The main issue, however, is China's willingness and ability to refuse or circumvent international sanctions, and to increase its own footprint and technological cooperation with Russia. Communication and digital equipment are first on the list of "modest" Chinese exports to Russia (USD68 billion, in fact twelve times the French sales to Moscow). However, the United States has enacted export bans on semiconductors, and the recent Huawei case shows the extent to which, in some areas, Chinese production remains dependent on patents or components, including from third countries (and Taiwan) whose flows the United States can control. The civil aviation sector is also affected in the medium term. After the C919, China has started a project with Russia for the C929, a larger aircraft for which the engines are to be developed with Aviadvigatel, of the Russian United Engine Corporation (UEC). On the one hand, Russian and Chinese technology gaps implied associating one or the other Western engine manufacturers. This is now impossible, and where would such an aircraft be sold if the sanctions are maintained, or where would it fly to?
These examples highlight that a complete decoupling from the United States and other parties implementing technological sanctions requires Russian and Chinese joint self-sufficiency, and that beyond the Sino-Russian market, their products are accepted in significant third markets. With regard to aviation, both Russia and China are still far from reaching this point. Military cooperation, on the other hand, does not pose the same problems.
On less than critical technologies, one could envisage a field day for Chinese companies - as happened in Iran under Western sanctions. Not only low end consumer goods, but now also such products as automobiles, are a perfect example. The catch, however, is how to pay for increased Chinese exports, if the US and EU are serious about their financial blockade. China and Russia have prepared for some financial self-sufficiency. There is a very strong convergence of Chinese and Russian policies: both have maintained (China) or acquired (Russia) a balanced budget, and while Russia has built USD640 billion in foreign exchange reserves from the energy rent, Xi's China has moderated its appetite for domestic debt. Other features are common to both regimes: the creation of international payment systems that offer an alternative to SWIFT (even if the Chinese system substantially depends on it), increased control over Russian oligarchs and top Chinese entrepreneurs, the one-way use of offshore places and their opacity.
But the very rise of China also implies a greater global interdependence. Chinese banks have sometimes had to implement the bulk of US sanctions (as was the case with North Korea, with indirect US sanctions against establishments in Macau), and have sometimes been spared by the United States (as was the case with the Iranian oil offtake, presumably settled in yuan and trade credits for Iranian imports). This time, however, the problem is much greater, given the ban on flows with the Russian central bank. Certainly, there are short-term loopholes: specifically, USD60-90 billion Russian central bank reserves in yuan, deposited in China. Russia might not be prevented by China from mobilizing these deposits to pay for its own imports or to recover liquidity in rubles, since China has a rising currency and trade surpluses. Russia’s sales of its yuan reserves could even help the Chinese central bank avoid interventions to limit the rise of its currency. In the short term, the UnionPay system and Chinese banks in Russia are going on the offensive with regard to credit cards: this will undoubtedly also serve to increase Chinese e-commerce sales in Russia, and more broadly the sale of consumer goods. In the short term, this is a good deal for China. But with what resources will Russian consumers be able to buy these products, if the ruble continues to fall? China would need to increase its export credits to Russia. The other - large - loophole is the proceeds from Russia’s ongoing sales of gas, oil and coal to Europe. This has strategic significance for gauging the actual extent of Europe’s support to Ukraine. Since more than half of China-Russia trade is now conducted in euros, Europe’s willingness to ban the use of euros by third parties trading with Russia is also a very significant issue. Europeans are faced with the issue of implementing extraterritorial sanctions, something they often reproached the US with.
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