March 2, 2023

One year after Vladimir Putin started his Ukraine invasion, Russia is falling deeper and deeper into the hole that its president has been digging hard.

But the number one loser is not Russia. It’s China. 

China’s decision to support Russia instead of the West in this war is as great a failure as Russia’s invasion itself.

To start with the logic of it, China has been betting on great gains from the war.

China’s ambition here is way greater and more complex than Putin’s simple and straightforward territorial demand.

The most sought-after reward for China as it sides with Russia is the notion that a Russia’s victory would pave the road for China to annex Taiwan, a self-ruled island that China has viewed as a breakaway territory.

So far, the uncertainty of the international response to a military invasion of a sovereign state has deterred China’s military aggression against Taiwan. Russia’s invasion provided China with a much-needed opportunity to observe and study the international reactions and the rationale behind them, and to assess its own ability to survive the international condemnation should it decided to follow Russia’s example and attack Taiwan.

At a minimum, China had hoped that the war in Ukraine would distract international attention from the Taiwan Strait.

But things have not turned out the way China had hoped.

Not only are Russia’s Ukraine objectives all but dashed, Ukraine’s suffering has awakened the world to the issue of Taiwan, and the potential for it being China’s Ukraine if Putin is allowed to get away with his invasion, and if the international community continues to tolerate China’s bullying tactics against Taiwan.