By
Dr. James M. Dorsey
July 22,
2020
BESA
Centre Perspectives Paper No. 1,655, July 22, 2020
Xi Jinping and Hassan Rouhani, screen capture from YouTube video
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EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY: Hobbled by
harsh US sanctions and a global economic downturn, Iran has discovered a new
weapon: hot air in the form of a cooperation deal with China that carries
messages to its opponents. China, albeit far less economically impaired, sees virtue
in this arrangement too.
A proposed
25-year humongous China-Iran cooperation deal has proven to be good business.
Reams of articles, analyses, and commentary by pundits are ensuring that the
two countries’ messages are delivered loud and clear.
Beijing and
Tehran have provided evidence to keep the story alive: Numerous agreements
signed by Presidents, Xi Jinping and Hassan Rouhani during the Chinese leader’s
visit to the Middle East in 2016 would, if implemented, expand economic
relations between the two countries by a factor of 10 to $600 billion and
significantly enhance military cooperation.
Those
agreements, which signalled a potential Chinese tilt toward Iran, were
concluded at a time when a significant easing of US sanctions against Iran was
anticipated as part of the 2015 international agreement, which curbed Iran’s
nuclear program.
Those hopes
were dashed when President Donald Trump pulled out of the agreement in 2018 and
re-imposed crippling sanctions. China has since by and large abided by the US
restrictions.
Iran
appeared this month to put flesh on the skeleton of a Beijing-Tehran deal by
leaking a purported final draft of a sweeping 25-year partnership agreement
that envisions up to $400 billion in Chinese investment to develop Iran’s oil, gas,
and transportation sectors. The problem is that there is nothing final about
the draft. It is little more than a trial balloon.
That is
just fine as far as Tehran and Beijing are concerned, even if both would like
to cooperate on a far grander scale if geopolitical circumstances permitted it.
For now, there remains a long negotiation path to the conclusion of an
agreement. It is certainly not yet ready for implementation.
That does
not mean that there is no upside to be had immediately, however.
By fuelling
talk of an imminent agreement, Iran is signalling Europe and a potential Biden
administration after the US November presidential election, American and
European policies might drive the Islamic Republic into Beijing’s arms. It also
allowed Iran to take a swipe at Saudi Arabia by suggesting that when the chips
are down, it will be Tehran, not Riyadh, to which China will turn.
China
capitalized on Iran’s hot air by amplifying its messages toward the US and the
kingdom. Officially, China limited itself to a non-committal on-the-record
reaction and low-key semi-official commentary.
FM
spokesman Zhao Lijian, an exponent of China’s newly adopted more assertive
approach to diplomacy, was exceptionally tactful in his comment. “China and
Iran enjoy traditional friendship, and the two sides have been in communication
on the development of bilateral relations. We stand ready to work with Iran to
steadily advance practical cooperation,” Zhao said.
Writing in
the Shanghai Observer, a secondary Communist party newspaper, Middle East
scholar Fan Hongda argued that an agreement, though nowhere close to
implementation, highlights “an important moment of development” at a time when
US-Chinese tensions have allowed Beijing to pay less heed to American policies.
In saying
this, Fan was echoing China’s warning that the US was putting much at risk by
ratcheting up tensions between the world’s two largest economies and could push
China to the point where it no longer regards the potential cost of countering
US policy as prohibitively high.
China’s
response also amplified its message to the Gulf States. Scholars with close
ties to the government have suggested that the economic downturn, which affects
China’s economic ties to the region, could persuade Beijing to further limit
its exposure if the Gulf States fail to find a way to come to grips with Iran
in a way that would dial down tensions.
“For China,
the Middle East is always on the very distant backburner of China’s strategic
global strategies … COVID-19, combined with the oil price crisis, will
dramatically change the Middle East. [This] will change China’s investment
model in the Middle East,” said Niu Xinchun, director of Middle East Studies at
China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations (CICIR), widely regarded
as China’s most influential think tank.
In July, in
an interesting twist that could signal China’s appetite to play the Iranian
card soon, Iran dropped India as a partner in the development of a rail line
from its Indian-backed deep-sea port of Chabahar because of delays in Indian
funding. The Trump administration had exempted Chabahar from its sanction’s
regime.
Iranian
transport and urban development minister Muhammad Eslami recently inaugurated
the track-laying for the first 628 kilometres of the line, which will
ultimately link Chabahar to Afghanistan. Iranian officials said Tehran would
fund the rail line itself, but both China and Iran have expressed an interest
in linking Chabahar to Gwadar, the Chinese-backed Arabian Sea port, some 70
kilometres down the coast in Pakistan. The economic downturn as a result of the
pandemic has revived doubts about the viability of Gwadar, a crown jewel of the
approximately $60 billion China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), China’s
single largest BRI-related investment.
In an
indication that the US does not see a potentially game-changing China-Iran deal
as imminent, the Trump administration has stuck to its long-standing policy so
far.
“The United
States will continue to impose costs on Chinese companies that aid Iran, the
world’s largest state sponsor of terrorism,” said a US State Department
spokesperson.
Dr. James M. Dorsey, a non-resident Senior
Associate at the BESA Centre, is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of
International Studies at Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University and
co-director of the University of Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture.
Original
Headline: The China-Iran Deal: A Trial
Balloon with a Clear Message
Source: The BESA Centre
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-west/hobbled-sanctions-iran-discovered-new/d/122441
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