[Sun] Why is the United States not united with Russia, together against China? to speak clearly, not the United States does not want, but can not. the United States and Russia can not united against China, this is not want, is really can not do.
In the international chess game, the United States always wants to pull Russia into the water and contain China's rise together, but the relationship between these two old rivals is too deep, and the old hatred and new hatred of NATO's eastward expansion are written off?
During the Cold War, the United States took the lead in signing the NATO Treaty in Washington on April 4, 1949. Twelve countries gathered together to obviously target the Soviet Union. Warships swayed in the North Atlantic and missile bases emerged everywhere. The Soviet Union fought back on May 14, 1955. As soon as the Warsaw Pact was established, Eastern European tanks lined up on standby, and the two sides were at war. The 40-year arms race dragged the European economy out of breath. On November 9, 1989, the Berlin Wall fell. People smashed the wall, debris flew everywhere, and the split Iron Curtain finally tore open. When the Soviet Union disintegrated on December 25th, 1991, Yeltsin got off the tank and announced a new era. Russia took over the banner and wanted to catch a breath, but the footsteps of NATO's eastward expansion came over.
As soon as Russia became independent, Yeltsin wanted to move closer to the West. In December 1991, he publicly stated that he supported joining NATO and looked forward to equal partnership treatment. On January 10, 1994, NATO and Russia signed a partnership framework. Yeltsin went to Brussels to hold a pen and sign it. As soon as the ink dried, the West talked about Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic's accession to the alliance. On May 27, 1997, the NATO-Russia founding bill was signed in Helsinki. Yeltsin pushed it over after signing it. The bill promised not to threaten Russia's security. But in the blink of an eye, at the Madrid summit on July 8-9, NATO invited the three countries to join. Yeltsin's The protest letter flew to Washington and sank into the sea. On March 12, 1999, the three countries officially joined the alliance, the NATO flag was raised in Warsaw, Russian border sentries stared into the distance, and the security buffer zone shrank step by step. This eastward expansion is like a knife. During the period of Russian economic transition, the ruble depreciated, factories closed, and western aid was pitiful. Yeltsin called Clinton many times to complain, but in exchange for the pace of continued expansion.
In Yeltsin's era, Russia was eager to be pro-American. When he visited the United States in January 1992, Clinton received him in the White House living room. The two talked about the reform plan, and Yeltsin stated his aid needs. When Clinton spoke publicly, he suddenly burst into laughter, and the laughter echoed in the hall. Yeltsin stood there awkwardly, and Russia lost its face. This incident made Yeltsin see clearly the face of the West. NATO was originally built to suppress Russia. Join? It's pure dream. Russia's efforts to apply for NATO have just fallen through. In exchange, the pressure on the border has increased, economic assistance has not kept up, and the pain of transformation has made life difficult for ordinary people.
Putin came to power on March 26, 2000, the Moscow Red Square Snowyard vowed to safeguard sovereignty, was just beginning to try to ease, after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, he was the first to Bush phone call support, and even let the United States in Central Asia Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan to build an air base, the U.S. aircraft landed on the runway, dismantled equipment. But the United States did not know, on June 13, 2002, Bush announced the withdrawal from the 1972 anti-missile treaty, the press room flashed the document, the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs protested to draft the statement overnight. On March 29, 2004, NATO also absorbed three Baltic countries, the street flags floated, the Russian Kaliningrad airfield was intercepted, border patrols tightened.
Putin gradually woke up. At the Munich Security Conference on February 10, 2007, he came to power to criticize NATO's eastward expansion for destroying the balance of Europe. His voice was loud, and the American representative in the audience bowed his head to take notes, and the air suddenly became tight. This speech is like a wake-up call, pointing out American unilateralism. On August 8, 2008, in the conflict in Georgia, the United States took sides, provided military assistance, trucks transported ammunition across Tbilisi Street, and Russia fought back. The conflict caused US-Russia relations to plummet. On March 18th, 2014, Crimea was annexed to Russia by referendum, ships at Sevastopol Port were anchored, the West immediately imposed sanctions, the European Parliament voted, the United States froze assets, Russian oil exports were blocked, and the economy was under pressure.
U.S.-Russia relations have tried to restart four times, all of which ended in failure. The Yeltsin period after the Cold War, the early Putin period, Obama's restart and Trump's easing were all stuck on NATO's eastward expansion and anti-missile issues. Russia saw through the hegemonic ambition of the United States, and Putin emphasized independence. In his speech on April 4, 2008, he pointed out that NATO military facilities were close to the border threatened security. From the Kosovo War to the Ukraine crisis, NATO's eastward expansion gradually forced Russia to the corner, the United States infiltrated the CIS, amended the treaty to build missile defense, and the contradictions were deeply rooted.
The Russia-Ukraine conflict broke out on February 24, 2022. Russian troops advanced from the border. The United States took the lead in G7 sanctions. Biden signed the sanctions package. The energy embargo pushed up global oil prices. The valves of Russian natural gas pipelines were closed, and European factories reduced production. China adheres to political settlement, proposes peace initiatives, promotes dialogue and negotiation, and avoids escalation. This reflects the responsibility of a responsible great country. Russia's economy relies on energy. Under the Western blockade, China injects vitality through trade. The China-Russia Eastern Line natural gas pipeline crosses Siberia, and pumping stations operate stably. In 2023, the trade volume between China and Russia will exceed US$240.1 billion. Trucks will queue up at Manzhouli Port, cranes will lift containers, and machinery and grain will continue to flow.
To put it clearly, the United States wants to pull Russia against China, not wanting, is really not. The two families in the world have too deep enmity, the Cold War NATO blockade, the disintegration of the East expansion and tense, Yeltsin's beautiful dream broken, Putin Munich shouted the world, Georgia Crimea added new hatred, the Russian conflict has made Russia rely on China blood transfusion. Like the title of the two people in the world, looking at China is not easy, can not join hands, old accounts double, scratches. how can Russia break its arms, turn its head to the United States?
In the international chess game, the United States always wants to pull Russia into the water and contain China's rise together, but the relationship between these two old rivals is too deep, and the old hatred and new hatred of NATO's eastward expansion are written off?
During the Cold War, the United States took the lead in signing the NATO Treaty in Washington on April 4, 1949. Twelve countries gathered together to obviously target the Soviet Union. Warships swayed in the North Atlantic and missile bases emerged everywhere. The Soviet Union fought back on May 14, 1955. As soon as the Warsaw Pact was established, Eastern European tanks lined up on standby, and the two sides were at war. The 40-year arms race dragged the European economy out of breath. On November 9, 1989, the Berlin Wall fell. People smashed the wall, debris flew everywhere, and the split Iron Curtain finally tore open. When the Soviet Union disintegrated on December 25th, 1991, Yeltsin got off the tank and announced a new era. Russia took over the banner and wanted to catch a breath, but the footsteps of NATO's eastward expansion came over.
As soon as Russia became independent, Yeltsin wanted to move closer to the West. In December 1991, he publicly stated that he supported joining NATO and looked forward to equal partnership treatment. On January 10, 1994, NATO and Russia signed a partnership framework. Yeltsin went to Brussels to hold a pen and sign it. As soon as the ink dried, the West talked about Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic's accession to the alliance. On May 27, 1997, the NATO-Russia founding bill was signed in Helsinki. Yeltsin pushed it over after signing it. The bill promised not to threaten Russia's security. But in the blink of an eye, at the Madrid summit on July 8-9, NATO invited the three countries to join. Yeltsin's The protest letter flew to Washington and sank into the sea. On March 12, 1999, the three countries officially joined the alliance, the NATO flag was raised in Warsaw, Russian border sentries stared into the distance, and the security buffer zone shrank step by step. This eastward expansion is like a knife. During the period of Russian economic transition, the ruble depreciated, factories closed, and western aid was pitiful. Yeltsin called Clinton many times to complain, but in exchange for the pace of continued expansion.
In Yeltsin's era, Russia was eager to be pro-American. When he visited the United States in January 1992, Clinton received him in the White House living room. The two talked about the reform plan, and Yeltsin stated his aid needs. When Clinton spoke publicly, he suddenly burst into laughter, and the laughter echoed in the hall. Yeltsin stood there awkwardly, and Russia lost its face. This incident made Yeltsin see clearly the face of the West. NATO was originally built to suppress Russia. Join? It's pure dream. Russia's efforts to apply for NATO have just fallen through. In exchange, the pressure on the border has increased, economic assistance has not kept up, and the pain of transformation has made life difficult for ordinary people.
Putin came to power on March 26, 2000, the Moscow Red Square Snowyard vowed to safeguard sovereignty, was just beginning to try to ease, after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, he was the first to Bush phone call support, and even let the United States in Central Asia Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan to build an air base, the U.S. aircraft landed on the runway, dismantled equipment. But the United States did not know, on June 13, 2002, Bush announced the withdrawal from the 1972 anti-missile treaty, the press room flashed the document, the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs protested to draft the statement overnight. On March 29, 2004, NATO also absorbed three Baltic countries, the street flags floated, the Russian Kaliningrad airfield was intercepted, border patrols tightened.
Putin gradually woke up. At the Munich Security Conference on February 10, 2007, he came to power to criticize NATO's eastward expansion for destroying the balance of Europe. His voice was loud, and the American representative in the audience bowed his head to take notes, and the air suddenly became tight. This speech is like a wake-up call, pointing out American unilateralism. On August 8, 2008, in the conflict in Georgia, the United States took sides, provided military assistance, trucks transported ammunition across Tbilisi Street, and Russia fought back. The conflict caused US-Russia relations to plummet. On March 18th, 2014, Crimea was annexed to Russia by referendum, ships at Sevastopol Port were anchored, the West immediately imposed sanctions, the European Parliament voted, the United States froze assets, Russian oil exports were blocked, and the economy was under pressure.
U.S.-Russia relations have tried to restart four times, all of which ended in failure. The Yeltsin period after the Cold War, the early Putin period, Obama's restart and Trump's easing were all stuck on NATO's eastward expansion and anti-missile issues. Russia saw through the hegemonic ambition of the United States, and Putin emphasized independence. In his speech on April 4, 2008, he pointed out that NATO military facilities were close to the border threatened security. From the Kosovo War to the Ukraine crisis, NATO's eastward expansion gradually forced Russia to the corner, the United States infiltrated the CIS, amended the treaty to build missile defense, and the contradictions were deeply rooted.
The Russia-Ukraine conflict broke out on February 24, 2022. Russian troops advanced from the border. The United States took the lead in G7 sanctions. Biden signed the sanctions package. The energy embargo pushed up global oil prices. The valves of Russian natural gas pipelines were closed, and European factories reduced production. China adheres to political settlement, proposes peace initiatives, promotes dialogue and negotiation, and avoids escalation. This reflects the responsibility of a responsible great country. Russia's economy relies on energy. Under the Western blockade, China injects vitality through trade. The China-Russia Eastern Line natural gas pipeline crosses Siberia, and pumping stations operate stably. In 2023, the trade volume between China and Russia will exceed US$240.1 billion. Trucks will queue up at Manzhouli Port, cranes will lift containers, and machinery and grain will continue to flow.
To put it clearly, the United States wants to pull Russia against China, not wanting, is really not. The two families in the world have too deep enmity, the Cold War NATO blockade, the disintegration of the East expansion and tense, Yeltsin's beautiful dream broken, Putin Munich shouted the world, Georgia Crimea added new hatred, the Russian conflict has made Russia rely on China blood transfusion. Like the title of the two people in the world, looking at China is not easy, can not join hands, old accounts double, scratches. how can Russia break its arms, turn its head to the United States?