BEIJING — Chinese leader Xi Jinping welcomed Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Great Hall of the People on Wednesday, holding a ceremony that capped a two-day visit designed to reaffirm what the Kremlin calls an unbreakable strategic partnership — and to send an unmistakable message to Washington: China is not choosing sides against Russia.
The meeting took place just three days after President Donald Trump concluded his own two-day summit in Beijing, creating a remarkable diplomatic sequence in which the two most consequential great powers challenging the US-led international order arrived in the Chinese capital within the same week.
A Carefully Choreographed Diplomatic Spectacle
Xi rolled out the full ceremonial pageantry for Putin — honor guards, flags, and a formal welcome designed to project equal partnership rather than patron-client hierarchy. The two leaders held extended bilateral talks, followed by a ceremony for signing cooperation agreements. The Chinese foreign ministry said the two sides formally extended a 25-year friendship treaty first signed in 2001, embedding their alliance for another generation.
Russian presidential aide Yuri Ushakov insisted there was no connection between Trump and Putin visits, telling reporters the trip was agreed several days after Putin and Xi spoke via videoconference on February 4. But analysts were unmoved by that framing.
The message is clearly one that China maintains friendship and strategic partnership with whichever power it likes, and the USA is just one of them.— Steve Tsang, director, SOAS China Institute, University of London
The sequence of visits — Trump, then Putin — was designed to show that Beijing has relationships with all the major powers simultaneously, and that no single country can claim a privileged position in Chinese strategic calculations, said Dr. Chen Xiaoting, a research fellow at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy in Singapore.
Energy, Sanctions, and the Iran Factor
Wednesday talks centered on energy and security — the two pillars of the Russia-China relationship since Moscow full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. China has become Russias largest trading partner, overtaking the EU as the primary market for Russian oil and gas following the imposition of Western economic sanctions. Russian oil exports to China grew by 35 percent in the first quarter of 2026, according to figures cited by Ushakov.
Beijing has ignored repeated Western demands to halt the supply of high-technology components — including semiconductors and dual-use materials — that Russian defense manufacturers depend on to sustain weapons production for the war in Ukraine and, increasingly, for the broader conflict with Iran.
Moscow expects the Iran conflict to increase global demand for Russian energy exports, officials in Putins delegation said, as instability in the Strait of Hormuz disrupts Persian Gulf supply routes and drives buyers toward Russian alternatives.
The Geopolitical Chessboard
The Trump administration has pressed Beijing repeatedly to use its leverage over Moscow to bring an end to the Ukraine war, and to reduce support for Irans defense sector. So far, Beijing has shown no willingness to wield those levers. Xi has maintained that China is neutral on Ukraine while steadily deepening economic integration with Russia.
Putins visit also serves an internal political purpose for both leaders, analysts say. Xi can demonstrate to domestic audiences that China is a world power commanding respect from Americas adversaries. Putin can use the visit to reassure Russian elites that Moscow is not isolated, that the pivot to Asia is producing concrete diplomatic returns.
What the Visit Signals for Washington
The timing of Putins arrival in Beijing was not accidental. Having Trump and Putin cycle through the same diplomatic venue within days creates a visual narrative that Xi can leverage — showcasing China as the gravitational center of Eurasian great-power politics, and the United States as merely one visitor among many.
No joint statement was released following Trumps Beijing summit, and Chinas commitments on agricultural purchases and Boeing jet orders remained vague affirmations rather than binding agreements. The Xi-Putin meeting, by contrast, produced a formal treaty extension and a signing ceremony — a visible commitment that Beijing was willing to make to Moscow that it conspicuously did not make to Washington.
As the Iran ceasefire remains fragile and the Ukraine war grinds on, the Putin-Xi axis is signaling that the era of Western-dominated international order is increasingly a thing of the past.