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Iran Conflict 2026
14JUN

China condemns the blockade it uses

3 min read
11:42UTC

Lowdown Newsroom

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Beijing protests the blockade in public and uses it in private, and the carve-out keeps both true.

Guo Jiakun, spokesman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, called the US blockade 'dangerous and irresponsible' on Monday and said it 'will only exacerbate tensions and undermine the already fragile ceasefire agreement.' A second statement the following day repeated the language. Beijing, Guo said, would 'make efforts to help restore peace and stability.' Between the two statements, the Chinese-owned, US-sanctioned tankers Rich Starry and Elpis transited the strait of Hormuz under CENTCOM's non-Iranian-port carve-out without incident. China has filed no formal sanctions challenge.

Beijing's annual oil imports from Iran are roughly a sixth of total crude purchases, the volume that would have given a formal legal challenge both motive and standing. The diplomatic protest and the commercial transit are the same event from different angles. Beijing is arguing against the blockade in public while its tankers use the operational order's gaps in private. The rhetorical register is escalating; the operational register is not. China's leverage sits in what moves, not what is said.

The dual posture is stable only while the carve-out holds. If CENTCOM widens its operational order to include non-Iranian-port traffic, Beijing's quiet mode ends. A formal Chinese challenge at that point would move from press briefing to UN procedural filing and would test the blockade's legality in a way the unsigned presidential posture cannot defend. The same ambiguity that currently lets Chinese crude cross freely is the ambiguity that keeps Beijing's response below the threshold that would force a reckoning over the Pacific. Both sides benefit from the fog, for now.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

China's government publicly called the US blockade 'dangerous and irresponsible' two days running. Across the same two days, two Chinese-owned tankers that the US had already sanctioned for carrying Iranian oil sailed straight through the Strait of Hormuz; because the US military's written order only blocked ships going to Iranian ports, not all Chinese-owned ships. So China is doing two things at once: complaining loudly about the blockade in public, while quietly using the gap the US military left open to keep buying discounted Iranian oil. This is not contradictory from Beijing's perspective; protesting the principle while exploiting the practice is a consistent Chinese foreign policy approach. The tanker transits are the more important signal: they demonstrate that US secondary sanctions, without matching naval enforcement, have no coercive weight over Chinese commercial operations.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The structural condition enabling China's dual-register response is CENTCOM's non-Iranian-port carve-out, which was written precisely to avoid triggering Chinese-flag-state incidents. CENTCOM's lawyers understood that boarding a PLA-connected tanker in international waters without a presidential directive or UNSC mandate would create a bilateral incident with no legal defence. By excluding non-Iranian-port traffic, CENTCOM preserved the status quo on China while appearing to execute a blockade.

China's structural incentive is straightforward: Iranian oil at a discount provides roughly 15 per cent of its total crude imports. The dark-fleet architecture Beijing developed since 2022; sanctioned vessels operating outside Western insurance and financial systems; was specifically designed to absorb this kind of commercial environment. The blockade's carve-out is an accidental gift to a supply chain China has been building for four years.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    CENTCOM's non-Iranian-port carve-out creates a structural exception for China's dark-fleet operations that cannot be closed without a presidential directive Beijing would contest as an act of economic warfare

    Immediate · 0.85
  • Risk

    If CENTCOM widens its operational order to include non-Iranian-port sanctioned traffic, China's response calculus shifts from quiet protest to potential countermeasures against US commercial interests

    Short term · 0.65
  • Precedent

    China's demonstrated ability to transit US-sanctioned vessels through a US-enforced blockade establishes a template for future secondary-sanctions evasion via dark-fleet architecture in any theatre

    Long term · 0.8
First Reported In

Update #69 · Cooper joins the instrument gap

Chinese Foreign Ministry· 15 Apr 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
China condemns the blockade it uses
Beijing's rhetorical escalation is running in the opposite direction from its operational posture, because the carve-out CENTCOM wrote lets Chinese tankers transit without any commercial cost to contesting it.
Different Perspectives
Qatar (mediator)
Qatar (mediator)
Qatari negotiators flew to Tehran on Sunday morning to close remaining gaps between the parties, operating as the primary shuttle channel. Qatar's role is to bridge the civilian-track gap the IRGC veto has left.
IAEA / Rafael Grossi
IAEA / Rafael Grossi
Grossi replied to Araghchi's 13 June protection-of-materials letter the same day, citing Iran's NPT Safeguards Agreement obligation to declare any nuclear material transfer. With 97 days of lost inspector access and approximately 240 kg unaccounted, Grossi has treaty text and no inspectors on the ground to enforce it.
United Arab Emirates
United Arab Emirates
The UAE state oil company assessed full Hormuz flows will not resume until 2027 even with a fast deal, citing demining, inspection, and insurance timelines. The UAE ambassador to Washington said a simple ceasefire is not enough.
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)
The IRGC ran naval exercises in Hormuz during Geneva talks and its political deputy declared Iran was negotiating from a position of strength. The corps has not endorsed the MoU; by amplifying Mashhad protests through Fars, it is framing any deal as conditions it imposed rather than a concession it accepted.
Iran Foreign Ministry / Araghchi
Iran Foreign Ministry / Araghchi
Araghchi's dilute-in-Iran red line was met by the US concession, but his foreign ministry spokesman said Tehran had not taken a final decision and a signing might come in days, not Sunday. Araghchi separately wrote to the IAEA pledging to protect nuclear materials as dilution negotiations advanced.
White House / US negotiating team
White House / US negotiating team
Washington accepted dilution inside Iran rather than ship-out, its first substantive material concession in 106 days, the New York Times reported. With the White House register blank and the ceremony slipped a third weekend, the administration has moved its negotiating position without yet producing a document.