By MalayMail
BEIJING, May 13 β The Iran war has strained US-Chinese ties further and looks set to dominate the May 14 to 15 βsummit between US President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart and host Xi Jinping in Beijing. Below are the key issues at stake for Washington and Beijing as the US-Israeli war with Iran reshapes calculations in their broader relationship:
Iran ceasefire talks
US Treasury Secretary Scott βBessent has said that the two presidents will discuss the Iran war, and urged China to βjoin us in this international operationβ to open the Strait of Hormuz to international shipping. But while Beijing worked behind the scenes to convince Iran to hold peace talks with the US in Pakistan last month, analysts say it would not act solely at Washingtonβs behest. After last weekβs visit to Beijing by Iranβs foreign minister, China called for a βcomplete cessation of hostilitiesβ.
On the nuclear issue, it said that βChina appreciates Iranβs commitment not to develop nuclear weapons, while also recognising Iranβs legitimate right to the peaceful use of nuclear energy.β
The US believes Iran wants to build a nuclear bomb and wants Iran to give up its right to enrichment for 20 years and hand over its stockpile of highly enriched uranium.
Energy security
Chinaβs energy βsecurity faces increasing risks as the war drags on, forcing Beijing to cut its lucrative exports of refined products such β as gasoline or jet fuel to protect its domestic market.
Around β half of Chinaβs crude oil imports are shipped from the Middle East, where β the closure of the Strait of β Hormuz and US blockade have left β ships stranded inside the Gulf and vulnerable to attacks. The conflict slashed Chinaβs total crude oil imports in April by 20 per cent from a year ago to the lowest level in almost four years, according to Chinese customs data. Chinaβs foreign ministry has β said the US blockade of the strait does not serve the common interest of the international community. It also confirmed last week that an oil products tanker with Chinese crew was attacked in the strait.
US sanctions over Iranian oil, weapon sales
China is the biggest buyer of Iranian oil despite pressure from the Trump administration.
More than 80 per cent of Iranβs shipped oil has been destined for China, as Chinese independent refiners take advantage of discounted US-sanctioned oil. Kpler estimates β that China bought an average of 1.38 million barrels per day of Iranian oil in 2025. In April, the US Treasury imposed sanctions on Chinese independent refinery Hengli Petrochemical for buying billions of dollarsβ worth of Iranian β oil, making good on its threats of sanctioning buyers. The Treasury has also written to two Chinese banks warning of secondary β sanctions if β they facilitated trade of Iranian oil.
Beijing has pushed back. The Ministry of Commerce ordered companies not to comply with US sanctions against five refiners, for the first time invoking a law that allows Beijing to retaliate against entities enforcing sanctions it deems unlawful. Just days before Trumpβs βvisit, the US Treasury imposed sanctions on two companies in China and two in Hong Kong it accused of supplying and facilitating efforts for Iran to purchase weapons from China and materials used in ballistic missiles. β Reuters
Source: Iran-war-raises-stakes-for-us-and-china-ahead-of-trump-xi-talks-as-ties-strain-further
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