Xi welcomes Putin in Beijing, hails China’s ‘unyielding’ ties with Russia
· France 24China and Russia's leaders lauded on Wednesday the progress in their strategic ties, as they met in Beijing for summit talks where Moscow is expected to push for stronger energy links.
President Xi Jinping welcomed President Vladimir Putin with an honour guard and a gun salute at the Great Hall of the People, as children waved Chinese and Russian flags. Alongside formal talks, the pair are expected to cap the day with an intimate meeting over tea.
Coming on the heels of US President Donald Trump's visit to the Chinese capital, the optics and outcomes of the summit between the Chinese and Russian presidents will be closely scrutinised and compared.
Read moreTrump hails ‘fantastic trade deals’ with Xi, China issues warning on Taiwan
Xi hailed China and Russia's "unyielding" ties in talks with Putin on Wednesday and said the two countries should focus on long-term strategy and promote a "more just and reasonable" global governance system, according to a transcript from Chinese state news agency Xinhua.
"The reason China-Russia relations have reached this level is because we have been able to deepen political mutual trust and strategic cooperation," Xi said at the start of his meeting with Putin.
Putin said their relations were helping ensure global stability and stressed that Russia remained a reliable energy supplier amid Middle East disruption.
The Russian leader told his Chinese counterpart that relations between their countries had reached and "unprecedentedly high level" despite "unfavourable external factors", without naming any third country, video from Russian media showed.
Following what Beijing called a "small-scale meeting" between the two leaders, Xi on Wednesday said further hostilities in the Middle East are "inadvisable" and called for a "comprehensive" ceasefire, Chinese state media reported.
"A comprehensive ceasefire is of utmost urgency, resuming hostilities is even more inadvisable and maintaining negotiations is particularly important," Xi told Putin, according to Xinhua news agency.
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Focus on energy
China became Russia's top trading partner following after Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Beijing has said it is neutral in the conflict while maintaining trade ties with the Kremlin despite economic and financial sanctions by the US and Europe.
China is the top customer for Russian oil and gas supplies, and Moscow expects the war in Iran to increase the demand. China also has ignored demands from the West to stop providing high-tech components for Russia’s weapons industries.
Ushakov said Russia’s oil exports to China grew by 35% in the first quarter of 2026 and that Russia is one of the biggest exporters of natural gas to China.
During “the crisis in the Middle East", Russia remains a reliable energy supplier and China is a “responsible consumer", Russian presidential aide Yuri Ushakov said.
'Old friend'
Xi has played host to a series of world leaders as an increasingly unpredictable United States under Trump pushed many to shore up alliances with Beijing, and the war in Iran has further accelerated the trend.
Russia-China ties have deepened since Moscow launched its invasion of Ukraine in 2022, with Putin visiting Beijing every year since as his country is shunned by Western powers.
Putin's visit promises to be less opulent than Trump's, emphasising that "the Xi-Putin relationship does not require that kind of performative reassurance", said Patricia Kim from the Brookings Institution in Washington.
Xi welcomed Putin with open arms as an "old friend" when he last visited Beijing in September 2025 – language the Chinese leader did not extend to Trump last week.
Both Putin and Xi view ties as "structurally stronger and more stable" than those between China and the United States, she told AFP.
Beijing has regularly called for talks to end the war in Ukraine but has never condemned Russia for sending in troops, presenting itself instead as a neutral party.
But with Russia reliant on sales to China to sustain its war effort, "Putin does not want to lose that support", Asia Society's Lyle Morris told AFP.
Middle East priorities
When it comes to the US-Israeli war on Iran, though, China and Russia may have different priorities.
Russia has sought to capitalise on the energy crisis and rocketing oil prices spurred by the closure of the Hormuz strait.
Russia's top diplomat Sergei Lavrov had said after meeting Xi in April that Russia could "compensate" for China's energy shortages as the Middle East war hits global supplies.
China, however, wants the Middle East conflict concluded as soon as possible.
Xi underlined in talks with Putin that further hostilities in the Middle East is "inadvisable" as he said a "comprehensive ceasefire is of utmost urgency".
"(China) relies on the freedom of the world's major waterways to sustain its economic activities, and would prefer that the standoff in the Strait of Hormuz end sooner rather than later," James Char of Singapore's Nanyang Technological University told AFP.
(FRANCE 24 with AFP, AP and Reuters)