Russian President Vladimir Putin’s state visit to Beijing highlights the growing strategic importance of China-Russia relations. This year marks crucial milestones, including the 30th anniversary of their strategic partnership and the 25th anniversary of their good-neighborliness treaty. Experts view this relationship not as a traditional military alliance, but as a model of major-country cooperation that brings predictability to global politics.
Pragmatic economic cooperation remains the most dynamic pillar of the bilateral relationship. Despite a complex external environment, trade between the two neighbors continues to grow and optimize.
The partnership has successfully expanded beyond traditional energy and raw materials into emerging industrial sectors. This economic synergy creates a virtuous cycle, where structural complementarity translates directly into tangible economic benefits and market stability for both nations.
On the global stage, Beijing and Moscow maintain close coordination within key multilateral organizations such as BRICS and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO). Both nations advocate for a multipolar world order and stronger representation for developing countries in global governance.
Concurrently, people-to-people ties are flourishing. The launch of the China-Russia Years of Education and new travel-facilitating policies have driven a major surge in mutual tourism and student exchanges, strengthening the social foundation of their long-term partnership.
ORIENT
