When China’s foreign minister sat down with his Iranian counterpart in Beijing on Wednesday, the meeting was not a routine diplomatic exchange. It carried the weight of a war still unresolved, a global shipping corridor barely functioning, and a nuclear standoff with no clear exit in sight.
Foreign Minister Wang Yi made Beijing’s position explicit during the talks with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi. China recognizes Iran’s right to develop civilian nuclear energy and takes seriously Tehran’s stated commitment to forgo weapons development. The timing of that affirmation, arriving months into an active conflict involving Iran, the United States and Israel, made it something more than a procedural statement.
The meeting behind the meeting
Wang and Araghchi had spoken by phone at least three times since the United States and Israel launched coordinated strikes against Iran on Feb. 28. Wednesday was their first in-person meeting since the conflict began. The conversation moved well past formalities.
Wang called for a comprehensive ceasefire and pressed for conditions that would allow commercial shipping to move safely again through the Strait of Hormuz. He also referenced a four-point peace framework put forward by President Xi Jinping, signaling that China had been working diplomatic channels since the fighting started.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy indicated it would guarantee safe passage through the strait once what it described as threats from the aggressor had been removed. The statement offered no timeline and left the conditions for that guarantee undefined.
The strait at the center of everything
The Strait of Hormuz is where this conflict becomes a global problem. Roughly 40% of China’s oil imports move through that narrow waterway. Before the war, daily commercial vessel traffic through the strait averaged 138 ships. By Tuesday, according to the U.S. Navy-run Joint Maritime Information Center, that number had fallen to five.
The drop is not a minor logistical inconvenience. It represents a supply disruption with consequences for energy markets well beyond the Middle East, and it gives China a direct economic stake in how quickly this conflict finds resolution.
A China nuclear standoff with no resolution yet
The diplomatic path forward remains blocked. Iran and the United States reached a ceasefire on April 8, but two subsequent rounds of talks organized by Pakistan produced nothing durable. The core dispute has not moved.
The Trump administration has insisted that any lasting agreement require Iran to fully halt uranium enrichment. Iran has consistently rejected that demand and has long denied pursuing nuclear weapons. Before the conflict, the International Atomic Energy Agency assessed that Iran was enriching uranium to 60%, a level well above what civilian energy programs require and close enough to weapons-grade material that the gap could be closed relatively quickly.
Iran’s nuclear enrichment and conversion sites sustained significant damage during the recent conflict, as well as during a separate 12-day U.S. and Israeli offensive in June 2025. Trump administration officials have stated their intention to prevent those capabilities from being rebuilt.
Beijing’s position and what it costs
China’s public support for Iran’s nuclear rights is not a costless position. Beijing depends on the strait for energy security, which gives it reason to want de-escalation. At the same time, Wang praised what he described as the resilience and responsibility of the Iranian people, language that signals China sees political value in standing alongside Tehran even while pushing for a ceasefire.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio addressed the Beijing meeting directly at a Tuesday press briefing, expressing hope that Chinese officials would convey to Iran plainly that its conduct in the strait was deepening its own international isolation. It was a rare public acknowledgment that China holds influence in this situation that Washington does not.
That influence is about to face a direct test. Iran’s nuclear status and the condition of the strait are expected to be central agenda items when President Trump travels to China, his first visit since November 2017, for meetings with Xi. What comes out of that conversation will matter to a world still dependent on stable energy corridors.

