Putin Arrives in Beijing: Energy Deal, Joint Declaration, and the Diplomatic Sequence That Puts China in the Middle

Putin's 25th trip to China — arriving days after Trump's own Beijing summit — opens with an agenda dominated by a pending oil-and-gas deal, a joint declaration on a "multipolar world," and Moscow's need for reassurance that China hasn't drifted toward Washington. A full roundup of the summit's opening, energy talks, and geopolitical stakes.

Putin arrived in Beijing on Tuesday for a two-day state visit with Xi Jinping — his 25th trip to China since first taking power more than two decades ago, and the second meeting between the two leaders in less than a year. The timing is conspicuous: Xi had barely cleared the ceremonial trappings of Donald Trump's high-profile summit when Putin's plane touched down. 1
Chinese state media embraced the optics immediately. The Global Times described the back-to-back visits as evidence that Beijing is "fast emerging as the focal point of global diplomacy," calling the sequence "extremely rare in the post-Cold War era." 1

The summit: what's on the table

The visit officially marks the 25th anniversary of the Sino-Russian Treaty of Friendship signed in 2001. 2 Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov said Putin arrived Tuesday evening and held talks with Xi on Wednesday morning — with the agenda covering bilateral cooperation across all sectors, "key international and regional issues," and a planned signing of a joint declaration on building a "multipolar world" and "a new type of international relations." 3
Putin set the tone in a video address released before departing Moscow: "Bilateral ties are at a truly unprecedented level," he said, with the relationship playing "an important role globally." He described Xi as an "old friend" — a term Xi has reciprocated, one of the rarest honorifics in Chinese diplomatic vocabulary. 2
Topics expected to feature include the war in Ukraine (now in its fifth year), the ongoing Iran conflict and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, and — crucially — the outcomes of Xi's summit with Trump, which the Kremlin said Putin would be directly briefed on. 3

Energy: the deal Putin wants to close

Energy dominates the agenda. Russia's oil exports to China grew 35% in the first quarter of 2026, and Moscow now expects the Iran crisis to push demand higher still. 2 Putin said publicly before departing that the two sides are at "a very advanced stage of agreement on making a serious, very substantial step forward in the gas and oil sector" and that he hoped to finalize the deal in Beijing. 1
The closure of the Strait of Hormuz — cutting off roughly one-fifth of global oil supply — has given Beijing fresh reason to lock in overland Russian supply. Beijing has already bought more than $367 billion worth of Russian fossil fuels since the start of the Iran war. 3
The proposed Power of Siberia-2 pipeline is also expected to come up. Russia and China signed a memorandum during Putin's September 2025 SCO visit to advance the 2,600-kilometer project linking Yamal to China via Mongolia. Pricing and commercial terms remain unresolved. Columbia University's Anne-Sophie Corbeau cautioned that "the negotiations could drag on for years and potentially never come to fruition," noting that the existing Power of Siberia-1 line is already running near capacity and the next meaningful volume increase — the 12 bcm Far East pipeline — won't come online until 2027 at the earliest. 3

The asymmetry in the room

The power dynamics of this visit differ sharply from Trump's. Xi met Trump with an agreement yielding $17 billion in annual US agricultural purchases through 2028, a 200-aircraft Boeing order, and a September Washington summit on the table. 1 Putin's visit is expected to be "more practical," in the words of Andrius Tursa at Teneo — but Moscow's leverage is limited.
Russia's economy is under strain. Moscow cut its 2026 growth forecast to 0.4% (from 1.3%) as Ukrainian strikes on oil infrastructure and export terminals compound the pressure, and the future of US sanctions waivers remains uncertain. 1 Timothy Ash at Chatham House was blunt: "The war in Ukraine has made Russia much more dependent on China. Putin will be very eager that there's no warming in the US-China relationship to the detriment of Russia." 3
China's trade with Russia has reached record levels since 2022, absorbing more than a quarter of Russia's total exports. Xi — who has met Putin more than 40 times, far more than with any Western leader — is described by analysts as holding "strong leverage." 4
The Al Jazeera framing was blunter still: Putin has "more to ask from Beijing" in this meeting than Beijing has to ask from Moscow — similar to Trump's own position the week prior. The difference is that Beijing granted Trump substantial deliverables. For Putin, the question is whether China's appetite for closer strategic coordination translates into concrete commitments. 5

Western reactions and Ukraine war context

Washington is watching closely. Kurt Tong of The Asia Group said on CNBC that "if there's significant assistance from China to Russia, the U.S. will probably complain about it." 1 NATO previously labeled China a "decisive enabler" of Russia's war effort, pointing to Chinese firms supplying dual-use goods that replenish Russian munitions. 1 Beijing has consistently rejected that framing, insisting it controls dual-use exports and supplies no lethal weapons to either side in Ukraine.
Trump's summit with Xi produced only a brief reference to "the Ukraine crisis" in China's official readout — and no mention of Ukraine at all in US summaries. The war figures in Putin's Beijing agenda, though analysts expect no breakthrough: China supports dialogue and peace talks but will not press Russia toward any specific outcome. 3
Michael Kimmage of the Kennan Institute described the visit's symbolic function directly: "It's about imagery and optics, and I think on the Chinese side, there is a balancing effort, hosting President Trump one week and President Putin the next. That's a gesture of politeness toward Putin, as if he's on par with the United States and with China." 3

This channel covers Putin's current China visit as it develops. A new roundup will be published when the next major development breaks — including summit outcomes, joint declarations, or significant international reactions.

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