
China's 'inaction' eroding leverage
China has been able to do little more than stand back and watch as war between its key partner Iran and Israel harms its hard-fought leverage in the Middle East, say analysts.
Beijing has sought to frame itself as a mediator in the region, facilitating a 2023 rapprochement between Saudi Arabia and Iran and portraying itself as a more neutral actor in the Israel-Palestinian conflict than its rival the United States.
And its position as the largest purchaser of Iranian oil has served as a crucial lifeline for Teheran as its economy is battered by crippling international sanctions.
But as Israel and Iran engaged in an unprecedented exchange of attacks and the US struck key targets on Iranian soil in the past week, Beijing has offered little beyond calls for de-escalation.
"Beijing has offered Teheran no real help — just rhetoric that paints China as the principled alternative while it stays safely on the sidelines," said Craig Singleton, senior China fellow at the Foundation for Defence of Democracies think tank.
China, he said, "sticks to rhetoric — condemnations, United Nations (UN) statements, talk of 'dialogue' — because over-promising and under-delivering would spotlight its power-projection limits".
"The result is a conspicuously thin response that underscores how little real heft China brings to Iran when the shooting starts."
China — alongside its "no limits" partner Russia — has long been a key backer of Iran, deepening ties in the wake of the US withdrawal from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action nuclear deal in 2018.
President Xi Jinping described relations as "strategic" in a 2023 meeting with Iran's then-president Ebrahim Raisi, and backed Teheran in its fight against "bullying".
Liu Qiang, a retired Chinese senior colonel, was even more explicit in an article on the academic website Aisixiang this month.
"Iran's survival is a matter of China's national security," said the director of the Academic Committee of the Shanghai International Centre for Strategic Studies.
Beijing, he insisted, must take "proactive measures" in light of the recent war to ensure that Teheran "will not be broken by the military conflict" or "jointly strangled by the US and Israel".
Analysts say Beijing's ties with Teheran are central to its efforts to ensure a regional counterbalance against both the US and Israel as well as the Gulf States.
"Iran fits into Beijing's broader campaign to counterbalance US-led hegemony and to a lesser extent Nato (North Atlantic Treaty Organisation) encroachment," said Tuvia Gering, non-resident fellow at the Atlantic Council's Global China Hub.
Those efforts have gone into overdrive following blows to other "Axis of resistance" players since the start of the Gaza war — the collapse of Bashar Al-Assad's rule in Syria and the degradation of Hamas and Hizbollah in fighting with Israel.
"Beijing has sought to prevent a total unravelling of Iran's regional role," said Gering, pointing to Chinese efforts to resurrect the nuclear deal.
China condemned recent US strikes on Iran and called for parties in the region, "especially Israel", to de-escalate.
And it has called for a political solution to help a declared ceasefire hold.
Fighting last month between India and Pakistan saw Beijing furnish its long-time allies in Islamabad with state-of-the-art military gear.
Analysts don't expect China to extend the same courtesy to its comrades in Teheran, given the risk of direct confrontation with the US.
"Iran needs more than statements at the UN or missile components," said Andrea Ghiselli, a lecturer at the University of Exeter.
"It needs air defences and fighter jets, which are things that China could provide but would require much time to be put into use — not to mention the likely extremely negative reaction by Israel and, especially now that it directly involves the US," he added.
The US has urged China to use its influence on Iran to help deter its leaders from shutting down the Strait of Hormuz, a vital route for oil and gas.
But Ahmed Aboudouh, an associate fellow with the Chatham House Middle East and North Africa Programme, was sceptical that Beijing has the leverage.
"China's position in the Middle East after this conflict" has been badly affected, he said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
an hour ago
- The Star
CIA says intelligence indicates Iran's nuclear program severely damaged
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Central Intelligence Agency Director John Ratcliffe on Wednesday said a body of credible intelligence indicated that Iran's nuclear program was severely damaged by recent U.S. strikes, and that it would take years to be rebuilt. "This includes new intelligence from a historically reliable and accurate source/method that several key Iranian nuclear facilities were destroyed and would have to be rebuilt over the course of years," Ratcliffe said in a statement. (Reporting by Kanishka Singh and Ryan Patrick Jones, Editing by Bhargav Acharya)


The Star
an hour ago
- The Star
Positive response to Axiata's bid to unlock value
HLIB Research viewed the potential monetisation of Axiata's stake in edotco as a key near-term catalyst for share price rerating. PETALING JAYA: Axiata Group Bhd 's earnings are likely to remain lacklustre in the near term and the market is likely to respond positively to the group's efforts to unlock value, according to Hong Leong Investment Bank (HLIB) Research. It viewed the potential monetisation of Axiata's stake in edotco as a key near-term catalyst for share price rerating. It slightly raised its financial year 2025 (FY25) to FY27 earnings forecasts by 2% to 15% to reflect management's guidance and fine-tuned assumptions. It said the second quarter (2Q25) financial results and headline earnings might see a lot of noise due to XLSmart deconsolidation, disposal gains on XLSmart stake sale to Sinar Mas and the disposal loss on the Edotco Myanmar divestment, besides foreign exchange (forex) volatility. It retained its 'buy' call on the stock with a target price of RM2.50 a share. It said the recent divestment of Myanmar tower assets would pave the way for Edotco's monetisation, with reports suggesting a Khazanah Nasional Bhd-Employees Provident Fund consortium could acquire Axiata's 63% stake at a US$3.5bil valuation. It is strategically consistent, given that Khazanah had acquired the entire 21% stake from Innovation Network Corp of Japan in early March 2025, boosting its ownership in Edotco to 32%. The remaining 5% stake is currently held by Retirement Fund Inc. Assuming this materialises, Axiata could net around RM6.3bil from the sale. With up to US$475mil in equalisation payments from the concluded XLSmart merger in April 2025, the proceeds would accelerate balance sheet-repair for Axiata.


The Star
an hour ago
- The Star
QXO seeks US$2bil in share sale
QXO chairman and CEO Brad Jacobs. — Bloomberg NEW YORK: QXO Inc is seeking to raise US$2bil in a share sale, as the building products distributor, led by billionaire Brad Jacobs, pursues a takeover. The Greenwich, Connecticut-based firm is marketing the shares for US$22.25 to US$23.25 each in an overnight share sale, according to people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified as the information isn't public. QXO intends to use proceeds from the offering for purposes which may include funding future acquisitions, according to a statement. The price range represents a discount of as much as 5.4% to the stock's last traded price of US$23.51 each. Its shares have climbed nearly 48% in the year-to-date period, giving the company a market value of US$13.4bil. QXO made an unsolicited US$5bil offer for GMS Inc, and said it wouldn't raise the offer after The Wall Street Journal reported Home Depot Inc had made a rival bid. QXO is the largest publicly traded distributor of roofing and building products in the United States. — Bloomberg