By
Michael Singh
July 21,
2020
Leaked news
this month that China and Iran had come to the verge of signing a 25-year trade
and military partnership agreement struck like a geopolitical storm in
Washington — a rising rival of America and a long-time foe joining forces to
threaten the United States’ predominant position in the Middle East.
President Xi Jinping of China, left, and President Hassan Rouhani of Iran concluding a joint news conference in Iran in 2016.Credit...Ebrahim Noroozi/Associated Press
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The
agreement ambitiously promises to bring a huge Chinese presence into Iran’s
economic development, in exchange for a regular supply of heavily discounted
Iranian oil.
Yet in Iran
and China themselves, the reaction was hardly ebullient. Critics of Iran’s
beleaguered president, Hassan Rouhani, called the deal a new Treaty of
Turkmenchay, after the notorious 1828 accord under which a weakened Persia
ceded much of the South Caucasus to the Russian Empire. In Beijing, a
government spokesman who was asked about the deal dodged rather than criticize
Washington, insisting blandly that Iran is merely one of many countries with
which China is “developing normal friendly relations,” and claiming not to have
further information about the reported deal.
Tehran’s and
Beijing’s ambivalence hardly suggests a loving embrace between the two
adversaries of America; rather, it reveals the conundrum each faces in pursuing
closer ties with the other — conundrums that the United States can turn to our
advantage.
In recent
years, as the United States has been bogged down in unrewarding conflicts in
the Middle East, China has been quietly expanding its economic, diplomatic and
even military activities in the region. Beijing’s motives are straightforward
but varied: It seeks to advance its interests, such as a pressing need for
energy imports and for destinations for surplus capital and labor. In practice,
it tries to advance President Xi Jinping’s signature Belt and Road Initiative,
which is aimed at reshaping regional economic topographies in China’s favor and
counters what Beijing sees as an American effort to contain it. In short, China
seeks to establish itself in the eyes of the world — and its own people — as a
great power capable of contending with the United States.
Yet Chinese
leaders are aware that few of the great powers have emerged unscathed from
Middle East adventures and that they face a particularly formidable set of
obstacles. The region’s deep political fissures make it difficult for outsiders
to avoid taking sides in its many conflicts. This poses a risk for a China that
aims to be a friend of everyone — Iran, Israel and Arab states alike — to
maximize the benefits of its regional engagement while minimizing its
commitments. Consistent with this balancing act, the leak of the China-Iran
agreement roughly coincided with the biannual China-Arab States Cooperation
Forum early this month, which prompted
numerous proclamations of Chinese friendship with Iran’s Arab rivals.
Even more
daunting is the outsize role played by the United States in the region, one
that ironically benefits Beijing as it expands its economic ventures without
being able to provide adequate security for its capital and citizens deployed
to the region. For all its “wolf warrior” bluster, China continues to pick its
battles with Washington. So far, it largely has chosen not to wage them in the
Middle East — for example, doing little beyond diplomatic finger-wagging to
shelter Iran from American secondary sanctions.
So even as
China seeks to make strategic gains in the Middle East, it does so sotto voce —
bolstering its own role and challenging Washington’s without fanfare.
Iran,
China’s foremost regional partner, faces a conundrum of its own. Squeezed by
America’s “maximum pressure” campaign, Tehran needs whatever friends it can
find. And China, which beside being rich and powerful shares Iran’s revisionist
inclination to challenge the United States’ role in the international order,
would seem to be a perfect match.
Yet Iran’s
history has made it suspicious of external powers, and China’s “help” in recent
years — buying Iranian oil in small quantities at a steep discount and crowding
out Iranian domestic producers with low-cost imports — seems not to have
engendered affection among the Iranian populace. What Iranians seem to desire
is to be no one’s junior partner, but to be self-sufficient and stand among the
likes of Russia and China as equals.
What amount
to challenges for China and Iran in further developing their ties constitute
opportunities for an America worried about the partnership between them. The
United States should, at every step, aim to exacerbate the conundrums each
faces. It should, for example, emphasize that Iranian dependence on China —
besides being costly — is a policy choice and that the door remains open to the
rest of the international community if Tehran is willing to compromise on its
nuclear ambitions and regional policies. And Washington should enlist regional
partners — who may otherwise prefer to enjoy the benefits of good relations
with Beijing while leaving it up to the United States to confront China when it
empowers Iran through arms sales or investment.
Make no
mistake: The China-Iran relationship has long been important for both
countries, contributing for example to Iran’s nuclear and missile advancements.
And whether in the form of formal partnership agreements or simply ad hoc
cooperation, those relations are very likely to grow closer yet in coming
years, as China tries to project power westward and Iran seeks to insulate
itself from the debilitating effects of American power and enhance its own
regional influence.
But while
the deepening of the Iran-China relationship may be inevitable, the United
States shouldn’t let it be easy for either Tehran or Beijing.
Michael Singh, a former senior director for
Middle East affairs at the National Security Council, is the managing director
of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
Original
Headline: When China Met Iran
Source: The New York Times
URL: https://newageislam.com/current-affairs/partnership-between-china-iran-bears/d/122431
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