Trump’s Iran tariff threat risks reopening China rift
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US President Donald Trump (left) and Chinese President Xi Jinping struck a deal in October 2025 to de-escalate the countries' trade war.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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- Trump's threat of 25% tariffs on countries trading with Iran risks escalating tensions with China, reminiscent of the Huawei and Meng Wenzhou incidents.
- Despite reduced official trade, China remains a key partner for Iran, especially in oil, potentially undermining Trump's efforts to isolate Tehran.
- Analysts are sceptical about the enforceability of Trump's tariffs and warn of potential repercussions for the Belt and Road Initiative and US-China relations.
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BEIJING - US President Donald Trump’s threat to slap a 25 per cent tariff
Iran became a flashpoint in US-China ties during Mr Trump’s 2017-21 first term as president as Washington tightened sanctions on Tehran and put China’s Huawei,
The arrest of Ms Meng Wenzhou,
With Iran in his sights once again, the duty would see Chinese shipments to the US incurring levies exceeding 70 per cent, higher than the effective 57.5 per cent tariffs in place before Mr Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping struck a deal in October
It remains unclear which countries with Iranian business links Mr Trump might target, and he has not named China. The US president has also made offhand remarks that threatened to upend US foreign policy without acting on them before.
“China will call (Mr Trump’s) bluff. I can assure you that Trump has no guts to impose the extra 25 per cent tariffs on China, and if he does, China will retaliate and he will be punished,” said Professor Wu Xinbo, dean of the Institute of International Studies at Fudan University, “just like in Meng Wenzhou’s case.”
Back to the future
“China and Iran are not as close as in the public imagination,” said a Beijing-based Chinese academic who advises the foreign ministry on Iran policy, and requested anonymity as they were not authorised to speak to media.
China has sharply reduced Iranian imports in recent years, according to Chinese customs data, with Chinese companies wary of being sanctioned by the US government. China bought just US$2.9 billion of Iranian goods in the first 11 months of 2025, the latest customs figures show, compared with a peak of US$21 billion in 2018 during Mr Trump’s first presidency.
That said, Beijing moves around 80 per cent of Iran’s shipped oil through small independent refiners trading off the books to skirt US sanctions over the country’s nuclear ambitions.
China’s state-backed oil majors have not done any business with Iran since 2022. Some analysts say the independents’ shipments means the total value of China’s purchases remains in the tens of billions of dollars.
“China is just an excuse, a kind of disguise for the Trump administration, to impose new pressure (on) Iran,” said Mr Wang Jin at the Beijing Club for International Dialogue think-tank.
When asked at a regular press conference on Jan 13 about Mr Trump’s tariff threat, China’s foreign ministry said that Beijing would “resolutely safeguard its legitimate rights and interests”.
High stakes
Still, Iran remains substantially bigger business for China than Venezuela, where Mr Trump acted to curb Beijing’s stake with a commando raid to capture President Nicolas Maduro
Analysts said Mr Trump’s renewed push to cut off Iran from global trade flows is likely to deepen scrutiny of Mr Xi’s flagship Belt and Road Initiative, where Iran is a strategic hub for the passage of Chinese goods to the Middle East.
It also raises uncertainty over whether Mr Trump will visit Beijing in April
“Whether Trump’s tariffs are enforceable remains a question,” said Mr Xu Tianchen, a Beijing-based analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit.
“Last year, he announced tariffs related to ‘illicit’ Russian oil trade, but their implementation was patchy.”
“Trump is also the kind of person who likes bullying the weak,” Mr Xu said. “He should manage his actions to avoid these tariffs escalating into direct confrontation with China.” REUTERS

