Beijing is to roll out the red carpet for more than two dozen world leaders at two major, defense-related events in the coming week. The guest lists, including notable omissions, are a window into China’s ambitions, alliances and continued attempts to expand its influence.
The two events are the annual summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), a group established by China and Russia in 2001 with a focus on security in Central Asia and the wider region, and a massive military parade commemorating the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II.
High-profile guests of Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) would include the Russian and North Korean leaders, as well as heads of state and government from most Southeast Asian and Central Asian nations.
Photo: RIA Novosti via AP
However, the guest lists for the SCO forum and the military parade do not fully overlap, reflecting Beijing’s interests, loyalties and limitations among its neighbors and beyond.
World leaders are set to start pouring in for the SCO summit to be held today and tomorrow in the Chinese port city of Tianjin, just southeast of Beijing, while the military parade would be held on Wednesday.
The parade is set to showcase some of China’s most advanced homegrown weapons, including more than 100 aircraft, and numerous tanks and missiles.
The guest list for the SCO summit includes leaders of the organization’s 10 member states, along with representatives from almost two dozen other countries, some of which may join the group at a later date.
The SCO was established by China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan and later expanded to include members such as India, Iran, Pakistan and Belarus. Afghanistan and Mongolia are observer states, and 14 other countries, mostly from Southeast Asia and the Middle East, serve as “dialogue partners.” The country hosting the annual summit rotates every year.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi top the list of dignitaries attending the summit. Also attending are Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Egyptian Prime Minister Mustafa Madbouly, whose countries are “dialogue partners” within the SCO.
Some countries that are not SCO members would also be represented, mostly from Southeast Asia. These include Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia and Vietnam, reflecting China’s desire to shore up its ties within the region.
Most of the high-level guests at the SCO forum and the military parade would overlap, but there will be some notable departures — and additions.
The leaders of India, Egypt and Turkey are to leave Beijing before the military show. Egypt would be represented by a lower-level official. Like most Western countries and their allies, India and Turkey generally refrain from posing alongside China’s top leaders at military parades.
Instead, joining Xi and Putin to observe Chinese troops marching in lockstep on Chang’an Avenue would be North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, who would not appear at the earlier SCO summit. This would be Kim’s first meeting with Xi in more than six years, and his first occasion to come together with a group of world leaders since the reclusive North Korean leader took office, in late 2011.
Xi, Putin and Kim potentially seated together in Tiananmen Square would make for a defiant show of unity at a time when the West is increasingly frustrated over Russia’s war in Ukraine. Beijing, although on paper neutral in the conflict, has not condemned Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine and is accused of selling weapon components to Russia. Meanwhile, North Korea has sent troops to aid the Russians in the war.
Additionally, Myanmar’s junta chief Min Aung Hlaing, who is the country’s acting president in the wake of a military coup in 2021, would also attend the military parade.
Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel, as well as the leaders of the Democratic Republic of Congo and Zimbabwe, would also be there.
The only European heads of state attending the parade, but not the SCO summit, would be Russia-friendly Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic and Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico.
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