Beijing Warns Washington After Chinese Vessels Are Caught in the Iran Blockade
China's foreign ministry demanded an explanation after Trump claimed Chinese ships were among those turned back from Iranian ports. Beijing has not confirmed the claim but called the blockade 'a violation of international maritime law.'

China's Foreign Ministry demanded an explanation from Washington on Tuesday after President Trump claimed on Truth Social that Chinese vessels were among those turned back from Iranian ports by the U.S. naval blockade. Beijing had not confirmed the claim as of Wednesday morning.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian told reporters at a regular press briefing that the blockade "constitutes a violation of international maritime law and freedom of navigation" and that China "reserves the right to take all necessary measures to protect the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese shipping companies and their crews." He did not confirm or deny that Chinese vessels had been intercepted.
Why It Matters
China is Iran's largest trading partner and the biggest buyer of Iranian crude oil, much of it purchased through sanctions-evasion channels involving ship-to-ship transfers and falsified documentation. Before the war, China imported an estimated 1.5 million barrels per day of Iranian crude, according to tracking data from Kpler and TankerTrackers.com.
The U.S. blockade, which has turned back 27 vessels since it began on April 12 according to Central Command, does not formally distinguish between Iranian-flagged vessels and third-party ships carrying Iranian cargo. In practice, any vessel bound for an Iranian port is subject to interdiction. Chinese-flagged or Chinese-owned vessels carrying non-Iranian cargo could be caught in the same net.
This is the collision point between two American strategic priorities that the administration has managed to keep separate until now: the Iran war and the China competition. The blockade is designed to pressure Tehran. If it also disrupts Chinese commercial shipping, it opens a second front that Washington may not want.
Beijing's Calculation
China has maintained studied neutrality throughout the Iran war, abstaining from every UN Security Council vote related to the conflict. Beijing's interest is in a resolution that restores oil supply and lowers energy prices, not in supporting either combatant.
The blockade complicates this neutrality. If Chinese ships are being interdicted by the U.S. Navy, Beijing faces domestic pressure to respond. China's merchant fleet is the world's largest. Its energy imports transit the same Gulf waterways that the U.S. Navy now controls. A confrontation between American warships and Chinese commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz would be an escalation neither side has planned for.
The Trump-Xi summit scheduled for later this year was already going to be dominated by trade tensions and the fallout from the Iran war. The blockade adds maritime security to the agenda in a way that could poison whatever diplomatic progress the two sides have made on tariffs.
The Legal Question
International maritime law, specifically the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, protects freedom of navigation and innocent passage through international straits. A blockade that intercepts third-party commercial shipping in international waters raises legal questions that the administration has not publicly addressed.
The administration's position is that the operation is sanctions enforcement, not a blockade in the traditional legal sense. The distinction matters because a formal blockade under international law requires notification, impartiality, and proportionality. Sanctions enforcement is a unilateral action under domestic law. Whether other countries accept the American characterization will depend on whether their ships are the ones being stopped.
China's ships appear to be getting stopped. That is a problem the administration needs to resolve before it becomes a crisis.
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