CAPRI, Apr 18: As G7 foreign ministers meet in Capri, the United States is hoping to persuade the Europeans to increase pressure on China, which Washington accuses of helping Russias military expansion.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who arrived on the Italian resort island on Wednesday, was to raise his concerns during a working session Thursday devoted to Russias February 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
The Americans hope in particular that European nations will pressure China to reduce military support for Russia, at a time when, according to Washington, Russian forces are gaining ground in Ukraine.
In addition to the United States, the G7 countries include Canada, Britain, France, Germany, Japan and Italy, which holds the presidency this year.
"What we have seen over the past months, is that there have been materials moving from China to Russia that Russia has used to rebuild their industrial base, and produce arms that are showing up on the battlefield in Ukraine, and we are incredibly concerned about that," US State Department spokesman Matthew Miller said this week.
On Thursday, after meeting with Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba, Blinken stressed the "urgent" need to step up support for Ukraine, after another Russian strike on Wednesday left 18 people dead.
The US House of Representatives is expected to vote Saturday on new military aid including some $61 billion in long-delayed support for Ukraine.
"This is a matter of death and life," Kuleba said, adding that he would be working at the G7 meeting to secure more air defence support, which he said was of "fundamental importance".
Washington has set a red line for Beijing -- not to supply weapons to Russia for its war in Ukraine. And so far it has not presented proof that this has been crossed.
But the United States is increasingly denouncing what it says is Chinas backdoor support for Moscow.
The US pressure comes as Blinken prepares to visit China, a trip Washington says will come in the "coming weeks". —AFP