By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
How China and Russia Can Exploit the
Iran War
The U.S.-Israeli war
on Iran has presented Russia and China with a significant opportunity. Both
Moscow and Beijing see the conflict as a chance to undermine U.S. interests in
the Middle East and elsewhere. Both are keen to exploit the war to sap U.S. power,
gain intelligence on U.S. military systems, and erode the U.S.-led order. Both
see a wide variety of potential options for doing so, diplomatic and military,
overt and covert. And so far, both countries are succeeding.
The quagmire endured
by Russian forces in Ukraine offers a model for the sorts of damage Moscow and
Beijing hope to inflict on the United States. The U.S. government has backed
Kyiv since the full-scale Russian invasion in February 2022 for reasons beyond
supporting a smaller democracy against its bigger authoritarian neighbor. The
war in Ukraine helps tie down a U.S. adversary, degrades Russian power, and
costs the Kremlin tens of billions of dollars every year. Russia’s struggle to
defeat a nominally weaker power also undermines perceptions of its military
capabilities while forcing Moscow to devote more soldiers, munitions, and
equipment just to maintain what has turned into a functional stalemate.
Meanwhile, the United States can study the conflict to deepen its understanding
of the Russian military’s tactics, techniques, and procedures. The Biden
administration also saw support for Ukraine as a way to reaffirm Washington’s
position as the leader of a rules-based international order. The widely held view
that Russia had undertaken a war of aggression in Ukraine, combined with the
fear that an emboldened Moscow would again engage in territorial acquisition in
the future, allowed the United States to bring together like-minded powers to
help isolate Russia.
In Iran, Russia and
China see the possibility of turning the tables on the United States. Both
countries believe that a U.S. government enmeshed in endless Middle Eastern
wars is one that would make much less trouble for them. Indeed, China’s
international position improved remarkably in the 20 years after the September
11 attacks, when the United States was preoccupied with wars in the Middle
East. As Indian Minister of External Affairs S. Jaishankar memorably noted:
“[F]or two decades, China had been winning but not fighting [in the Middle
East], while the U.S. was fighting without winning.”
Moscow and Beijing
now want to reap the rewards of Washington’s entanglement in the region. The
Russians and the Chinese have every interest in miring the United States in a
simmering, low-intensity war that consumes U.S. resources and undermines its
international standing. Both countries have tools to help achieve that end
through their support for Iran. Washington can prevent this outcome by
eschewing maximalist goals in the conflict. It must instead follow a pragmatic
middle way that harnesses Iran’s disruptive potential while paving a
path back to diplomacy and revitalizing American alliances. The Iran war may
not produce a clear victor, but the United States can ensure that neither China
nor Russia ends up claiming the win.

Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov in Beijing, April 2026
Recipe For a Quagmire
There is strong
evidence that Russia and China have supplied Iran with imagery and signals
intelligence to help it with both targeting and damage assessment. If that has
indeed happened, they have helped a country with quite limited surveillance
capacity destroy the military assets of a much more powerful country. Russia
and China have also been monitoring American military operations, studying the
U.S. military through the Iran war, just as the United States is assessing the
Russian military through the war in Ukraine. Although the United States,
alongside Israel, has been largely successful when it comes to destroying
targets, Russia and China must take some comfort in how the U.S.-Israeli
bombardment has still failed to cow Iran. Despite the successful assassination
of various Iranian leaders and the pummeling of Iranian military facilities,
anything resembling victory has so far proved elusive.
The war has benefited
Russia in several ways. The Trump administration has waived sanctions on
Russian oil in a bid to rein in rising oil prices, creating an economic
windfall for Moscow. In addition, Iran’s Shahed drone has proved robust against
U.S.-engineered defenses, thanks to lessons drawn from Russia’s battlefield
experience. Moscow has upgraded the drone’s original Iranian design, improving
its effectiveness for its own campaign, and U.S. and European officials say it
is now sharing details of those enhancements with Tehran, strengthening
military cooperation between the two countries. The United States undoubtedly
has air superiority, and its intelligence agents have been able to penetrate
the Iranian leadership, but the image of an all-powerful U.S. military has
taken a serious hit. The Islamic Republic has absorbed a heavy battering and is
still standing.
Moscow must be
particularly happy about the damage the war is inflicting on U.S. alliances.
The growing gap between the United States and its closest allies in Europe is
the best news Russia has had in years. Europe’s deep reservations about the war
in Iran (which several European states flatly declared to be illegal),
exacerbated by Trump’s alarming threat on April 7 that “a whole civilization
will die tonight,” will leave an enduring scar in the transatlantic alliance - giving
some European leaders a pretext to reject U.S. moral leadership now and in the
future. Europe may unite to resist Russia in the coming years, but its
connection to the world’s greatest economic and military power will never again
be as close as it once was. In Russian eyes, a drawn-out Iran war will only
deepen U.S.-European tensions and solidify this trend.

The war has not
delivered to China the kind of windfall it has handed to Russia - even if the
energy shock precipitated by the war has led many states to take a greater
interest in China’s carbon-free energy sector. Economically, China has focused
on avoiding pain. Anticipating for years that the United States might seek to
block its access to oil in the Middle East, it has long made strategic
investments in the region to help protect itself from potential turmoil there.
It has built up large oil reserves, blunting the effects of higher prices. It
has electrified much of its economy, including more than half of its new car
fleet, reducing its reliance on imported oil. It has also boosted its ability
to produce petrochemicals from coal, further freeing it from Middle Eastern
hydrocarbons.
The upside for China
from the Iran conflict is mostly political and diplomatic. China has studiously
portrayed itself as a responsible global power, pushing all sides toward
negotiation and settlement. Its statements have been measured, and its
diplomacy sure-footed. As European and Asian states reeled from the United
States’ unpredictable moves, China embraced the tone and language of
traditional diplomacy, to the relief of many.
China has
increasingly pitched itself to U.S. allies as a level-headed partner for peace,
building on its success three years ago, when it presided over an Iranian-Saudi
rapprochement. In the current conflict, it has pushed its close partner
Pakistan to mediate a temporary cease-fire between Iran and the United States,
demonstrating its reliability as a global stakeholder, at a time when the
United States is behaving like an erratic hegemon.
China has provided
Iran with military assistance, including chemical components for its solid-fuel
ballistic missiles, and might now move to ratchet up its support by providing
advanced radar systems and supersonic antiship cruise missiles. Even so, it presents
itself to Middle Eastern powers as distant from the region’s conflicts and as
an alternative to an increasingly untrustworthy United States. For countries
that are looking to rebalance relationships in order to reduce risk, China
seems a remarkably good partner.

The Diplomatic Exit
Against this
backdrop, the right U.S. strategy is neither maximalist war nor naive
retrenchment. Washington should aim for a hardheaded equilibrium: prevent Iran
from taking hugely destabilizing actions, restore a credible path to diplomacy,
and resist turning this conflict into the kind of open-ended regional struggle
that Moscow and Beijing most desire. If the United States defines success as
the humiliation of Iran or the collapse of the Islamic Republic, it will likely
get the opposite of what it wants: a wounded and more aggressive Iran, more
tightly bound to Russia and China, as well as enduring damage to the
international legitimacy of the United States.
That means Washington
should pair deterrence with a realistic diplomatic off-ramp. The United States
should make clear that it is prepared to define a new and mutually beneficial
modus vivendi with Iran. It could do so by taking a number of steps. One would
be establishing a U.S.-led consortium for uranium enrichment on an Iranian
island in the Persian Gulf, which would give Iran a face-saving way to preserve
its nuclear capacity without the ability to weaponize it. Such a solution would
also bind both sides of the Gulf in a collaborative effort.
Another is finding
the terms for a nonaggression pact with Tehran. Hawks would criticize such an
approach as weakness, because it does not demand Iran’s full capitulation.
Doves would take it as evidence of the Trump administration’s failure to
triumph through the use of force. In fact, it is the only strategy that matches
the balance of power and the balance of interests. Iran is too weak to dominate
the region but too important, too networked, and too resilient to be bombed
into submission at an acceptable cost to the United States.
Washington must also
repair the political foundations of its regional policy. That means closer
alignment with European allies, steadier consultation with Gulf partners, and
less inflammatory rhetoric that alienates the very coalition the United States
must sustain.
The test of American
statecraft is not whether it can destroy targets in Iran. It is whether it can
shape an outcome in which Iran is reintegrated into the global economy and no
longer poses a major threat to neighbors in the region, regional states feel
less compelled to hedge toward Beijing, and Moscow is denied another
geopolitical gift. The United States need not hand its rivals a win by
committing to another long war that will drain its resources and credibility.
It should pursue a limited, disciplined strategy that reduces political
tensions in the Gulf, restores freedom of navigation, and leaves Tehran with a
choice other than total dependence on Moscow and Beijing. In this contest,
prudence need not be passivity - rather, it can be power exercised with intent.
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