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Opinion | Iran’s uncertain future poses a strategic test for China

Opinion | Iran’s uncertain future poses a strategic test for China插图

China has responded to the escalating conflict in Iran with familiar language: calls for restraint, condemnation of military escalation and appeals for dialogue. But beneath the carefully calibrated diplomacy lies a harder strategic reality. What happens in Iran carries significant implications for Beijing’s energy security, regional positioning and global rivalry with the United States.
For China, Iran is not an ideological ally in the way Russia appears to be. The relationship is rooted in pragmatism. In the past decade, ties deepened under a “comprehensive strategic partnership” framework, culminating in a 25-year cooperation agreement signed in 2021.
Energy sits at the core of that partnership. Iran has supplied China with substantial volumes of crude oil – an average of 1.38 million barrels per day in 2025 – often at discounted rates and through complex payment mechanisms that helped Tehran bypass Western sanctions. For Iran, China is an economic lifeline. For China, Iran is a useful, though not irreplaceable, supplier within a broader diversification strategy.

That asymmetry matters. Iran depends far more on China than China depends on Iran. Even so, the current crisis exposes how even a limited dependency can create outsize strategic risk.

The first and most immediate concern for Beijing is energy security. China remains the world’s largest crude oil importer. A significant portion of those imports transit the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow maritime chokepoint adjacent to Iran. Even if Iranian exports themselves are only temporarily disrupted, any prolonged instability that threatens shipping routes or increases insurance costs would reverberate across Chinese refineries and industrial supply chains.

A sudden regime collapse in Tehran could magnify this volatility. In the short term, political upheaval often means export disruption. In the longer term, a new Iranian government could reorient its energy relationships, potentially renegotiating existing contracts or shifting supply towards markets that offer sanctions relief or political alignment. For Beijing, the risk is not only lost barrels but lost preferential terms.

Israel, oil, sanctions, diplomacy, Belt and Road Initiative, Iran, United States, Indo-Pacific, Russia, Strait of Hormuz, Middle East, Europe, China#Opinion #Irans #uncertain #future #poses #strategic #test #China1772800332

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