President Donald Trump, numerous members of his cabinet, and approximately thirty top businessmen traveled to China for historic talks with Chinese leader Xi Jinping. Discussions about business are a big part of this trip, but “the Iran war is casting a shadow over the meeting,” according to Mehek Cooke, Senior National Security and Legal Analyst at The Daily Signal.
China
wants the world to believe it is a force for peace, open shipping lanes, stable
energy markets, lower oil prices, and a responsible global power. But the truth
is much uglier, and Beijing is helping to bankroll the very regime threatening
the world’s most important energy choke point, the Strait of Hormuz. Trump is
openly forcing China’s hypocrisy into view. It is now a test of Beijing’s role
in sustaining the instability it publicly opposes. He arrives in China with leverage
over a contradiction that Xi has tried to hide.
The
test is critical as Iran stalls during peace talks. Trump called Iran’s most
recent proposal “totally unacceptable” because it was not a peace offer; it was
a list of demands to end the blockade, lift sanctions, and preserve Tehran’s
leverage over the Strait of Hormuz. Once again, we are watching a weakened
regime try to bluff from a position of strength. The U.S.-Iran ceasefire is on
life support, and the message is clear from Trump: If Beijing wants calmer
energy markets and protected shipping lanes, it must stop underwriting a regime
that threatens both. Beijing has spent years playing both sides. It wants
uninterrupted access to Gulf energy, freedom of navigation, and all the
economic benefits of regional order. At the same time, it treats Iran as a
useful anti-American partner by helping Tehran evade U.S. sanctions, sustain
its destabilizing activity across the Middle East, and, in return, secure
deeply discounted Iranian oil.
While
the China-Iran relationship is not a formal alliance, an official document is
not required to see what the United States already knows. China is Iran’s
largest trading partner and the primary purchaser of Iranian oil, accounting
for roughly 90% of Iran’s exported crude and providing Tehran with billions in
revenue.
China’s
relationship with Tehran directly conflicts with America’s mission to restore
global stability. It continues to benefit economically while the U.S. absorbs
the security costs. Trump is changing that equation.
This
moment is unique because Trump is directly turning Tehran into a China problem.
If freedom of navigation is not restored and the Strait of Hormuz remains
unstable, Beijing can no longer hide behind slogans about peace while
bankrolling the regime, putting the global economy risk. China may not care
about America’s interest in restoring order, but it cares about its own growth,
energy security, and economic stability.
For
years, Beijing enjoyed a free ride in the Middle East. The United States
absorbed the terror, security, and military shocks, while China collected the
economic benefits and expanded its regional influence. Trump is ending that arrangement
and calculates that China will bend, given that its security is on the line.
Historically, China acts when its own energy security and commercial stability
are threatened. In 2008, when piracy endangered Chinese petroleum imports from
the Middle East and trade routes to Europe and North Africa, Beijing deployed
naval escort missions to protect shipping. The Strait of Hormuz now presents
the same test on a far larger scale.
Trump’s
visit to China today is also a call to policymakers in Washington to recognize
that the Iran war is a broader power struggle with Beijing and not an isolated
Middle East conflict. Every move China makes, from China-based entities
supplying drones and missiles and satellite imagery that enabled Iranian
strikes, to U.S. intelligence showing Beijing was preparing to transfer a new
air-defense system during the conflict, shows the clear fight.
If Beijing wants the benefits of stability, it must stop financing Tehran. It can either use its leverage over Iran to help force peace, or it will face a Trump pressure campaign that no longer lets China profit from chaos at America’s expense.