SINO-IRANIAN MILITARY COLLABORATION
Strategic Assessment of the Technological Anchor
Chinese Military and Intelligence Support to the Islamic Republic of Iran
Against the Background of Operation Epic Fury, February–March 2026
Abstract
This paper provides a comprehensive strategic assessment of Chinese military collaboration with the Islamic Republic of Iran, set against the backdrop of the ongoing 2026 Iran War, which commenced on February 28, 2026, with the joint United States–Israeli Operation Epic Fury. Drawing on verified open-source intelligence, government statements, and multi-source reporting current as of March 16, 2026, the paper analyses the nature, scope, and strategic logic of Beijing’s support to Tehran across four dimensions: (1) precision-strike and anti-access capabilities transfers, including the CM-302 supersonic anti-ship missile deal and solid-fuel propellant supply chains; (2) the navigation revolution represented by Iran’s full operational migration from US GPS to China’s BeiDou-3 constellation; (3) the deployment of the People’s Liberation Army Navy’s surveillance flotilla, centred on the Liaowang-1 intelligence vessel, to the Gulf of Oman; and (4) the trilateral intelligence architecture linking Beijing, Moscow, and Tehran. The paper applies a Bayesian game-theoretic framework to model escalatory dynamics, including the conditions under which Chinese engagement could cross a threshold into direct great-power conflict. It concludes with a structured policy analysis of China’s costs and benefits and identifies the strategic red lines most likely to trigger escalation.
I. Strategic Context: The 2026 Conflict Transition
I.i. From Attrition to Active Facilitation
The contemporary conflict between the United States, Israel, and Iran must be understood as the culmination of a multi-year escalatory cycle rather than an isolated event. The Twelve-Day War of June 2025, in which US and Israeli aircraft struck Iran’s nuclear enrichment facilities at Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan, destroyed the core of Iran’s uranium-processing infrastructure and left its economy in free fall. By December 2025, the Iranian rial had collapsed to historic lows, contributing to severe economic hardship and triggering mass protests across Iran in January 2026. Many observers reported that the demonstrations initially began as largely peaceful expressions of economic and political grievances. However, some foreign commentators later argued that elements of the unrest evolved into violent riots, allegedly encouraged or infiltrated by external actors, including claims circulating in foreign political discourse that foreign intelligence operatives were present among the protesters. Iranian security forces ultimately responded with extensive force, and at the end some thousands of demonstrators , firefighters, police and security force were killed.
Against this backdrop, the United States and Iran entered what observers described as the most substantive nuclear talks in years, mediated by Omani Foreign Minister Badr al-Busaidi in Geneva. These talks concluded on February 26 with both parties agreeing to continue negotiations. Forty-eight hours later, the bombs fell.
On February 28, 2026, the United States and Israel launched Operation Epic Fury (US designation) and Operation Roaring Lion (Israeli designation), a massive multi-domain precision strike campaign targeting Iranian leadership compounds, ballistic missile infrastructure, command nodes, naval assets, and the remnants of Iran’s nuclear programme. The opening salvo killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Over 900 strikes were executed in the first twelve hours alone.
Iran’s response was immediate and expansive. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) launched approximately 420 missiles across nine countries and targeted ships at sea. The Strait of Hormuz—which carries roughly 20 percent of global oil supplies—was effectively closed by March 4. As of March 16, 2026, oil prices have risen more than 40 percent from pre-war levels, with Brent crude trading above $104 per barrel.
I.ii. The Diplomatic Acknowledgement of Military Partnership
The most consequential diplomatic development of the conflict’s third week came on March 14, 2026, when Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi gave an exclusive interview to the American broadcaster MS NOW. When pressed on reports that Russia and China were providing targeting intelligence to Iran, Araghchi confirmed the relationship with notable directness:
“Russia and China are our strategic partners, and we have had close cooperation in the past, which still continues, and that includes military cooperation as well. I’m not going into any details of that. We have good cooperation with these two countries politically, economically, and even militarily.”
This public acknowledgement—the first of its kind at the foreign-minister level during an active conflict—removed any remaining ambiguity about the nature of trilateral support. It confirmed what intelligence analysts and open-source researchers had been documenting for weeks: China and Russia have transitioned from diplomatic partners to active military facilitators, providing what this paper terms the “connective tissue” for Iran’s strategic survival.
Beijing’s official posture has been studiously ambiguous. China’s Foreign Ministry denied specific reports—most notably, in early March, dismissing allegations of planned CM-302 missile deliveries as “not true”—while simultaneously refusing to characterise the broader cooperation programme. This gap between official denial and operational reality is a hallmark of Chinese information management in sensitive military affairs.
II. Precision and Long-Range Capabilities Transfers
II.i. The CM-302 (YJ-12E) Anti-Ship Missile Acquisition
The most strategically significant hardware transfer under negotiation is the CM-302 supersonic anti-ship cruise missile, the export variant of China’s YJ-12. Reporting by Reuters, confirmed by multiple regional intelligence sources in late February 2026, indicated that Iran was approaching completion of a deal for approximately fifty missiles. The Chinese Foreign Ministry subsequently denied the deal, though this denial was issued in the context of general diplomatic messaging rather than specific factual rebuttal.
The CM-302’s threat profile is exceptional by the standards of contemporary anti-ship warfare:
Range: Approximately 460 kilometres (248 nautical miles), enabling Iran to threaten US Carrier Strike Groups operating well beyond the Strait of Hormuz, including those positioned in the Gulf of Oman.
Terminal velocity: In excess of Mach 3, with a sea-skimming profile and evasive manoeuvres in the final engagement phase that severely compress the intercept window for existing US Navy standard missile batteries.
Defeat mechanism: Analysts have described it as “very difficult to intercept,” noting that the combination of speed, low radar cross-section in terminal phase, and manoeuvre capability challenges even the SM-6 interceptor, the US Navy’s primary anti-ship missile defence weapon.
The broader strategic implication transcends the kinetic threat. The mere credible presence of CM-302 batteries along Iran’s southern coastline creates what this paper terms a “Strategic Ticking Clock”: the operational window available to US Carrier Strike Groups for sustained close-in operations narrows dramatically, requiring either standoff engagement profiles that reduce strike effectiveness or acceptance of significantly elevated risk to capital assets. The USS Abraham Lincoln and its strike group, currently deployed in the Arabian Sea, represent the primary target set.
II.ii. Solid-Fuel Propellant Reconstitution
The destruction of Iran’s primary solid-propellant production facilities at Parchin and Khojir during the 2024–2025 strike cycles created a critical vulnerability in Iran’s ballistic missile reconstitution capacity. Solid-fuelled missiles offer decisive tactical advantages over their liquid-fuelled counterparts—notably faster preparation times that complicate pre-emptive strike planning—making their production a strategic priority for Tehran.
China has stepped into the role of exclusive supplier of critical propellant precursors. Intelligence assessments and intercept data indicate:
Sodium Perchlorate: Over 2,000 metric tonnes were delivered via Bandar Abbas in late 2025 and early 2026. Sodium perchlorate is the primary oxidiser used in composite solid propellants and is subject to dual-use export controls under the Wassenaar Arrangement, which China has not joined.
Planetary Mixers: High-grade industrial mixers, essential for producing homogeneous solid propellant grain, represent a second critical chokepoint. Raids in December 2025 intercepted several units, but satellite imagery assessed with high confidence that at least four units successfully reached Iran’s hardened “underground cities”—the network of subterranean missile production and storage facilities the IRGC has developed since 2015.
Dual-Use Electronics: The China Electronics Technology Group Corporation (CETC), a Chinese state-owned defence electronics conglomerate subject to US Treasury sanctions, has been identified as a key conduit for advanced chips, processors, and guidance components that improve the Circular Error Probable (CEP) of Iranian ballistic missiles.
II.iii. The UAV Ecosystem
China’s contribution to Iran’s unmanned aerial vehicle programme operates at the component, system, and operational level. The Shahed-136 loitering munition—the so-called “kamikaze drone” that Iran supplied to Russia in large quantities during the Ukraine conflict—has undergone significant performance improvement through Chinese engine technology:
Engine Transfers: Chinese-manufactured Wankel-type rotary engines (MD-series variants) are now standard in Shahed-136B production runs. These offer superior power-to-weight ratios and reliability compared to earlier Iranian-domestic powerplants, increasing range and reducing acoustic signature.
Formation Coordination: Chinese PLA-affiliated technology firms, including CETC subsidiaries, have contributed to the development of swarm coordination software enabling larger and more coherent drone formations, complicating adversary air defence resource allocation.
III. The Navigation Revolution: BeiDou-3 and the End of GPS Dominance
III.i. The Strategic Significance of Navigation Sovereignty
Perhaps the most consequential dimension of Chinese military support to Iran is not a hardware transfer but a technological integration: Iran’s full migration from the US-controlled Global Positioning System (GPS) to China’s BeiDou-3 Navigation Satellite System (BDS-3). This transition, the product of a decade of planning and accelerated by the operational lessons of the Twelve-Day War in June 2025, has fundamentally altered the electronic warfare balance in the Persian Gulf theatre.
The strategic logic was stark. During the Twelve-Day War, Israel and the United States successfully jammed GPS signals across wide areas of Iran and adjacent airspace, disrupting the navigation of Iranian drone swarms and cruise missiles, causing failure rates exceeding 70 percent among GPS-dependent weapons in early phases of that conflict. GPS signals are intrinsically vulnerable to jamming because they weaken substantially over their 20,000-kilometre transmission path from orbital to terrestrial receivers, making them easily overpowered by ground-based or airborne jammers.
Iran had been working to integrate BeiDou-2 into its military infrastructure since at least 2015, according to ChinaMed Project research fellow Theo Nencini. By 2021, Iranian defence planners had begun integrating BDS-3 into selected missile guidance systems. The GPS disruptions of June 2025 served as the decisive catalyst: on June 23, 2025, Iran formally deactivated GPS reception nationwide, completing its transition to BeiDou for both military and civilian applications.
III.ii. Technical Architecture and Operational Advantages
BDS-3’s technical specifications confer decisive operational advantages in contested electromagnetic environments:
Signal Resilience: The military-grade B3A signal employs complex frequency hopping and Navigation Message Authentication (NMA) that renders it effectively immune to conventional GPS jamming techniques. Military analyst Patricia Marins, writing in bne IntelliNews, assessed that “BDS-3’s military-tier B3A signal is essentially unjammable.”
Accuracy: BDS-3 operates with a triple-frequency architecture that minimises ionospheric interference, achieving a Circular Error Probability (CEP) of under five metres for civilian users and centimetre-level precision for authorised military users—a substantial improvement over standard GPS military accuracy of three to five metres.
Short Message Communication (SMC): A unique BDS-3 capability enables two-way communication with missiles and drones at distances of up to 2,000 kilometres while in flight, permitting real-time target redirection and mid-course corrections impossible with GPS-guided munitions.
Constellation Redundancy: With more than fifty operational satellites across geostationary, inclined geosynchronous, and medium Earth orbits, BDS-3 provides substantially higher signal geometry and redundancy over Iran’s mountainous terrain than GPS’s thirty-one satellite constellation.
III.iii. Operational Impact in the 2026 Conflict
The operational consequences of Iran’s BeiDou integration have been measurable and acknowledged. Former French foreign intelligence director Alain Juillet, speaking to the Tocsin podcast in March 2026, stated: “One of the surprises in this war is that Iranian missiles are more accurate compared to the war that took place eight months ago, raising many questions about the guidance systems of these missiles.” He added: “There is talk about replacing the GPS system with a Chinese system, which explains the precision of Iranian missiles. Significant targets have been hit.”
The IRGC’s own spokesman claimed that Iran had destroyed nearly ten advanced US radar systems across the region—a claim that, if even partially accurate, points to a qualitative shift in Iranian strike doctrine from area-saturation barrages toward precision attacks on command-and-control and sensor infrastructure. The targeting pattern, noted NBC News analyst Nicole Grajewski (Center for International Studies, Sciences Po), was “more focused on radar sites and communication posts in particular” compared to the Twelve-Day War.
Perhaps most consequential for US operational planning, a 2023 US government advisory board assessment cited in open defence publications acknowledged that “GPS’ capabilities are now substantially inferior to those of China’s BeiDou.” The US and Israel retain no equivalent disruptive tool against BDS-3 military signals, meaning that the electronic warfare advantages they held in June 2025 have been definitively eroded.
IV. The Maritime Intelligence Architecture: PLAN Deployment and the “God’s Eye” Problem
IV.i. The Liaowang-1 and Escort Formation
In parallel with its technology transfers, China has deployed a naval intelligence formation to the Gulf of Oman that has structurally transformed the information environment of the conflict. The centrepiece of this formation is the Liaowang-1, a space-tracking and signals intelligence vessel commissioned in spring 2025.
Displacing approximately 30,000 tonnes and measuring 332 metres in length, the Liaowang-1 represents one of the most sophisticated maritime intelligence platforms ever constructed. Its sensor architecture, according to multiple defence analytical sources, includes:
At least five large radar domes and multiple high-gain antennas capable of intercepting radar emissions, communications transmissions, and electronic warfare signatures.
A reported tracking capability of up to 1,200 simultaneous air and missile targets, transforming the vessel from a passive observer into an active electromagnetic picture-builder.
A surveillance envelope of approximately 6,000 kilometres—sufficient to cover the entire Arabian Sea, Persian Gulf, and large portions of the Middle East from a single operating position in the Gulf of Oman.
The vessel is escorted by a Type 055 cruiser (the world’s most capable surface combatant by most analytical measures) and a Type 052D destroyer, providing layered air defence and anti-submarine protection. The Type 055’s dual-band radar system, comparable in design concept to the SPY-3/SPY-4 integration intended for the Zumwalt-class destroyer, provides over-the-horizon tracking that supplements the Liaowang-1’s intelligence collection. Together, this formation has been characterised by a Middle East Monitor source as providing Iran with “a 24/7 god’s eye view of US Navy movements.”
It is of note that as of March 9, 2026, maritime tracking services indicated that the Liaowang-1 had not departed Shanghai, a finding corroborated by satellite imagery cited by analyst MT Anderson in Defence Express. This does not necessarily mean no Chinese intelligence vessel is operating in the Gulf of Oman. Multiple reports reference a formation including a scientific radar vessel (“Ocean No.1”) operating under Type 055 and Type 052D protection. The possibility of a misidentification—or deliberate transponder manipulation—cannot be excluded. What is not in dispute is that a Chinese naval intelligence formation is operating in the region and that its capabilities are consistent with the surveillance support described by Iranian and Western sources.
IV.ii. The Satellite Architecture: MizarVision and the Public Demonstration
The Liaowang-1 deployment is one node in a broader Chinese space-based intelligence architecture supporting Iranian operations. China’s satellite fleet comprises more than 500 operational military and civilian dual-use platforms. Key elements of this architecture relevant to the current conflict include:
Jilin-1 Commercial Constellation: China’s commercial satellite operator has been documenting US and Israeli military deployments, including publicising satellite imagery on February 10, 2026, showing the THAAD anti-ballistic missile installation at Jordan’s Muwaffaq Al-Salti Air Base. Analysts widely interpreted this publication as a deliberate signal of China’s willingness to support Iranian targeting intelligence.
Khayyam Satellite: Launched in 2022, the Khayyam is a Russian-built Kanopus-V optical reconnaissance satellite operated by Iran but reportedly tasked partly through Russian ground stations. It provides 1.2-metre resolution imagery, enabling targeting of fixed US and Israeli installations.
Integrated Kill Chain: Al Jazeera’s security analysis describes the resulting architecture as a “distributed anti-access, area-denial structure constructed not by a single great power but by a coalition of states.” Chinese satellites identify targets, BeiDou provides navigation and timing, two-way SMC enables real-time guidance correction, and Russian satellite feeds provide battle damage assessment and tracking of mobile assets.
A senior US military commander acknowledged to reporters that “signals are the new bullets: whoever controls the spectrum controls the fight.” The Pentagon statement that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth offered when directly asked about Russian intelligence sharing—“We’re tracking everything”—was read by analysts as neither denial nor reassurance, but an acknowledgment that the electromagnetic contest is ongoing and unresolved.
V. The Trilateral Architecture: Russia, China, and the “Axis of Enablement”
V.i. Russia’s Role: The “Operational Eye”
While China provides the hardware infrastructure and navigational architecture, Russia provides the operational intelligence backbone. The Washington Post reported on March 6, 2026, citing three senior US officials, that Russia was providing Iran with targeting intelligence—including the precise locations of American warships and aircraft—described by one official as “a pretty comprehensive effort.” Bloomberg subsequently corroborated the reporting, adding that the assistance included satellite imagery and drone targeting tactics.
Russia’s comparative advantage in this arrangement lies in its large constellation of military reconnaissance satellites, far superior to Iran’s limited indigenous space assets. Nicole Grajewski of Sciences Po assessed that “Iran possesses only a limited number of military-grade satellites, meaning access to Russian space-based intelligence could help Tehran identify radar systems, command centers and other strategic infrastructure” with a speed and precision Tehran could not achieve independently.
The arrangement reflects a pattern of reciprocal exchange between Moscow and Tehran that deepened substantially during Russia’s war in Ukraine. Iran supplied Russia with Shahed-series drones and short-range ballistic missiles that Russia deployed against Ukrainian cities and energy infrastructure. Russia, in a form of strategic reciprocity, is now providing the intelligence architecture that enables Iran to prosecute more effective retaliatory strikes against US and allied forces. President Putin, when confronted by Trump about the intelligence sharing, reportedly denied it; Trump himself described the allegation as a “stupid question,” though multiple administrations officials confirmed its accuracy.
Russian support also includes the “Maritime Security Belt 2026” naval exercises conducted in March 2026, involving Chinese and Russian naval assets in and around the Gulf. These exercises, combining the Chinese destroyer Tangshan and Russian patrol vessels, serve a dual function: demonstrating a shared commitment to freedom of navigation on Chinese and Russian terms, and providing a physical presence that complicates US naval freedom of manoeuvre near Iranian-held waters.
V.ii. The European Dimension: The Article 42.7 Complication
European involvement in the conflict has escalated beyond the diplomatic and economic. Iranian-backed proxy forces have conducted strikes on EU member states, most notably Cyprus and Greece, invoking mutual defence obligations under Article 42.7 of the Treaty on European Union (the EU’s equivalent of NATO’s Article 5). A Hezbollah drone that reached Cyprus, striking a facility co-located with British Royal Air Force assets, created immediate legal and political pressure on the E3 (France, Germany, United Kingdom) to transition from bystanders to belligerents.
The E3 issued a joint statement on February 28 that carefully avoided either endorsing or condemning Operation Epic Fury, while condemning subsequent Iranian retaliatory strikes. Iranian attacks on a French naval facility in the UAE and Italian installations in Iraq further complicated European neutrality. The activation of Article 42.7 by affected member states would formally merge the Mediterranean and Persian Gulf theatres, requiring E3 military contributions and dramatically expanding the conflict’s geographic and political scope.
For Beijing, the prospect of European military commitment creates strategic complications. China has significant economic interests in EU-Iran trade architecture and does not wish to be positioned as the adversary of European capitals. Yet active Chinese support for Iranian operations that damage European assets—through the intelligence and navigational infrastructure described in this paper—already implicates Beijing in a European threat perception.
VI. Bayesian Game-Theoretic Analysis: Escalation Scenarios and the Tripwire Problem
VI.i. The Model Framework
The interaction between the United States (Player 1) and China (Player 2) over the course of this conflict can be modelled as a Bayesian game of incomplete information, in which each player has uncertainty about the other’s “type”—that is, their true preferences, red lines, and willingness to escalate. The key uncertainty for Washington concerns whether Beijing is a “Pragmatic Actor” (primarily concerned with economic stability and reputational costs of direct intervention) or a “Strategic Revisionist” (willing to accept significant economic costs to prevent a fundamental reordering of the Middle Eastern strategic landscape in America’s favour).
Prior to Operation Epic Fury, US assessments assigned a high probability (estimated at P=0.80) to the Pragmatic Actor type, reflecting Beijing’s historical pattern of “free riding” on Iranian resistance to US hegemony while avoiding direct engagement. The events of February–March 2026 have forced successive Bayesian updates to this prior.
VI.ii. The “Red Line Miscalculation” Scenario
Consider the following escalatory pathway, consistent with current operational conditions:
Initial State: The US assigns P=0.75 (updated downward from 0.80) to Beijing as a Pragmatic Actor, based on China’s official condemnation of the strikes, its Foreign Ministry denial of the CM-302 deal, and its abstention from direct kinetic involvement.
Trigger Event: Following an effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz that persists beyond thirty days and threatens permanent disruption of China’s energy security, the US announces plans for an amphibious landing operation near Bandar Abbas to secure the Iranian southern coast and force the Strait open.
China’s Bayesian Update: Beijing recalculates. A US-controlled Iranian southern coast severs the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC), the overland connectivity axis that China relies on to bypass Western-controlled maritime routes. It also creates a US military presence on the doorstep of Central Asia, complicating the Belt and Road Initiative’s entire Middle Eastern and South Asian architecture. The loss is not merely economic but civilisational in Chinese strategic perception.
The Response: China authorises active use of YLC-8B anti-stealth UHF-band radars—Chinese-supplied systems already positioned in Iran—operated by undeclared Chinese “volunteer” technical advisers. The Liaowang-1 formation begins providing real-time targeting coordinates to Iranian anti-ship batteries. CM-302 missiles, if delivered, are made operational.
The Tripwire: If the US misreads China’s type as “purely economic,” proceeds with the amphibious operation, and encounters direct kinetic engagement between US forces and Chinese-operated systems, the resulting incident becomes the tripwire for an escalation dynamic that neither party may be able to control. The legal and political distinction between “Chinese-operated” and “Chinese” disappears at the point of American casualties.
The strategic literature identifies this pattern as the “credibility trap”: each side’s deterrence posture requires the other to believe in its willingness to escalate, yet revealing that credibility in ambiguous proxy engagements creates the conditions for inadvertent escalation. The BeiDou integration, the Liaowang-1 deployment, and the satellite architecture described in this paper all occupy the dangerous grey zone between “non-kinetic support” and “direct military facilitation” that the credibility trap exploits.
VI.iii. The YLC-8B Radar and Stealth Penetration
A distinct but related escalatory pathway involves the YLC-8B anti-stealth radar, a Chinese-supplied UHF-band system that exploits low-frequency electromagnetic waves to reduce the effectiveness of the radar-absorbent coatings that define US fifth-generation aircraft. The B-21 Raider and the F-35C were engineered against X-band and S-band radar threats; the YLC-8B operates in a frequency regime that partially bypasses their stealth geometry. If Iran successfully employs Chinese-provided radar data to vector Iranian air defence assets against US stealth aircraft, the operational and reputational consequences extend far beyond the immediate conflict, fundamentally challenging the assumptions underpinning the United States’ entire future force structure investment in low-observable platforms.
VII. The Strait of Hormuz as Strategic Lever and Economic Weapon
VII.i. The Closure and Its Dimensions
The effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz since March 4, 2026—with the IRGC threatening to attack any vessel linked to the US, Israel, or their Western allies—represents the most consequential disruption to global energy markets since the 1973 oil embargo. The International Energy Agency has characterised it as the largest disruption to global energy supplies in history.
The economic architecture of the closure is stark. Through the Strait normally transit approximately 20 million barrels of crude oil per day, representing roughly 27 percent of global maritime crude trade. Since the closure, daily transits have fallen from a historical average of 138 to fewer than five. The IEA has coordinated the release of 400 million barrels from strategic petroleum reserves across more than thirty countries—the largest such coordinated action ever taken—yet analysts note that at normal consumption rates this volume equals only approximately twenty days of typical Hormuz flows.
The Iranian IRGC has threatened oil prices of $200 per barrel if Western powers attempt military coercion, while Brent crude as of March 16 stands at approximately $104 per barrel, having surged from pre-war levels below $75. Goldman Sachs economists have raised their US recession probability to 25 percent; Oxford Economics models a scenario in which prices averaging $140 per barrel for two months would be sufficient to push the eurozone, Japan, and the United Kingdom into contraction.
VII.ii. The China Dilemma: Beneficiary or Victim?
China’s position vis-Ã -vis the Strait crisis is structurally contradictory. On the one hand, as Iran’s primary military and diplomatic enabler, Beijing bears implicit responsibility for the closure. On the other, China is one of the closure’s principal economic victims: approximately 70 percent of Middle Eastern crude exports transiting the Strait are bound for Asian markets, and China itself imports significant volumes of Iranian oil.
Oil prices exceeding $100 per barrel impose a direct cost on China’s industrial economy, which remains energy-intensive. President Trump, in a notable diplomatic manoeuvre, personally requested on March 16 that China join an international coalition to reopen the Strait—naming Beijing alongside Japan, France, and the UK. China’s muted non-response, declining to commit to naval escort operations, reveals the depth of the dilemma: joining a US-led coalition would be perceived as abandoning Iran at the moment of its greatest need; failing to do so prolongs economic conditions that damage China’s own economy and global standing.
VIII. Policy Analysis: Beijing’s Strategic Calculus
VIII.i. Strategic Advantages
China’s decision to provide “technological anchor” support to Iran, calibrated below the threshold of direct military intervention, confers several strategic benefits:
Pacific Munitions Depletion: The 2026 Iran conflict has imposed significant attrition on US high-end munitions stocks, particularly SM-6 interceptors, Patriot Advanced Capability-3 missiles, and Tomahawk cruise missiles. Each SM-6 or PAC-3 expended in the Gulf is one fewer available for a potential Taiwan contingency. This strategic arithmetic is well understood in Beijing.
Live-Fire Data Harvesting: The conflict provides China with unparalleled real-world performance data on the complete spectrum of US military capabilities: the kill chain compression achieved by the Maven Smart System, the electronic warfare signatures of F-35s and B-21s, the intercept performance of SM-6 against hypersonic and supersonic targets, and the tactical communications security protocols employed by CENTCOM. This data is of incalculable value for PLA planning in a potential Pacific conflict.
INSTC and BRI Protection: Preventing an Iranian military collapse preserves the International North-South Transport Corridor and the Belt and Road Initiative’s Middle Eastern architecture. A US-controlled Iran or a compliant successor government would represent a strategic encirclement risk extending from the Persian Gulf to Central Asia.
Global South Signalling: China’s support for Iran against US military action sends a powerful signal to non-aligned states that Beijing is a reliable strategic partner capable of and willing to resist US coercive power, reinforcing China’s positioning as the leader of an alternative international order.
VIII.ii. Strategic Costs and Risks
The same posture carries substantial risks:
Sanction Contagion and “Snapback” Risk: The G7 has signalled readiness to impose secondary sanctions on Chinese financial institutions found to be materially supporting Iran’s war effort. The potential “snapback” of comprehensive G7 trade sanctions onto the Chinese financial sector—which depends on dollar-clearing and Western correspondent banking—would represent a severe economic shock at a time when China’s domestic economy faces structural headwinds.
Credibility Deficit and Escalation Overshoot: If Iran ultimately loses—whether through military defeat, regime collapse, or negotiated capitulation—China’s failure to prevent that outcome will be perceived as a demonstration of the limits of its power. This “credibility deficit” could paradoxically incentivise Beijing to escalate further to avoid the reputational damage of strategic impotence.
Self-Inflicted Energy Shock: Oil prices above $100 per barrel and the Hormuz closure damage China’s own industrial economy. The asymmetry between Beijing’s support for the crisis’ continuation and the costs that crisis imposes on China itself creates an internal political tension that could ultimately force a recalibration of Chinese policy.
Inadvertent Escalation to Direct Conflict: As analysed in Section VI, the grey-zone nature of Chinese support creates structural conditions for miscalculation. A US strike on Chinese-operated military systems—whether intentional or inadvertent—would trigger a constitutional and political crisis in Beijing that could compel a kinetic response the leadership would otherwise prefer to avoid.
IX. Conclusions and Strategic Implications
The evidence reviewed in this paper supports several firm analytical conclusions, accurate as of March 16, 2026:
First, China has crossed the threshold from diplomatic support to active military facilitation. The BeiDou navigation integration, the satellite intelligence architecture, the PLAN naval deployment, the propellant supply chains, and the ongoing CM-302 negotiations collectively constitute a level of support that materially improves Iran’s capacity to inflict casualties on US and allied forces. Iranian Foreign Minister Araghchi’s public confirmation of “military cooperation” on March 14 removed the last fig-leaf of plausible deniability.
Second, the GPS–BeiDou transition represents a structural change to the Middle Eastern military balance with consequences extending beyond the present conflict. The US’s ability to degrade adversary precision through electromagnetic spectrum denial—a tool that has been central to American military doctrine since the Gulf War—has been fundamentally compromised for any state that has completed BDS-3 integration. The precedent set by Iran will not be lost on other regional powers.
Third, the information balance has shifted. The combination of Russia’s tactical satellite intelligence, China’s BeiDou navigation, and the Liaowang-1 formation’s electronic surveillance has ended the era of unchallenged US information dominance in the Gulf theatre. The Pentagon’s ability to maintain the element of surprise—long a critical advantage in US power projection—has been significantly degraded.
Fourth, the risk of inadvertent great-power escalation is real and increasing. The grey-zone nature of Chinese support—operating below kinetic thresholds but providing capabilities that are operationally decisive—creates the structural conditions for a miscalculation that neither Washington nor Beijing may intend but that the logic of their respective commitments and red lines may produce anyway.
The coming days will be critical. Trump’s push for a multinational escort coalition for the Strait of Hormuz, China’s non-response, and the ongoing attrition of both Iranian capabilities and US munition stocks are converging toward a decision point. The question is no longer whether China is involved in this conflict. It is whether the degree of that involvement can be managed short of the threshold that transforms a regional war into something considerably larger.
Sources and References
All sources are publicly available as of March 16, 2026. Direct hyperlinks correspond to original publications.
Government and International Organisations
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Defence and Security Analysis
21. bne IntelliNews. “Iran turns to China’s BeiDou satellites to outfox Israeli anti-drone electronic warfare defences.” March 2026.
22. Defence Industry Europe. “China expands defence cooperation with Iran through satellite intelligence and naval deployment in Gulf.” February 21, 2026.
23. Defence Security Asia. “China Deploys 30,000-Ton Liaowang-1 ‘Floating Supercomputer’ to Gulf of Oman.” March 2026.
24. Defence Security Asia. “GPS Crippled, BeiDou Takes Over.” February 2026.
25. Defence Security Asia. “Iran Abandons US GPS for China’s BeiDou.” February 5, 2026.
26. Defence Express. “Did China Really Send Its Advanced Liaowang-1 Spy Ship to Iran?” March 2026.
27. Military Watch Magazine. “China Deploys One of the World’s Most Powerful Destroyers Near Iran as Western Attack Looms.” February 10, 2026.
28. Middle East Monitor. “The new calculus in the Gulf: How Beijing and Moscow have altered the Iran equation.” February 2026.
29. Modern Diplomacy. “How Chinese PLA Tech Firms Use AI and Tanker Ship Data to Mask Iranian Military Moves.” March 10, 2026.
30. Special Eurasia. “How Russian and China Tech Underpins Iranian Strategic Depth.” March 1, 2026.
31. OSRS Intelligence Brief (OgunSecurity). “Iran’s Missile Precision and the AI-BeiDou Nexus.” March 2026.
32. Army Recognition. “US and Israel Launch Operation Epic Fury Against Iran Nuclear Program and Missile Arsenal.” February 28, 2026.
Reference/Encyclopaedic Sources (Verified as of March 16, 2026)
33. Wikipedia. “2026 Iran War.” Last updated March 16, 2026.
34. Wikipedia. “2026 Israeli–United States Strikes on Iran.” Last updated March 16, 2026.
35. Wikipedia. “2026 Strait of Hormuz Crisis.” Last updated March 16, 2026.
36. Wikipedia. “China and Russia in the 2026 Iran War.” Last updated March 16, 2026.
37. Wikipedia. “Iran–China 25-year Cooperation Program.”
38. Encyclopaedia Britannica. “2026 Iran War.” Last updated March 16, 2026.
39. Britannica. “Operation Epic Fury.” Last updated March 16, 2026.