The interests of China and Russia diverge and clash in Sudan

Omar Adan
Omar Adan

Global Courant

Like collisions Get on between the Sudanese army and the rapid support forces, the current and historical role of foreign governments in Sudanese affairs is under scrutiny.

It is not surprising that the Sudan conflict has increased to assure from the US and other countries about the reels Russia And China play specifically in Sudan and in Africa.

Researchers had been Worried that Beijing’s infrastructure and development loans to countries including Sudan could be “debt trap diplomacy”, a predatory attempt to acquire key foreign infrastructure such as ports.

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Analysts had previously suggested China’s implications growing military involvement in Africa, including the establishment and use of naval bases security contractors are examples of Beijing seeking to expand its military power and political influence abroad.

Others have suggested that Russian activity in Africa could represent a return to Soviet-era levels of influence through arms sales, joint military exercises and installing their own set of security contractors to train the Sudanese army.

The Wagner Group, a high-profile group of Russian mercenaries, has not denied any of them involvement in events in Sudansaying in a post on Telegram: “Due to the high number of questions from various foreign media about Sudan, most of which are provocative, we feel it necessary to inform everyone that Wagner personnel have not been in Sudan for more than two years. ”

China favors stability

Our work for PeaceRep, an international research consortium led by the Edinburgh School of Law, suggests that the US and Europe should be careful about lumping Russia’s and China’s goals in Africa together. It found that Beijing and Moscow take different approaches. China has its own interests, but its approach appears fundamentally to promote stability.

As a result, China sharper to work with the wider international community on issues such as peacekeeping and conflict mediation. Conversely, Russia pursues its interests in Africa without as much cooperation with international institutions.

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Our new report looks at the available data for pre-war Sudan to see how well claims made by scholars and commentators match the behavior of Russia and China.

We have consolidated data from the United Nations, Stockholm International Institute for Peace Researchthe Auxiliary Data research lab on Chinese and Russian involvement in Sudan, as well as news reports to examine how well the arguments of scientists and policymakers hold up.

The fighters of the Wagner Group are often referred to as the “shadow warriors” of Russia. Image: Twitter/Salika

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We found that China was cooperating with the international community on things like peacekeeping and pursuing deep economic engagement. Russia, on the other hand, prioritized arms sales over things like trade, aid or peacekeeping.

Sudan shows how Russia’s and China’s approaches differ from Africa. Sudan received billions in loans and investments from China to facilitate oil production and economic development in the 2000s.

Russia has long been a security partner of Sudan and would like to become one naval base in Port Sudan. Both countries sell weapons and send peacekeepers to at least one UN mission.

China’s investment

According to the UN Comrade database, China’s economic investment is higher than Russia’s. China’s imports from Sudan took a major hit when South Sudan became independent because South Sudan controlled the lion’s share of oil reserves.

China’s imports peaked at nearly $7.8 billion in goods in 2011. Ten years later, annual imports had not yet recovered. Meanwhile, Chinese exports to Sudan grew steadily. In 2021, China exported $1.6 billion worth of goods to Sudan, even during the disruptions caused by Covid-19.

China is also a major lender. If AidDatas Chinese development finance Records show China has pledged billions of dollars in loans since 2000 claims that Chinese loans are part of “debt trap diplomacy”, China has often given Sudan debt relief.

The findings are consistent with recent research being China to work to ensure that the countries they lend to can service their debts.

By comparison, Russia’s economic involvement in Sudan is meager. As a major oil producer, Russia did not need to purchase Sudanese petroleum products. Annual trade with Sudan is significantly lower than China’s, and Russia offered little bilateral aid or loans.

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Supply weapons

Unlike some to assure about Chinese arms sales, facts shows that by post-Cold War value, Russia sold more “big guns” than China, especially high-priced items such as fighter jets.

Globally, China is much more involved in multilateral efforts than Russia. Of all five permanent members of the UN Security Council, China has become the largest contributor to UN peacekeeping.

In Sudan, Russia created a small peacekeeping contingent United Nations Mission in Sudan (UNMIS). China contributed a larger force to UNMIS and a engineering unit of the African Union’s concurrent UN mission in Darfur, nearly 800 peacekeepers at the height of both missions.

Russian and Chinese security contractors are both out of business strict supervisionbut we did not find reliable quantitative data on the number of Russian or Chinese contractors in Sudan. Other work suggests that their roles in Africa and Sudan are different.

Chinese security contractors appear to be focused on protecting Chinese companies abroad and Russian contractors such as the Wagner Group are said to be involved in criminal activity in addition to their formal missions. The Wagner Group said reports that it would have any personnel in Sudan was false.

Overall, the conflict in Sudan demonstrates the differences between Russia’s and China’s approaches. Russian pre-war activities in Sudan have had more negative consequences than China’s in the current conflict. Russian-made aircraft are currently used strike Sudanese cities.

China, on the other hand, faced similar challenges to Western states trying to do so to evacuate its citizensbut also helped to get citizens of other countries from Sudan also.

Any international engagement with China and Russia to help find long-term responses to the crisis in Sudan should be well informed about these different approaches.

Marcel PlichtaPhD student, University of St Andrews And Mateja PeterInternational Relations teacher, University of St Andrews

This article has been republished from The conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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