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Iran Conflict 2026
18APR

Araghchi meets Wang Yi in Beijing

3 min read
14:57UTC

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi met Chinese counterpart Wang Yi in Beijing on 6 May, the first such visit since the war began on 28 February, eight days before the scheduled Trump-Xi summit on 14-15 May.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Beijing now hosts the only Iran channel running in parallel to Washington's, eight days before Trump-Xi.

Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi met Chinese counterpart Wang Yi in Beijing on Wednesday 6 May, the first such visit since the war began on 28 February 1. Wang Yi told Araghchi that China is 'deeply distressed' by the conflict and offered Beijing 'a greater role in restoring peace and tranquility'. Araghchi replied that China is 'a close friend' and that bilateral cooperation 'will become stronger under current circumstances'. The Trump-Xi summit is scheduled for Thursday 14 and Friday 15 May, also in Beijing.

The pause sits inside that schedule. Trump paused Project Freedom on Tuesday 5 May; Araghchi met Wang Yi on Wednesday 6 May; Trump-Xi convenes eight days later. Two days before Araghchi's visit, MOFCOM (China's Ministry of Commerce) activated China's 2021 Blocking Rules and named five refineries protected from OFAC Iran compliance, including Hengli Petrochemical and four Shandong and Hebei independents . The same week the United States was deploying destroyers to enforce its blockade against Iranian oil flows, China was writing the legal counter-instrument that protects roughly 400,000 barrels per day of refining capacity from compliance.

Wang Yi's call for a 'comprehensive Ceasefire' goes further than the US framing of a 'pause'. Trump's stated reason for pausing was Pakistan; the schedule said Beijing. A US-China confrontation over Iran-sanctions enforcement on the eve of a 14-15 May summit was the overhang the pause removed. Beijing's diplomatic position now combines a public Ceasefire call, a domestic legal shield for its refiners and a face-to-face meeting with Tehran's chief diplomat, all sequenced into the eight-day window before Trump arrives.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Iran's top diplomat flew to Beijing on 6 May and met China's foreign minister Wang Yi, who offered China a 'greater role in restoring peace'. This was the first such visit since the war started in late February. China matters here because it buys most of Iran's oil. Despite US sanctions, China has kept buying Iranian crude through workarounds. If the Strait of Hormuz stays blocked, even those workarounds get harder. China also has a summit with Trump scheduled for 14-15 May, so it wants to show it can help end the conflict, which gives it more leverage with the US. The meeting happened the day after Trump paused the US naval operation, suggesting both sides are testing whether diplomacy can produce a deal before the pause ends.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

China's stake in a Hormuz resolution runs through its MOFCOM-shielded crude flows: of the 153.7 million barrels of Iranian crude on water in mid-April (per Windward data cited in prior updates), 84.9% was China-bound. China cannot sustain that flow if P&I war-risk exclusions prevent Iranian tankers from obtaining any insurance, even Chinese state reinsurance, for transits through waters now explicitly designated as combat zones by UKMTO.

The timing of the meeting, eight days before the Trump-Xi summit, is the second structural driver. China needs to demonstrate to the US that it can deliver Iranian de-escalation as a tradeable diplomatic asset. If Araghchi leaves Beijing and Iran resumes attacks, Wang Yi loses face before the summit opens.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    China's public ceasefire call eight days before the Trump-Xi summit creates a diplomatic timeline: if no progress is made by 14 May, Wang Yi's offer of mediation becomes a personal credibility liability.

  • Opportunity

    Beijing's interest in a Hormuz resolution aligns with Washington's pause, creating a narrow window in which Chinese diplomatic pressure on Tehran could unlock IRGC concessions the Pakistan channel alone cannot achieve.

First Reported In

Update #89 · Truxtun gets through; Trump pulls back

Al Jazeera· 6 May 2026
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Different Perspectives
Shipping and war-risk insurers
Shipping and war-risk insurers
War-risk premiums for Hormuz transits reached 3 to 10 per cent of hull value on 17 July, against 0.25 per cent before the war, as Brent cleared $87 and daily transits fell to eight vessels. Underwriters are pricing the confirmed UKMTO mine near the Traffic Separation Scheme, not the IRGC's unconfirmed 18 July mining claim, which CENTCOM called false.
Oman
Oman
Abbas Araghchi led an Iranian delegation to Oman-hosted talks in Muscat on 18 July, an agenda confined to reopening the Strait of Hormuz and nothing else. Oman's decades of studied neutrality make it the one channel neither Washington nor Tehran needs to be seen initiating, and that narrowness is what lets it survive the bombing.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait's electricity ministry asked residents to ration water and power after the IRGC set Shuaiba's generating units alight on 17 July, the second Kuwaiti site struck in two days. The country draws 90 per cent of its drinking water from plants sharing power infrastructure, so one strike reaches every tap in the hottest weeks of the year.
Jordan
Jordan
Amman still reports no casualties or damage of its own from the 17 July attack even as CENTCOM confirmed two American dead on the same runway, a line it has not amended since. Hosting the base that produced the war's first US fatalities puts Jordan's decades-old defence arrangement with Washington under a domestic scrutiny it has not faced before.
Tehran / Artesh and AEOI
Tehran / Artesh and AEOI
Iran's Atomic Energy Organisation called the alleged Darkhovin strike a violation of international law, while the Artesh put Operation Saeqeh, its campaign against Kuwait, Jordan and Bahrain, at phases 14 and 15 by 18 July. Domestic outlets Fars and Tabnak claim 16 Americans dead since February, a toll no source outside Iran supports.
CENTCOM / Washington
CENTCOM / Washington
CENTCOM confirmed two dead and one missing at Muwaffaq Salti on 17 July, when Jordan says its air defences intercepted eight of ten incoming missiles, against five of five stopped on 10 June. Its own strikes stay aimed at Iran's coast, interior and navy, not the Artesh campaign that killed them.