Donald Trump: China’s oil “arteries” are indeed feeling the squeeze as tightened flows through the Strait of Hormuz and war‑related disruptions pinch Saudi and Middle‑East‑linked shipments to Asia, while Iran’s latest explosive warnings about the strategic waterway have effectively hijacked the backdrop of Donald Trump’s China visit in Beijing. With global markets on edge over possible supply shocks and insurance costs soaring, the question now is whether Xi Jinping can leverage Beijing’s economic heft and diplomatic access to both Washington and Tehran to coax a ceasefire or at least a partial reopening of the strait.
China’s Oil Arteries Under Pressure
Shipping disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz and the wider Gulf have forced major exporters such as Saudi Arabia to reroute some crude around the Red Sea, but this has only partly offset the hit to regular Asian flows. As a result, deliveries to key buyers like China and India are forecast to tighten, pushing up costs and fueling concern that financial markets may be underestimating how quickly the US‑Iran conflict is bleeding into the real‑economy energy chain.
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Iran Hijacks Trump’s China Trip
Even as Trump arrives in Beijing, Iran’s leadership has doubled down on its Straits‑of‑Hormuz rhetoric, warning that any US military incursion into the narrow channel would be met with immediate attacks and that commercial vessels must coordinate passage with Tehran. Iranian officials simultaneously insist the strait remains “open” in principle—but not for what they call “enemies,” effectively turning the route into a geopolitical bargaining chip that hangs over the Trump–Xi summit agenda.
Can Xi Jinping Mediate?
Donald Trump: Beijing is positioning itself as a potential mediator, with Chinese officials pledging to help launch peace talks and restore stability in the Middle East, while quietly encouraging both sides to de‑escalate. Yet analysts caution that Xi Jinping is likely to use mediation mainly to bolster China’s global influence and protect its energy interests, not to force Tehran into a settlement Beijing cannot itself guarantee; success will depend on whether China is willing to translate its economic leverage—especially over Iran’s oil‑for‑goods trade—into concrete political pressure.


