China may in some ways favor Russia, but it has been ambivalent about the situation in Crimea. More importantly, it will buy Russian energy and opportunistically sell its pork, but Chinese state banks are not lending money to fill the capital gap left by Western sanctions. Sino-Russian Implications Chinese Premier Li Keqiang signed several deals in Moscow covering energy, trade and finance, which Russia claims will offset the sanctions imposed on it by the U.S. and EU. However, Western exporters dispute the claim. China may in some ways favor Russia, but it has been ambivalent about the situation in Crimea. More importantly, it will buy Russian energy and opportunistically sell its pork, but Chinese state banks are not lending money to fi...