U.S.
Warns China Over Iranian Oil as Sanctions Fight Intensifies
China
told its independent refineries to disregard U.S. sanctions over their
purchases of Iranian crude.
Alan
Rappeport
By Alan
Rappeport
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/04/us/politics/us-china-iranian-oil-sanctions.html
May 4,
2026
Updated
1:32 p.m. ET
The
United States on Monday urged China to push Iran to open the Strait of Hormuz
and said that its purchases of Iranian oil amounted to funding global
terrorism, delivering a stern rebuke ahead of President Trump’s meeting in
Beijing this month with the Chinese leader, Xi Jinping.
The
warning came from Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who will be participating
in the high-stakes meetings. Mr. Bessent has been leading an aggressive
campaign to cripple Iran’s economy with a blitz of new sanctions. He has also
been working to devise ways to increase oil supplies around the world to blunt
the impact of soaring energy prices. Gasoline hit an average of $4.45 per
gallon on Monday.
“Let’s
see if China — let’s see them step up with some diplomacy and get the Iranians
to open the strait,” Mr. Bessent said on Fox News on Monday. “Iran is the
largest state sponsor of terrorism, and China has been buying 90 percent of
their energy, so they are funding the largest state sponsor of terrorism.”
Tension
between the United States and China has eased since a year ago, when the Trump
administration triggered a trade war by hiking tariffs on Chinese imports and
China retaliated with export controls on critical minerals. But the Iran war
has opened a new front in their rivalry, as Chinese purchases of Iranian oil
keep Iran’s economy afloat.
In recent
weeks, the Treasury Department has intensified economic pressure on China. It
has specifically been targeting China’s independent “teapot” refineries with
sanctions and warning financial institutions that they will face penalties for
facilitating oil sales between Iran and China.
The
Treasury Department on April 24 imposed sanctions on an independent Chinese
refinery, Hengli Petrochemical Refinery, which is one of Iran’s largest
customers for crude oil and other petroleum products. Hengli has purchased
billions of dollars’ worth of Iranian crude from the Revolutionary Guards
Corps, which wields military, political and economic clout throughout Iran.
But China
responded this past weekend, ordering its companies not to comply with the U.S.
sanctions. China’s Ministry of Commerce invoked a 2021 “blocking measure” that
protects its firms from foreign laws that the Chinese government believes
violate international norms and unfairly restrict trade.
U.S.
sanctions are far-reaching economic tools that can block transactions and
freeze the international assets of companies around the world, essentially
cutting them off from Western financial services providers. China’s order to
disregard the sanctions will create a new point of tension between the world’s
two largest economies and could set the stage for additional decoupling of
their financial systems.
China has
been making other provocative moves ahead of the meeting between the two
leaders.
Last
Monday, the Chinese government said it
would require the unwinding of Meta’s acquisition of Manus, a Singapore-based
artificial intelligence company with Chinese founders, in a move that could
chill other Chinese entrepreneurs from seeking alliances with foreign partners.
Mr.
Bessent suggested that Iran would be high on the agenda when Mr. Trump meets
with Mr. Xi.
“The
threat of attacks from Iran has closed the strait — we are reopening it,” Mr.
Bessent said. “So I would urge the Chinese to join us in supporting this
international operation.”
Alan
Rappeport is an economic policy reporter for The Times, based in Washington. He
covers the Treasury Department and writes about taxes, trade and fiscal
matters.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário