More Important Than Iran: George Friedman on China's Future
The scheduled summit between Presidents Trump and Xi has been delayed by the Middle East war, yet it may prove far more consequential for the global order than the current conflict. Despite being Iran's friend and the largest consumer of Gulf energy, China has maintained a conspicuously restrained response to the U.S.-Israel-Iran war. This raises urgent questions: Is Chinese restraint a sign of weakness, or calculated self-interest? What does Beijing's muted support for Tehran reveal about the emerging Sino-American relationship? And could an economic accommodation between the world's two largest economies fundamentally reshape the geopolitical landscape?
Pontos-chave
China's muted response to the Iran war reflects its urgent need for economic accommodation with the U.S., not weakness—Beijing requires access to American markets and investment more than it needs to support Tehran.
The upcoming Trump-Xi summit could produce a Taiwan settlement modeled on «Hong Kong on steroids»—symbolic Chinese sovereignty paired with genuine autonomy and implicit U.S. security guarantees.
A Sino-American economic accord would unite half the world's GDP and fundamentally transform the global geopolitical system, relegating Russia to secondary importance and ending the Cold War paradigm.
Both nations face domestic economic pressures—Chinese bank failures and unemployment, American inflation and affordability crises—that make confrontation unsustainable and cooperation rational.
The Iran war creates economic pain for both powers, raising oil prices and threatening supply chains, but U.S.-China economic delegations continued meeting in Paris even as the conflict raged.
Em resumo
China's restrained response to the Iran war signals that economic accommodation with the United States has become Beijing's overriding priority, potentially heralding a historic shift from U.S.-China confrontation to pragmatic coexistence that will define the global order far more than the current Middle East conflict.
China's Calculated Restraint
Beijing prioritizes U.S. economic access over support for Iran despite energy dependence.
China's response to the U.S.-Israel-Iran war has been conspicuously muted, despite importing more than $400 billion worth of Gulf energy in 2024 and maintaining a friendship with Tehran. The restraint stems from two realities: China lacks the ability to project force effectively into the Middle East, and more importantly, it has something far more valuable at stake. Beijing desperately needs an economic accommodation with Washington that would restore access to American markets and investment. China's economy faces serious trouble, including bank failures, rising unemployment, and social unrest—problems that cannot be solved without the U.S. market, which represents 25% of global GDP.
The Chinese have consciously chosen not to exploit the war for propaganda purposes or to condemn American «imperialism» with their usual vigor. This silence speaks volumes. Even as the conflict threatens their oil supply, Chinese and American economic delegations continued meeting in Paris to finalize summit details. When Trump delayed the meeting due to the war, Beijing immediately agreed to reschedule for April without protest. China's rational calculation is clear: an economic agreement with the United States matters infinitely more than symbolic support for Iran or short-term energy concerns.
The Limits of Chinese-Iranian Friendship
The Economic Entanglement
U.S. and Chinese economies are deeply interdependent despite political tensions.
The Taiwan Solution
A «Hong Kong on steroids» model could resolve the military impasse.
The Strategic Problem Taiwan sits in the «first island chain» that could block Chinese access to the Pacific. For Beijing, this represents an existential military threat to global economic access; for Washington, it's a critical lever against Chinese expansion.
Symbolic Concession The U.S. could formally acknowledge Taiwan as part of China, satisfying Beijing's symbolic and historical claims while maintaining the island's effective independence.
Guaranteed Autonomy Unlike Hong Kong, Taiwan would receive genuine, enforceable autonomy backed by implicit American security guarantees, potentially from bases like Guam in the drone age.
Limited Arms Sales Washington would restrict weapons sales to Taiwan to defensive systems sufficient to repel invasion but insufficient to threaten Chinese access to the Pacific.
Domestic Evolution Taiwan's opposition Kuomintang party, which favors closer China ties, is gaining strength domestically, suggesting political space for accommodation exists within Taiwanese society.
Enforceable Consequences Unlike the Hong Kong arrangement, violation of Taiwan's autonomy would trigger concrete American responses, including potential cutoff of Chinese exports to the U.S. market—a credible deterrent.
Friedman on the New Geopolitical Order
Sino-American accommodation would eclipse Russia and end the Cold War paradigm.
“The old geopolitical order is obsolete. Russia is not the key issue. And this is one of the things that Trump has made a point of saying this is not our key issue. Our key issue is China and the possibility of reaching accommodation.”
Key Economic and Strategic Facts
Numbers that define the stakes of Sino-American relations.
The Paradigm Shift
U.S.-China accommodation matters more than Middle East conflicts for long-term order.
The Paradigm Shift
The Iran war, though significant in the moment, pales in long-term importance compared to the potential Sino-American economic accommodation. If successful, the summit will mark the formal end of the Cold War geopolitical paradigm and the beginning of a new order defined not by U.S.-Russia confrontation but by pragmatic U.S.-China coexistence. Russia, diminished and fragmented, becomes a secondary power. The future belongs to economic interdependence between rational actors, not ideological blocs locked in permanent hostility.
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