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China
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China

The People's Republic of China; permanent UN Security Council member and world's second-largest economy.

Last refreshed: 28 May 2026 · Appears in 8 active topics

Key Question

How is China using the Iran war to reshape its global position?

Timeline for China

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Common Questions
Is China buying Iranian oil during the war?
Yes. 11.7 million barrels of Iranian oil have shipped to China since 28 February 2026, all through the Strait of Hormuz under bilateral transit arrangements.Source: TankerTrackers
Did China veto the UN resolution on Iran?
China and Russia vetoed UNSC resolution 2817 calling for Hormuz reopening. China had abstained on the earlier resolution condemning Iran's Gulf attacks.
How much oil does China import through Hormuz?
Roughly 50% of China's crude imports transit the Strait of Hormuz. China is one of five countries negotiating bilateral passage through the IRGC's toll system.Source: event
Did Trump threaten China over the Iran war?
Yes. Trump threatened to delay his summit with Xi Jinping unless China helps secure passage through the Strait of Hormuz.Source: event
What is China doing about AI job losses?
In April 2026, China's MOHRSS recognised 42 new AI occupations each requiring 300,000 to 500,000 workers and prepared an employment policy covering 12.7 million graduates with training rebates. Beijing treats AI as a jobs engine rather than a displacement problem.Source: editorial
What is China's position on the Iran war?
Beijing condemned the US-Israeli strikes as illegal but has not taken direct action. It abstained on the first UN resolution, then vetoed the Hormuz reopening resolution while its own tankers transit under the IRGC toll system.
Why is China buying oil from Iran during the 2026 conflict?
China is Iran's largest oil customer, with ~50% of its crude imports transiting the Strait of Hormuz; it negotiated bilateral SAFE-passage with the IRGC and continued buying discounted Iranian crude throughout the conflict, with 11.7 million barrels shipped in the first ten days.Source: Lowdown Iran Conflict 2026 briefings
What has China said about the US strikes on Iran?
China condemned the US-Israeli strikes as illegal and abstained on UNSC Resolution 2817 condemning Iranian Gulf attacks; Beijing's Washington embassy called OFAC's Hengli Petrochemical designation 'illegal unilateral sanctions' but took no retaliatory action.Source: Lowdown Iran Conflict 2026 briefings
How is China responding to AI job displacement?
In April 2026, China's Ministry of Human Resources recognised 42 new AI occupations, each projected to require 300,000 to 500,000 workers, as part of a policy covering 12.7 million graduates with job-retention rebates and training — the largest state-managed AI employment response in the world.Source: Lowdown AI Jobs Power Money U5
Did Trump threaten China over the Iran conflict?
Yes; Trump threatened to delay his summit with Xi unless China helps secure Hormuz passage, treating Chinese oil purchases as undermining the sanctions pressure campaign against Iran.Source: Lowdown Iran Conflict 2026 U37
What is Hengli Petrochemical and why was it sanctioned?
Hengli Petrochemical is China's second-largest independent refinery; OFAC designated it in April 2026 under sb0472 for buying Iranian crude, the first Chinese refinery targeted in the 2026 conflict and the first OFAC sanction to attach nuclear-programme language to a shadow-fleet action.Source: Lowdown Iran Conflict 2026 briefings
Why is China still buying Iranian oil despite US sanctions?
China issued MOFCOM Blocking Rules No. 21 on 2 May 2026, protecting five named refineries from OFAC Iran sanctions compliance. Hong Kong-registered Shell companies are also being used to route payments outside SWIFT restrictions.Source: MOFCOM / Reuters
What is the Trump-Xi Beijing summit about?
The Trump-Xi summit in Beijing on 14-15 May 2026 covers Hormuz transit arrangements, trade tariffs, and the Iran conflict. Trump has linked summit progress to Chinese co-operation on the Hormuz blockade.Source: White House / Xinhua
Is China mediating between the US and Iran?
China is not a direct mediator but endorsed Pakistan's role as the channel on 12 May 2026. Wang Yi's call to Pakistani FM Dar positioned Beijing as the architect behind the only active diplomatic track connecting Washington and Tehran.Source: Chinese Foreign Ministry
How is China responding to US Iran sanctions?
China issued blocking rules protecting five refineries, vetoed a UN Security Council Hormuz resolution alongside Russia, and publicly opposed OFAC designations of Chinese firms as 'illegal unilateral sanctions'. No ministerial-level retaliatory action has been taken.Source: MOFCOM / Chinese embassy
What is China doing about AI jobs?
China's Ministry of Human Resources recognised 42 new AI occupations in April 2026, each projected to need 300,000 to 500,000 workers. The policy covers 12.7 million graduates with job-retention rebates and training subsidies.Source: Chinese Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security
Who leads China and makes decisions on the Iran crisis?
Xi Jinping leads the People's Republic of China as General Secretary of the Communist Party and President. The Politburo Standing Committee — China's seven-member apex body — sets strategic direction; the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Wang Yi) and MOFCOM execute policy on sanctions and trade.
What is China's role in the Iran conflict?
China is Iran's largest oil customer, absorbing roughly 90% of Iranian crude exports. Beijing condemned US-Israeli strikes, activated MOFCOM Blocking Rules No. 21 to shield five refineries from OFAC sanctions, and publicly backed Pakistan as the US-Iran back-channel — positioning itself as the diplomatic architect of any settlement without direct military exposure.Source: Lowdown
When did China activate the Blocking Rules against US Iran sanctions?
MOFCOM issued Blocking Rules No. 21 on 2 May 2026, formally protecting five named Chinese refineries from OFAC's Iran sanctions compliance requirements and giving them domestic legal cover to continue purchasing Iranian crude.Source: MOFCOM / Lowdown
Why does China oppose US sanctions on Iran?
China depends on Iran for discounted crude — roughly 50% of its imports transit the Strait of Hormuz. US secondary sanctions on Chinese refineries (such as the April 2026 OFAC designation of Hengli Petrochemical) directly threaten Chinese energy security and set a precedent for extraterritorial US enforcement over Chinese commerce, which Beijing rejects as illegal.
How does China balance its Iran ties with the Trump-Xi summit?
Beijing used the 14-15 May summit to signal diplomatic cooperation — Xi wrote to Trump denying arms transfers to Iran, and Commerce cleared 10 Chinese firms for Nvidia chip purchases as a trade-for-diplomacy concession. China simultaneously protected its Iranian oil supply through MOFCOM Blocking Rules and backed Pakistan's Mediation role, keeping leverage over both negotiating tracks.Source: Lowdown
Why is China so important to the Iran conflict?
China buys roughly 90% of Iranian crude exports and has a 25-year cooperation agreement with Tehran. Its MOFCOM Blocking Rules protect Chinese refineries from US sanctions, making Beijing Iran's economic lifeline during the war.Source: entity background
What did China's blocking statute do to Iran sanctions?
MOFCOM Blocking Rules No. 21, issued 2 May 2026, give five named Chinese refineries domestic legal cover to continue purchasing Iranian crude regardless of US OFAC designations, turning passive sanctions resistance into an active legal counter.Source: entity background
How is China responding to AI job losses?
China's Ministry of Human Resources recognised 42 new AI occupations in April 2026, covering 12.7 million graduates with job-retention rebates and training programmes, framing AI as an employment engine rather than a displacement wave.Source: entity background
Why did Trump reject China as an Iran uranium custodian?
At a 27 May Cabinet meeting, Trump said he would not be comfortable with either Russia or China holding Iran's 440.9 kg of 60%-enriched uranium, eliminating the only third-country storage arrangement that had been proposed.Source: entity background
What happened at the Trump-Xi summit in May 2026?
The Beijing summit on 14-15 May was Trump's first overseas trip and the first US presidential visit to China in eight years. The main Iran-adjacent deliverable was a Commerce Department clearance for 10 Chinese firms to buy Nvidia chips; no Iran executive instrument was signed.Source: entity background

Background

China is a permanent UN Security Council member whose energy security depends critically on the Strait of Hormuz: roughly 50% of its crude imports transit the chokepoint. Beijing condemned the US-Israeli strikes as illegal, then carved out protected economic corridors. It is one of five nations in bilateral Hormuz transit talks with Tehran , and 11.7 million barrels of Iranian oil had shipped to China in the first ten days of the war, all through the strait. Beijing abstained on UNSC Resolution 2817 condemning Iran's Gulf attacks rather than vetoing it, signalling unwillingness to defend Iranian retaliation while refusing to endorse a one-sided condemnation. On 2 May 2026, MOFCOM issued Blocking Rules No. 21, formally protecting five named Chinese refineries from OFAC's Iran sanctions compliance requirements, transforming Beijing's posture from passive resistance into an active legal counter to US secondary-sanctions pressure. On 12 May, Foreign Minister Wang Yi endorsed Pakistan as the active US-Iran Mediation channel, positioning China as the diplomatic architect behind the only working route to Washington while avoiding direct exposure. The Trump-Xi summit opened in Beijing on 14 May 2026Trump's first overseas trip and the first US presidential visit to China in eight years — though no Iran executive instrument was signed and the Hormuz dimension remained unresolved. On 27 May, Trump publicly rejected both Russia and China as custodians for Iran's 440.9 kg stockpile of 60%-enriched uranium, removing the only third-country storage arrangement on the table.

China is simultaneously executing the world's largest state-managed AI employment response. In April 2026, the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security recognised 42 new AI occupations, each projected to require 300,000 to 500,000 workers, as part of a dedicated policy covering 12.7 million graduates with job-retention rebates and training programmes. Beijing frames AI as an employment engine, not a displacement wave, in deliberate contrast to US inaction.

China's cross-topic presence in Lowdown's knowledge graph spans Iran conflict energy and diplomacy, Russia-Ukraine UNSC dynamics, AI jobs and power, and European energy markets. It is Iran's largest oil customer, Moscow's principal financial lifeline, and the country whose state AI employment policy has drawn the most international commentary in 2026.

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