China’s Victory day military parade: why are Putin and Kim Jong-un there, and what is the ‘axis of upheaval’?
On Wednesday, China is holding a military parade in the capital, Beijing, to mark 80 years since the end of the second world war. But it’s not just about the past, the parade says a lot about the forces reshaping the world today, and in the future. At the parade, Chinese leader Xi Jinping will be flanked by the leaders of some of the world’s most heavily sanctioned nations – Russia, North Korea, Iran and Myanmar – and a host of other leaders of the global south but notably almost no western leaders. The parade is seen as a show of military and diplomatic strength by Beijing amid high-stakes negotiations with Donald Trump’s administration in the US over trade. Who is going to China’s victory day parade? Russian president Vladimir Putin and North Korea’s Kim Jong-un will attend the victory day parade on 3 September, marking the end of the second world war after Japan’s formal surrender. It will be the first time the two leaders have appeared in public together alongside Xi. Iranian president Masoud Pezeshkian is also expected to be on the dais as tens of thousands of troops march through the Chinese capital, completing a quartet that western political and economic analysts have described as the “axis of upheaval”. Myanmar junta chief Min Aung Hlaing, who rarely travels abroad, will also attend, the Chinese foreign ministry said on Thursday. Most western leaders are expected to shun the parade, making it a major show of diplomatic solidarity between China, Russia and the global south. The only western heads of state or government attending the events in Beijing are Robert Fico, the prime minister of EU member state Slovakia, and Aleksandar Vučić, the president of Serbia. Fico has been an opponent of sanctioning Russia for its war against Ukraine and has broken ranks with the EU by visiting Moscow. Vučić also visited Moscow in May and wants good relations with Russia and China but says Serbia remains committed to joining the EU. The United Nations will be represented by undersecretary general Li Junhua, who previously served in various capacities at the Chinese foreign ministry, including time as the Chinese ambassador to Italy, San Marino and Myanmar. What can we expect to see at the parade? The highly choreographed event, one of China’s largest in years, will unveil cutting-edge equipment such as fighter jets, missile defence systems and hypersonic weapons – the results of a long-running modernisation drive of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) which has lately been beset by corruption scandals and personnel purges. China is expected to showcase a range of new weapons, including an enhanced DF-26 intermediate range ballistic missile – dubbed by Chinese media the “Guam killer” for its ability to hit the US Pacific base with a conventional or nuclear weapon. New anti-ship missiles called the Ying Ji, which means “eagle attack” in Chinese, have been spotted by analysts. Chinese commentators have described them as designed to “prevent the United States from posing a serious threat to China’s national security.” On the day, Xi Jinping will survey tens of thousands of troops at Tiananmen Square alongside several foreign dignitaries including guest of honour Vladimir Putin. Many ordinary Beijing residents who have experienced weeks of widespread disruption to their daily lives will be hoping for a brief respite. The last time the parade was held in 2015, China implemented a nationwide three-day public holiday and Beijing schools delayed the start of term. Ahead of the parade, Beijing has also mounted a campaign to emphasise the “correct view” of second world war history, which emphasises that China and Soviet Russia played a pivotal role in fighting fascist forces in the Asian and European theatres. A People’s Daily commentary this week claimed China’s contribution to fighting Japan was “selectively ignored and underestimated by some”, adding the Communist party’s (CCP) wartime efforts were “deliberately belittled and vilified”. What are the experts saying? Political analysts say the parade is designed to demonstrate Xi’s influence over nations intent on reshaping the western-led global order. “Xi Jinping is trying to showcase that he is very strong, that he is still powerful and well received in China,” said Alfred Wu, associate professor at the Lee Kuan Yew school of public policy at the National University of Singapore. “When Xi was just a regional leader, he looked up to Putin, and saw the kind of leader he could learn from – and now he is a global leader. Having Kim alongside him, as well, highlights how Xi is now also a global leader.” Lim Chuan-Tiong, a researcher with the Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia at the University of Tokyo, said the primary purpose of the “temporary spectacle” was to reinforce Xi’s power and the strength of the CCP. “Commemorating the 80th anniversary ... does not necessarily require a military parade,” he said, noting that China only really started marking the date 10 years ago, and at a fraction of the budget. “Most of the [leaders] attending, the ones invited, are not there to support China’s commemoration of the 80th anniversary of the victory of WWII,” Lim said. “They are there to give face to China, to give face to Chinese leaders and to avoid harming bilateral relations. Very simple.” What other world leaders have been in China? Prior to the parade, world leaders have been attending the Shanghai cooperation organisation security forum (SCO). As well as Vladimir Putin, Indian prime minister Narendra Modi and the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, have been among the attendees. Much has been made of Modi’s visit – his first in seven years – just as India’s ties with Washington have soured. It has come days after the US doubled tariffs on Indian exports to 50%, citing Delhi’s refusal to stop buying Russian oil. For China, the two-day SCO summit that started on Sunday could not be better timed. Modi “will be in China at a moment when India-China relations are stabilising and India-US relations have gone south. It is a powerful optic,” South Asia analyst Michael Kugelman said. “I’m not sure whether US officials fully realise how much trust they have squandered in such a short time.” With additional research by Lillian Yang and reporting by Reuters