The New York Times
By NEIL
MacFARQUHAR and DAVID M. HERSZENHORNMAY 19, 2014
MOSCOW
— President Vladimir V. Putin said Monday that he was withdrawing Russian
troops from the border with Ukraine,
the second time he has said that in less than two weeks. He also praised the
government in Kiev,
which he had previously called an illegal, fascist junta, for its willingness
to negotiate structural changes.
But the
intended audience for these conciliatory remarks may not have been the United States and Europe,
who would distrust them in any event. No, Mr. Putin’s gaze was more likely
fixed on China, where he
arrives on Tuesday by all accounts determined to show that he, too, wants to
pivot to Asia.
While Mr.
Putin has been casting an eye eastward practically since he returned to the
presidency in 2012, the crisis in relations with the West over Ukraine has made ties to Asia, and particularly
relations with its economic engine, China, a key strategic priority.
With Europe trying to wean itself off Russian gas, and the possibility of far
more serious Western sanctions looming should the crisis deepen, Moscow needs an
alternative.