President Biden warned China two years ago not to provide “material support” for Russia’s war in Ukraine. On Friday, Secretary of State Antony Blinken conceded that Xi Jinping ignored that warning. China, Mr. Blinken said, was “overwhelmingly the No. 1 supplier” of Russia’s military industrial base, with the “material effect” of having fundamentally changed the course of the war. Whatever Mr. Biden chooses to do next will be momentous for global security and stability.
Mr. Biden can either enforce his red line through sanctions or other means, or he can signal a collapse of American resolve by applying merely symbolic penalties. Beijing and its strategic partners in Moscow, Tehran, Pyongyang and Caracas would surely interpret half-hearted enforcement as a green light to deepen their campaign of global chaos. Mr. Xi sees a historic opportunity here to undermine the West.
This is a moment akin to President Obama’s 2013 red-line failure in Syria. When dictator Bashar al-Assad defied Mr. Obama’s warning not to use chemical weapons on his people, the president abstained from military action, and the consequences were dire. Six months later Moscow launched its 2014 invasion of Crimea—the beginning of the now-decadelong Ukraine War. A failure to act decisively against China now would open a path for Russian victory in Ukraine.
@ISIDEWITH12mos12MO
Do you believe there are ethical considerations in deciding whether to enforce sanctions against a country supporting a war, and what are those?
@9M2559512mos12MO
dude money is money try to make bank for your country when you can
@ISIDEWITH12mos12MO
If a country ignores a warning from another country not to support a war, how should the warning country respond to maintain global respect and prevent conflict escalation?
@9M2559512mos12MO
just take it as a warning but prepare for the worst
@ISIDEWITH12mos12MO
@ISIDEWITH12mos12MO
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