The meeting of Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin, scheduled for tomorrow at the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, is likely to involve jostling for influence in central Asia, where the two global powers have long waged a "quiet rivalry".
The annual meeting of Eurasian leaders on regional politics, economics and security occurs at a crucial time when a rising China and weakening Russia could shift the central Asia power balance in Beijing's favour.
Both leaders have also scheduled stops in Kazakhstan, where Xi launched his trademark "belt and road" foreign investment initiative in 2013. Underscoring the importance of the region, Xi's visit will be his first international trip since the pandemic began and comes a month before a crucial Communist party meeting expected to cement his precedent breaking third term as leader.
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