Analysis

Pepe Escobar: Trump Goes to China, But Iran Holds All the Cards

A few days ago, we had Mr. Araghchi go to Russia. Earlier this week, we had Mr. Araghchi go to China.
Sputnik
These two trips mirror in full regalia the power of the new Russia-Iran-China triangle, which has emerged as the driving force behind Eurasian integration and multipolarity.
Some of Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi’s observations to Iranian media were quite fascinating. For instance:
“Our Chinese friends believe that Iran after the war is different from Iran before the war. Its international standing has improved, and it has demonstrated its capabilities and power. Therefore, a new era of cooperation between Iran and other countries is ahead.”
That’s code for Beijing now recognizing – and backing up - Tehran as a major global power.
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi for his part delivered the definitive definition of the US-Israel war on Iran: “Illegitimate”.
That’s code for everything related to this war of choice, from causes to myriad consequences, is mired in a swamp of illegality.
Wang framed the Chinese diplomatic drive with characteristic politesse: “We are ready to continue our efforts to reduce the intensity of tensions.”
That should be the preamble for a true negotiation leading to the end of the war – and all wars - in West Asia against the whole Axis of Resistance. That’s exactly the Iranian position.
Wang Yi stressed how “China supports Iran in safeguarding its national sovereignty and security and appreciates Iran's willingness to seek a political solution through diplomatic channels.”
That’s code for full Chinese backing for sovereign rights and diplomacy – not intimidation.
The Strait of Hormuz is absolutely vital for China because of energy imports not only from Iran but also Gulf petromonarchies. So Beijing’s position must be nuanced:
“The international community shares a common concern for restoring normal and safe passage through the Strait, and China hopes that the parties involved will respond promptly to the strong calls from the international community.”
That’s code for an end of the American blockade while simultaneously showing respect for the new juridical system in Hormuz being framed by Tehran.
On the nuclear issue, “China appreciates Iran's commitment not to develop nuclear weapons, while also recognizing Iran's legitimate right to the peaceful use of nuclear energy.”
That’s exactly Tehran’s position – in sharp contrast with Trump 2.0.
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Welcome to the New West Asia Order

China via Wang Yi clarified 3 essential points: support for all of Iran's reasonable claims; support for the withdrawal of US military bases across the Persian Gulf; and active participation in the post-war reconstruction of Iran.
Simultaneously, Beijing is extolling Arab countries to get their act together and work toward a new security framework – excluding the Empire of Chaos, Lies and lately Piracy (fully admitted by POTUS). Once again: that’s exactly Tehran’s position.
With proverbial finesse, Beijing is de facto aligning with former IRGC commander Mohsen Rezaee, top military adviser to new Leader Mojtaba Khamenei.
Beijing fully understands how Tehran is framing resistance as a strategic asset. For the new power configuration in Tehran, the war has been all about surviving maximum pressure – and devastating bombing; absorbing and controlling the escalation trap; and refusing to fold under military and economic coercion.
All of that, together, could not be more strategic. Here we see endurance metastasized into political capital. And that is instantly translated at the negotiating table, despite tactical losses (none of them are strategic).
This understanding is reflected in arguably the two key formulations by Araghchi and Wang Yi. Let’s look at them side by side.
Iran "supports the establishment of a new post-war regional architecture that can coordinate development and security."
China "supports the establishment of a regional peace and security architecture by which regional countries jointly participate, safeguard common interests, and achieve common development."
This new architecture is the new West Asia order.
So it’s no wonder the Trump 2.0 universe is discombobulated.
Because this new West Asia order is a microcosm, directly linked to the New Global Order macrocosm, of which China is a main driver, alongside Russia.
Russia is concentrated on implementing, long-term and against all odds, a Greater Eurasia Partnership, which expands to Afro-Eurasia.
That follows the New Silk Roads, or BRI (Belt and Road Initiative), which then evolved into the first three Global Initiatives: the Global Development Initiative; the Global Security Initiative; and the Global Civilization Initiative – all the way to Global Governance.
Altogether, that’s the Chinese road map for “building a community with a shared future for mankind”; the de facto alternative for collapsing Western liberalism. The ambition is, yes, global.
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China-Iran: Totally Aligned on West Asia

What is already quite clear is that China and Iran share a totally aligned vision for West Asia; in fact that’s the basis of their mutual trust and reliance. Beijing and Tehran understand how post-World War II history has been essentially a tale of Washington using West Asia to control the planet via an oil obsession.
As much as Tehran learned a lot from the Chinese Way of War – “appear weak when you are strong”, and disinterested when up to the eyeballs in War – Araghchi’s trip to Beijing was essential to re-solidify the strategic partnership. As much as Russia is all-in – as confirmed by the St. Petersburg meeting between Araghchi and Putin – China is in a “we’ve got your back” position.
Chinese oil tankers, incidentally, continue to transit through the Strait of Hormuz daily. Not a peep from Washington.
Then there’s China’s total defiance of the latest sanctions chapter.
Until recenty, China circumvented US sanctions unofficially and/or via intermediaries. Now it officially declares it does not recognize unilateral US sanctions against Iran or Russia, for instance, as well as sanctions against its own oil refineries.
We are deep into a financial Cold War and an offensive by RIC (Russia, Iran, China) to permanently amputate the power of the sanctions obsession.
Iran was fully expelled from SWIFT in 2012. So what Tehran did was to rewire the system, capitalizing on the experience of building a parallel trade architecture.
Iran does the bulk of cross-border trade in yuan, rubles, rupees, UAE dirhams (from now on, not anymore), and Iraqi dinars. China accounts for as much as 35% of Iran’s total trade. Everything is settled in yuan or via barter.
Iran and Russia formalized a currency settlement system in 2023, totally bypassing SWIFT, linking Iran’s SEPAM and the Russian SPFS. In the first period of the tollbooth in the Strait of Hormuz – the mechanism is constantly being tweaked and streamlined - a key mode of payment was via the Chinese CIPS.
The tollbooth is inevitable. Tehran is fully aware that Trump will never agree to pay reparations for the illegal war he started, and also aware of inevitable crass manipulations when it comes to lifting the freeze on Iranian funds.
The tollbooth may work as a replacement for getting reparations and collecting something equivalent to the frozen Iranian funds in Western banks; and it will also force the West to lift sanctions on Iranian banks and the Iranian financial system.
After all Tehran already made it clear that only its banks are authorized to collect the fees at the Strait of Hormuz.
Translation: every nation that needs to transit will have to deal with the Iranian financial system.
Moreover, the fees will help Iran to rebuild its destroyed infrastructure.
Analysis
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Confronting the US’s Structural Vulnerability

The US does not even play checkers, not to mention poker. China plays weiqi (“go”). Weiqi is all about shaping the board, slowly but surely, sacrificing a detail here and there for an overall supremacy. China has been patiently shaping the board for the past two decades. In weiqi, once you correctly shape the board, the rest of the Great Game plays itself.
That’s where we are now.
If he harbors the intellectual curiosity, Trump will be able to see China’s mighty industrial firepower (that’s called productive capitalism) and full control over the supply chains the US depends on.
And he will be reminded that US law does not possess automatic extraterritorial authority inside China anymore. Yes, that hurts.
Meanwhile, the seven centuries of standoff between imperial Rome and Persia will continue to be replayed, in lightning speed, in the 21st century. The US war has been proven utterly impotent: unwinnable against attrition, and that will lead Persia to supremacy in West Asia.
This astonishing geopolitical turnaround is being achieved by a potent mix of ideology, societal cohesion, utter contempt for crude barbarians, and the drive to bankrupt them using impossible logistics. Not to mention fully controlling the Strait of Hormuz.
Bubbles are bursting fast in the Empire of Chaos, Lies and Piracy, mercilessly smacked by RIC reality.
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