ANALYSISAnalysts say
China may seek changes in US policy towards
Taiwan if it were to pressure
Iran reopen Hormuz.US and Chinese national flags next to the portrait of late Chinese Chairman
Mao Zedong, before US President Donald Trump's visit to
China, Beijing, May 13, 2026 [Go Nakamura/Reuters]Published On 13 May 2026When President Donald Trump meets with his counterpart,
Xi Jinping, a new item will be added to the long list of issues of mutual interest and potential disagreement between the
United States and
China: the war in
Iran.US officials have suggested that
China should play a greater role in pushing
Iran to reopen the
Strait of Hormuz, but analysts say Beijing will require concessions from the US, likely over
Taiwan, if it were to aid in resolving the crisis.Recommended Stories list of 3 itemslist 1 of 3Iran war day 75: Trump-Xi talks loom in Beijing as tensions rise in Gulflist 2 of 3China’s Xi expected to press Trump on
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Iran as diplomacy faltersend of listAnd
Iran is unlikely to be at the top of the agenda in the Trump-Xi meeting.“The
Iran issue is not really the central issue for either party in this summit,” said
Christopher Heurlin, an associate professor of government and Asian studies at
Bowdoin College.Heurlin said that, although the meeting was delayed earlier this year due to the war,
Taiwan will remain
China’s top issue, while Trump will likely push Beijing to buy more US soya beans.
China is a major importer of Iranian and Middle East oil, so its economy could come under strain from the disruption caused by Tehran’s Hormuz blockade and the US naval siege on
Iran.Still, Heurlin said Beijing has been reluctant to get involved in the crisis.“In terms of
Iran, the Chinese have sort of been positioning themselves as someone who might possibly be helpful in this regard,” he said.“They hosted the Iranian foreign minister recently, but it seems like they’ve been holding off on putting any pressure on
Iran to end the conflict, just waiting for this visit.”Trump ‘chastened’While Beijing has amassed oil reserves that have helped it weather global energy shortfalls, such resources are finite, so
China has an interest in opening the strait.At the same time, if Washington – Beijing’s chief strategic competitor – is weakened globally from the
Iran conflict, which is increasingly looking like an unwinnable war for many observers.The Economist magazine summed up that dynamic on its front cover last month, featuring a photo of Xi looking at Trump with a quote attributed to Napoleon Bonaparte: “Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.”Inderjeet Parmar, professor of international politics at City St George’s, University of London, said Trump heads to
China “chastened” by the shortcomings of the
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Iran war.“So Trump is going there in a bit of a situation,” Parmar told Al Jazeera.“He needs Chinese support for opening the
Strait of Hormuz.
China needs the
Strait of Hormuz to open for its own reasons – of oil and energy from
Iran and so on. At the same time, they can use this as leverage regarding
Taiwan.”Trump said before departing for
China on Tuesday that he does not need Xi’s help on
Iran, saying that the conflict is “very much under control”.However, with petrol prices in the US skyrocketing and fuelling inflation, diplomacy stalled, and Trump’s popularity plummeting, the war appears to be hampering the Republican president’s domestic and global standing.Last week, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called on
China to intervene in the crisis.“The attacks from
Iran have closed the strait. We are reopening it. So I would urge the Chinese to join us in supporting this international operation,” Bessent said.He also underscored that
China is the top importer of Iranian oil, accusing Beijing of “funding the largest state sponsor of terrorism”, referring to Tehran.“Let’s see them step up with some diplomacy and get the Iranians to open the strait,” he said.
China’s planWilliam Yang, senior analyst for Northeast Asia at the International Crisis Group, said
China and the US both want Hormuz to open, but “their preferred approach to achieve this goal don’t align.”While
China has been calling for restraint from all sides, Trump has been threatening
Iran with enormous military attacks almost daily.
Iran has refused to hold direct talks with the US before Washington lifts its naval blockade.A US military initiative to reopen Hormuz by force, while maintaining the siege on Iranian ports, earlier this month was short-lived, ending in less than 48 hours without significantly increasing traffic in the strait.“Washington understands that it may need Beijing’s help to nudge
Iran back to the negotiating table, but it is also aware of the implications of directly seeking support from Beijing to end the blockade, as it would likely mean giving
China the upper hand in the bilateral relations,” Yang told Al Jazeera.“As a result, Trump has been trying to push
Iran to accept the conditions that the US had put forward through coercion, threatening to resume bombing if Tehran doesn’t agree to its terms.”In April, Xi proposed a “four-point plan to safeguard and promote Middle East peace and stability”: Commitment to peaceful coexistence Respect for national sovereignty Commitment to international law Backing a “balanced approach to development and security” While vague, the proposal reflected a preference for multilateralism and diplomacy in contrast with Trump’s reliance on military power to advance his goals in the region.Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi hosted his Iranian counterpart, Abbas Araghchi, last week.“
China believes that a comprehensive ceasefire is of utmost urgency, that resuming hostilities is even less acceptable, and that adhering to negotiations is particularly important,” Beijing’s Foreign Ministry said after the meeting.“
China supports
Iran in safeguarding its national sovereignty and security, and appreciates
Iran’s willingness to seek a political solution through diplomatic channels.”At the same time,
China called for restoring “normal and safe passage” through Hormuz, which appears to be at odds with
Iran’s claim of sovereignty over the strategic waterway, which emerged after the war.US-
China tiesChina buys oil from
Iran despite US sanctions, and Washington has voiced concern about Beijing’s sale of products that could be repurposed for military use by Tehran.However, before the war, the
Iran file was an afterthought in the competition between the US and
China.Over the past two decades, Washington has come to see Beijing as its top global challenger as the Chinese economy and regional and global influence have grown.During his first term, Trump formally recognised
China as a strategic competitor of the US.“Although the
United States seeks to continue to cooperate with
China,
China is using economic inducements and penalties, influence operations, and implied military threats to persuade other states to heed its political and security agenda,” the 2017 US National Security Strategy read.“
China’s infrastructure investments and trade strategies reinforce its geopolitical aspirations.”Former President Joe Biden picked up where Trump left off with his administration declaring Beijing a “pacing challenge” for Washington.The US has pushed to deepen its alliances in the Asia Pacific region to counter
China’s rise.As the competition intensified, the relationship between the two countries soured in recent years over several points of tension: trade practices, sanctions, Beijing’s claims to the South
China Sea, the COVID-19 pandemic, and the status of
Taiwan.Ties particularly worsened in 2022 when then-US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited
Taiwan.Months later, there was another crisis – Washington accused Beijing of sending a “spy balloon” into US airspace.
China insisted that the aircraft was a weather balloon that drifted over the US.But since returning to the White House in January 2025, Trump and his administration have put less emphasis on the great power competition.