Wang's comments, made in a call with his Dutch counterpart,
came hours after leaders of NATO member states gathered in Washington DC and
issued a declaration on the war.
They accused China of being a "decisive enabler"
of Russia through its "large-scale support for Russia's defense industrial
base", in some of their harshest remarks yet about Beijing.
They called on China to stop "all material and
political support" to Russia's war effort such as the supply of dual-use
materials, which are items that can be used for both civilian and military
purposes.
Western states have previously accused Beijing of
transferring drone and missile technology and satellite imagery to Moscow.
The US
estimates about 70% of the machine tools and 90% of the microelectronics Russia
imports now come from China.
Beijing was also accused of conducting "malicious cyber
and hybrid activities, including disinformation" on NATO states.
On Thursday, while speaking to the Netherlands' new foreign
minister Caspar Veldkamp, Wang said "China absolutely does not
accept" all these accusations and insisted that they have "always
been a force for peace and force for stability".
In comments carried by state media, he said that China's different political
system and values "should not be used as a reason for NATO to incite
confrontation with China", and called for NATO to "stay within its
bounds".
His remarks was the latest in a flurry of angry responses
from Beijing.
Earlier on Thursday, a foreign ministry spokesperson said
NATO was smearing China with "fabricated disinformation", while
Beijing's mission to the European Union told the alliance to "stop hyping
up the so-called China threat".
Beijing has long rebutted accusations that it has been
aiding Russia in the war and insists that it remains a neutral party. It has
called for an end to the conflict and proposed a peace plan, which Ukraine has
rejected.
Besides the growing accusations of military support,
observers have also pointed out that Beijing's purchases of vast amounts of oil
and gas have helped prop up Russia's economy crippled by sanctions and
replenish coffers drained by war spending.
Beijing's official rhetoric on the conflict often mirrors Moscow's — like them,
China still does not call it a war — and Chinese President Xi Jinping has
maintained a close relationship with President Vladimir Putin, with both of
them famously declaring their partnership has "no limits".
Beijing has accused the US and other Western states of pouring "fuel on
the fire" by supplying lethal weapons and technology to Ukraine for its
defense.
In recent weeks, several countries have gone a step further and allowed Ukraine
to use their weapons to hit targets inside Russia.
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