami openers
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BTS takes over central Seoul for comeback concert
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US jury finds Elon Musk misled Twitter shareholders
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Trump says considering 'winding down' Iran war but rules out ceasefire
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Trump mulls 'winding down' Iran war
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Man Utd held by Bournemouth after Maguire sees red
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Lens go top of Ligue 1 with handsome Angers win
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Leipzig pummel Hoffenheim to climb to third
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Anthony, Jackson nail US double at world indoors
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US newcomer Anthony crowned world indoor sprint king
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Trump slams NATO 'cowards' as more Marines head to Middle East
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Attacked Russian tanker drifting toward Libya: Italian authorities
Why China props up Putin
Beijing’s refusal to condemn Moscow’s full-scale assault on Ukraine has hardened into active, if carefully calibrated, material support. Customs and corporate-registration data show Chinese firms now dominate the flow of critical metals, micro-electronics and dual-use components that keep Russia’s defence industry alive, even as Western sanctions tighten.
Recent investigative dossiers detail how small export-intermediaries in coastal provinces label drone engines as “industrial refrigeration units,” allowing them to cross Eurasia by rail and re-appear inside Shahed-style loitering munitions launched against Odesa and Kyiv.
The trade underpinning this pipeline is immense. Despite a 9 % year-on-year dip, bilateral turnover still exceeded $106 billion in the first half of 2025, with Chinese car parts, machine tools and consumer electronics filling gaps left by departing Western brands. Energy sits at the core of the partnership. Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin agreed in May to fast-track the 50 bcm-per-year “Power of Siberia 2” gas link, which would lock in discounted Siberian gas for decades and give Moscow a lifeline as European demand evaporates.
Financial ties deepen in parallel. By late 2024 more than a third of Russia’s trade was settled in yuan, helping the Kremlin skirt dollar clearing and accelerating Beijing’s long-term bid to internationalise its currency. Yet 98 % of Chinese banks now refuse direct rouble deals, a sign of how carefully Beijing manages sanctions exposure. Strategically, Chinese planners see virtue in a protracted conflict that drains U.S. and European arsenals, diverts NATO bandwidth, and tests Western sanctions architecture—all while avoiding outright Russian collapse that could leave a NATO-leaning vacuum on China’s northern frontier.
Washington and Brussels are responding. The EU is preparing its first penalties on Chinese banks accused of laundering Russian transactions, while Kyiv has black-listed several mainland suppliers implicated in drone production.
Still, Beijing judges the benefits—energy security, discounted commodities, a pliant strategic partner, and valuable combat data for its own doctrine—outweigh the risks. The partnership remains officially “no-limits,” but in practice it is bounded by one overriding calculation: help Moscow enough to bleed Ukraine and frustrate the West, yet not so openly that secondary sanctions threaten China’s wider economic ambitions.