Clara Ferreira Marques, Columnist

China Is Winning the Post-Ukraine Game, at Russia’s Expense

Ukraine’s rapid advances on the battlefield have left both Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping in an uncomfortable position heading into this week’s summit in Central Asia. Moscow should keep its expectations low.

We meet again.

Photographer: Alexei Druzhinin/AFP/Getty Images

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For his return to geopolitical frontlines after almost three years of Covid-19 isolation, Xi Jinping has chosen something of a victory lap.

The Chinese leader is set to visit Central Asia, starting in Kazakhstan on Wednesday and then moving on to a Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit in Uzbekistan. There he’ll meet Vladimir Putin for their first encounter since the Russian president traveled to the opening of the Beijing Olympics in February, shook hands with his counterpart, declared a friendship with “no limits” — and then launched an assault on Ukraine. It’ll be a week of political theater, and one from which Moscow, under growing pressure on the battlefield, should expect few substantial gains.