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    Conflicts & Security

    Iran Shows China’s Relationships Aren’t Security Based

    adminBy adminMarch 6, 2026No Comments8 Mins Read
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    Iran Shows China’s Relationships Aren’t Security Based
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    For many Western analysts, China’s response to the Iran crisis seems to confirm a familiar verdict: Beijing is an unreliable friend. It buys Iranian oil, denounces unilateral military action, calls for restraint—and then stops short of doing what they believe a great power should do for a partner under pressure: come to its aid militarily, either directly or through supplying arms and funding.

    It is certainly true that China is not willing to play the same role for Iran that the United States has long assumed for its own partners. But that does not mean that China is feckless, nor does it mean that its ties with Iran are insincere. It means, above all, that too many observers still measure every rising power against a U.S. template.

    For many Western analysts, China’s response to the Iran crisis seems to confirm a familiar verdict: Beijing is an unreliable friend. It buys Iranian oil, denounces unilateral military action, calls for restraint—and then stops short of doing what they believe a great power should do for a partner under pressure: come to its aid militarily, either directly or through supplying arms and funding.

    It is certainly true that China is not willing to play the same role for Iran that the United States has long assumed for its own partners. But that does not mean that China is feckless, nor does it mean that its ties with Iran are insincere. It means, above all, that too many observers still measure every rising power against a U.S. template.

    In Washington, power is still read through the grammar of alliances, security guarantees, and the conversion of political relationships into military obligations. Once that template is assumed to be universal, any refusal to act as a military patron becomes evidence of weakness. Yet Beijing has never organized power quite that way—and the reasons are not reducible to a single cynical calculation.

    Domestic priorities come first for Beijing. However powerful China has become, it remains preoccupied with internal modernization: reviving demand, creating jobs, managing debt, coping with demographic pressure, sustaining technological upgrading, and preserving social stability. Foreign policy is judged primarily by whether it secures a workable external environment for domestic goals, such as stable access to markets or technology. Open-ended military liabilities for distant partners cut against that hierarchy—especially when China’s core economic and political tests remain at home.

    Historical memory also shapes strategic tradition. Modern China’s political identity was forged through invasion, coercion, and national humiliation. A country with that experience is less likely to romanticize the idea that strong states should travel abroad to reorder weaker ones by force. This is often dismissed as propaganda, but it’s the message that the state has been spreading domestically, including in textbooks.

    The historical record broadly fits that instinct: Outside of the Korean War, which threatened its own border, China has rarely used force primarily to defend a third country, with most of its wars tied instead to its frontiers. Beijing is capable of economic coercion when what it sees as key international interests are at stake, but it has not built a global, or even a regional, role around expeditionary warfare . China is instinctively wary of being cast as anyone’s protectorate manager.

    Then there’s the example of the United States itself. Beijing has spent decades watching Washington launch war after war and then struggle to translate battlefield superiority into durable political outcomes. From Iraq to Afghanistan and beyond, the lesson that Chinese policymakers have drawn is not that force is irrelevant, but that it often fails to produce order at an acceptable cost. Military power can destroy an old order; it cannot reliably build a legitimate new one. In Chinese eyes, the post-Cold War U.S. record is as much a cautionary tale about overreach as it is a demonstration of capability.

    There is also a lack of capacity. Even if Beijing wanted to become a Middle Eastern security patron on the U.S. model, it would struggle to do so. China has rapidly modernized its military, but it still lacks the United States’ alliance network, regional force posture, combat experience, and the logistical infrastructure for sustained power projection. It is a major power with expanding global interests, but not one equipped to underwrite order in the way that Washington can.

    Iran illustrates the distinction between interest and obligation. China is the largest buyer of Iranian crude, and it has obvious reasons to care about stability in the Gulf, the safety of shipping lanes, and the broader regional balance. But those interests do not amount to an alliance commitment. Much of the Iranian oil flowing into China is purchased not by its largest state-owned energy champions but by smaller independent refiners attracted by discounted barrels. Iran matters to China, but not in the way that treaty allies or core security theaters matter to the United States. Importance is not the same as obligation.

    This is where the “axis” narrative misleads. Folding China’s ties with countries such as Iran into a bloc story encourages observers to treat economic coordination and shared resistance to U.S. pressure as the early stages of a military alliance. But China’s influence has typically spread through commerce, infrastructure, finance, and diplomacy. These can be weaponized from time to time, but they are not treaty guarantees. In practice, Beijing has benefited from a security environment that the United States has largely underwritten while avoiding the costs and entanglements that security patronage creates.

    That posture has advantages. It gives Beijing flexibility. It reduces the risk of strategic overstretch. It allows China to maintain relations with rival actors at the same time.

    It also has limits. China can often shape the peacetime environment more effectively than it can determine outcomes once a crisis turns violent. When deterrence, force protection, intelligence coordination, and emergency guarantees are needed, regional actors still look first to Washington, not Beijing. China’s influence is real, but it is not symmetrical with the United States’.

    Parts of China’s trade with Iran operate in the shadow of unilateral U.S. sanctions, and Washington has repeatedly targeted entities involved in Iranian oil flows. That does not prove the existence of a hidden military alliance. But it does fuel Western skepticism that Beijing wants the upside of relationships without the responsibilities—and it makes China’s calls for “stability” sound, at times, like a preference for low-cost continuity.

    Still, recognizing Beijing’s limits should not lead to a more dangerous misreading: the idea that Chinese restraint means that Chinese interests are fair game.

    If Washington concludes that China’s unwillingness to act as a security patron means that it will also tolerate pressure on all of its overseas interests, the result could be serious escalation. Once the target is not another state but lawful Chinese commercial interests abroad, the issue changes. It is no longer about whether Beijing is willing to rescue a partner. It becomes a question of whether the United States is directly challenging China itself.

    Early signs of such overreach are already visible. In Panama, the lease of two ports by a Hong Kong firm, known to be on icy terms with Beijing, was recently snatched under falsehoods manufactured by U.S. President Donald Trump, even though such commercial activity had not previously been treated as intolerable. In Peru, Washington has increasingly cast the Chinese-backed Chancay port in securitized terms. Trump is also attempting to kick China out in Venezuela. The broader trend is that Washington is increasingly tempted to treat ordinary Chinese commercial presence as a latent threat, and therefore as a legitimate object of geopolitical coercion.

    China may not be willing—or able—to defend partners the way that the United States does. Yet it is unlikely to remain passive if it concludes that U.S. policy is shifting from contesting states to systematically squeezing lawful Chinese commercial interests with no direct military character. That is the difference between declining to be Iran’s patron and accepting a precedent that Chinese interests abroad can be treated as expendable.

    China’s posture toward Iran, then, should not be read as evidence that it secretly wants to be the United States and has failed, but nor should it be dismissed as empty language. It reflects a different conception of power: strategic relevance without alliance leadership, commercial reach without automatic security obligations, and diplomatic influence without permanent military exposure.

    The real risk is not that China will become another United States. It is that the United States, unable to imagine a major power that does not operate through protectorates and guarantees, will keep mistaking restraint for weakness—and act on that mistake in ways that make rivalry sharper, broader, and more dangerous than it needs to be.

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