Washington’s “rush” to end the war with Iran this week is not explained only by fatigue on the front, market pressure, or fears of a new flare-up in the Strait of Hormuz. It is explained above all by China—or more precisely, by Donald Trump’s upcoming trip to Beijing on May 14 and 15, where he is expected to meet Xi Jinping in one of the most politically charged summits of his second presidency.
By then, Trump wants the war with Iran to have shifted from an open crisis into a manageable diplomatic file. He wants to arrive in China not as a president seeking an exit from the Middle East, but as a leader capable of imposing terms, stabilizing markets, and reasserting American power in its primary strategic theatre: the Indo-Pacific.
This is the real background of the new diplomatic momentum. According to international reports, the US has intensified pressure on China to use its influence over Tehran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, while Abbas Araghchi visited Beijing for talks with Wang Yi just days before the Trump–Xi meeting.
The weight of Hormuz
The crisis in the Strait of Hormuz has become a strategic burden for Trump. It is not only about oil—it is about the image of American power. If the US president arrives in Beijing while Hormuz is still closed or partially blocked, he will face Xi Jinping not as an equal negotiator, but as a leader who needs Chinese mediation to resolve a crisis Washington failed to end militarily.
Tehran knows this. That is why it is trying to narrow the framework of any agreement. From the original maximal goals—nuclear containment, military weakening, safe navigation, and regional restructuring—the discussion is shifting toward something far more limited: reopening Hormuz, freezing escalation, and returning to future nuclear talks. In other words, Iran is trying to sell Trump what he urgently needs before Beijing: an exit, not a victory.
The war that “drains” the Indo-Pacific
The most serious problem for Washington is not only in the Persian Gulf, but in the Pacific. The war with Iran has already absorbed naval, air, and missile capabilities that the US would prefer to keep available for deterrence against China.
The absence of a US aircraft carrier from the Pacific for more than two months is not just an operational detail. It is a political signal. It shows that the Middle East still has the power to pull America back into a theatre it has been trying to downgrade strategically for years. It also signals to Beijing that in a high-intensity crisis, the US military machine is not inexhaustible.
Stockpiles of ammunition, naval maintenance requirements, air defense strain, and production pressures are not abstract concepts. They are the core of deterrence. If the US has consumed critical capabilities in the Middle East, its credibility in relation to Taiwan, Japan, the Philippines, and the South China Sea is weakened. At this point, the Iran crisis stops being regional—it becomes global.
Xi wants Trump in a position of need
Xi Jinping would prefer to meet Trump with the war still ongoing. Not necessarily because China wants instability in the Gulf—China depends on the region’s energy flows—but because a Trump tied down in Iran is a Trump with less negotiating power.
Beijing could then present itself as the “responsible” actor, speaking about stability, free navigation, and acting as a global mediator between Tehran, Moscow, Gulf states, and Washington—while advancing its broader narrative that the US creates crises and China manages them.
The Iranian foreign minister’s visit to Beijing just before Trump’s arrival is no coincidence. It is diplomatic staging. China wants to appear present in the crisis; Iran wants to show it is not isolated; and Trump wants to avoid asking Xi for help in ending a war he opened himself.
Taiwan in the background
The second major field is Taiwan. Xi is expected to push Trump for a rhetorical shift in the US position. Beijing has long sought a move from Washington’s statement that it “does not support” Taiwan independence to the much stronger wording that it “opposes” it. The difference is not technical—it is strategic.
In diplomacy over Taiwan, wording defines strategic boundaries. The current formulation preserves US ambiguity. A shift would hand Beijing a symbolic victory, allowing it to argue that Washington explicitly rejects Taiwan independence.
So far, Trump has not made that shift, but he has shown willingness to reduce tensions with China ahead of the summit.
Economics as bargaining power
Trump also goes to Beijing with an economic objective: stabilizing US–China relations after last year’s tensions over tariffs and critical minerals. He wants agricultural purchases, aircraft deals, and a mechanism to manage trade disputes so he can present the summit as a “stability agreement” rather than a concession.
But this requires space. He cannot negotiate trade deals while simultaneously asking China to help with Iran, pressure Tehran, and maintain diplomatic coordination at the UN Security Council. Every concession becomes transactional.
China links issues: Taiwan, tariffs, rare earths, semiconductors, the South China Sea, and Iran are part of a single strategic bargaining system.
Iran’s window of opportunity
For Tehran, the timing is almost ideal. It knows Trump needs de-escalation before Beijing. It knows China does not want a full collapse of energy flows. It also knows Gulf states, India, and Europe are pushing for maritime stability.
This allows Iran to lower the price of any deal: partial reopening of Hormuz, reduced escalation, indirect guarantees, and postponement of nuclear issues.
The US can call it success; Iran can call it endurance; China can call it proof that it is indispensable.
The real equation
The real struggle is not just about Iran. It is about the US position in global competition. Washington began the war to show it can impose discipline on Tehran. It now risks ending it to regain strategic flexibility against China.
The Middle East has once again functioned as a drain on American power—absorbing ships, missiles, political capital, and time—while Washington declares the Indo-Pacific its priority.
China does not need to defeat the US militarily. It only needs to see it arrive at the negotiation table exhausted, with fewer options, and more urgency.
Conclusion
The attempt to end the Iran war before the Beijing summit is not sudden diplomatic maturity—it is strategic necessity. Trump needs a deal so he does not sit across from Xi Jinping as a president asking for help to reopen Hormuz.
Iranians know it. The Chinese know it even better. That is why terms are narrowing, war objectives are shrinking, and any final agreement—if reached—should be read not only as the end of the Iran conflict, but as the opening chapter of the next phase in US–China rivalry.
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