China, U.S. Agree That Hormuz Should Be Reopened Quickly

No Sign of Agreement on How Superpowers Can Achieve Goal

Strait of Hormuz
The Strait of Hormuz. (maps4media/Bloomberg)

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China called for a rapid reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, a goal it shares with the U.S., though there was no sign of a breakthrough between the superpowers on how to achieve that after President Donald Trump’s trip to Beijing

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said May 15 that the strait should be opened to shipping as soon as possible, according to state-run Xinhua News Agency. Both Iran and the U.S. are blocking traffic through the crucial waterway for global energy flows.

The statement came as world’s two largest economies sought to emphasize points of agreement on the Middle East conflict during Trump’s meetings with President Xi Jinping this week — even as they’re essentially on opposite sides, with China repeatedly criticizing the U.S.-Israeli attack on its Iranian ally. Oil extended gains May 15 as the war headed toward its 12th week with no clear path to a solution.   

On his way back from China, Trump also told reporters he spoke with Xi about potentially lifting sanctions on Chinese oil companies that buy Iranian crude. The Treasury has ramped up those penalties in recent weeks as the U.S. tries to pressure Tehran on talks. Beijing ordered its companies to ignore the sanctions.



“I’m going to make a decision over the next few days,” Trump said aboard Air Force One when asked if he’d consider lifting the sanctions. “We did talk about that.”

The conciliatory comments follow a summit that was overshadowed by the Iran war, given China is the largest buyer of Iranian oil. But they do little to ease the conundrum now facing the White House: How to reopen the strait, lower global energy prices and wind down an increasingly unpopular conflict that has caused the biggest oil supply disruption in history ahead of midterm elections in November.

Brent crude jumped 3.3% to settle at $109.26 per barrel on May 15 in New York, extending its gains since the start of the war to about 50%. Traders are worried about a fresh escalation in hostilities between the U.S. and Iran after Trump’s visit to China didn’t appear to yield concrete progress on a plan to restart Hormuz traffic.

A modest recovery in vessel movements seen earlier this week has faded as owners remained cautious about transits amid reports of a ship seizure near the waterway.

Trump said earlier in Beijing that he and Xi share common goals for resolving the conflict — namely that Hormuz should reopen and Iran shouldn’t possess a nuclear weapon. China, like the U.S., was a signatory to the 2015 accord on curtailing Iran’s atomic program, which Trump abandoned during his first term.

Trump stopped short of asking Xi to lean on Iran to ease traffic through the strait, but predicted the Chinese leader would do so. On May 14, Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency said Tehran would allow Chinese vessels to transit following discussions with Beijing. 

Image
Donald Trump/Xi Jinping

Trump and Xi attend a meeting on the sidelines of their visit to the Zhongnanhai Garden in Beijing on May 15. (Evan Vucci/Pool Photo via AP)

Iran has little interest in loosening its hold on the waterway. Tehran has insisted it wants to maintain control after the war, and attacked two commercial ships leaving Hormuz under U.S. protection in a quickly-shelved effort to pry open the strait known as Project Freedom. 

Iran’s ability to shut down Hormuz has sent global energy prices soaring and given Tehran enormous leverage in talks with U.S. negotiators, who want Iran to cave on several issues — from its missile and nuclear programs to its support for militant groups in the Middle East.

The only real prospect of a short-term deal now appears to be putting off talks about Tehran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium, with both sides suggesting that issue be dealt with later — despite Trump citing Iran’s nuclear program as the main justification for the war.  

Iran said it had “come to the conclusion with the Americans” to postpone the topic until the later stages of negotiations, calling it “very complicated,” Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said at a press conference in India on May 15. 

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Trump also said aboard Air Force One that he’s willing to send U.S. forces to remove Iran’s uranium “at the right time,” though he earlier suggested in a Fox News interview such a mission was “more for public relations than it is for anything else.”

Iran’s highly enriched uranium, which has been in an unknown location since a US and Israeli bombing campaign in June last year, remains one of many obstacles to a peace agreement.  

Another is the U.S. naval blockade of Iranian ports, designed to pressure Tehran economically, which U.S. Central Command said on Friday had redirected 75 commercial ships from sailing through Hormuz.

Written by Skylar Woodhouse, Jeff Mason and Josh Wingrove

 

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