Top Chinese diplomat Yang Jiechi to visit Greece and Spain this week

Top Chinese diplomat Yang Jiechi will visit Greece and Spain this week, as part of an unusual arrangement of back-to-back European visits by two high-level Chinese foreign policy officials.

Analysts say this signals Beijing's urgency to prevent further European strategic rebalancing in favour of the US, but neither European country would favour Beijing at the expense of Brussels or Washington. Both Spain and Greece are facing increasing pressure to take sides between their security alliance with the US and vast business interest with China.

President Xi Jinping made state visits to both countries in the last two years, with Yang present on both occasions. This time, however, Yang will be visiting a Europe which has turned much more wary of Beijing after the coronavirus pandemic.

The Chinese foreign ministry on Monday announced Yang's trip, which also includes a stop in Myanmar, confirming a report by the South China Morning Post.

French President Emmanuel Macron (at right) meets with visiting Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, last week. Photo: Xinhua alt=French President Emmanuel Macron (at right) meets with visiting Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, last week. Photo: Xinhua

Yang, a member of the Politburo, is widely considered the highest-ranking diplomat within the Chinese Communist Party.

His main portfolio involves handling Sino-US relations, a theme that is expected to reverberate on his European trip, which will closely follow Foreign Minister Wang Yi's trip to five other European countries.

Wang during his current trip criticised Czech politicians for visiting Taiwan and warned the Nobel Peace Prize committee not to award Hong Kong protesters - neither gesture considered conducive to alleviating EU officials' worries over Beijing's "wolf warrior diplomacy".

"China is trying to regain ground, amidst the massive pushback it is facing and visibly deteriorating relations with Europeans across the board," said Plamen Tonchev, a China expert at the Athens-based Institute of International Economic Relations.

"Greece matters, as it used to be one of China's staunchest supporters in Europe until recently, and hosts one of the most successful and visible Belt and Road Initiative projects," Tonchev added, referring to the port of Piraeus in which China's state-owned COSCO Shipping owns a 51 per cent stake.

During Xi's visit to Athens, China and Greece agreed to push ahead with a €600 million ($717 million) investment by COSCO, including mandatory investments of €300 million ($359 million) by 2022 which once concluded will allow it to acquire an additional 16 per cent stake in the port.