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Commentary
Wall Street Journal

The Iran War Around the World

China sees opportunity. Europe is divided. Aside from Tehran itself, Russia has the most to lose.

walter_russell_mead
walter_russell_mead
Ravenel B. Curry III Distinguished Fellow in Strategy and Statesmanship
Walter Russell Mead
An aerial drone photo shows the China Coast Guard CCG vessel Sandu patrolling near a reef in the South China Sea on March 24, 2026. (Getty Images)
Caption
The China Coast Guard CCG vessel Sandu is patrolling in the South China Sea on March 24, 2026. (Getty Images)

With the Iran war in its sixth week, we don’t yet know how or when it will end. But we know that it matters. A lot. All wars matter intensely to those caught up in them, but not every war matters to the whole world. The Iran war does, and every great and near-great power is adjusting its foreign-policy strategies in light of a conflict that is reshaping world politics.

China is thousands of miles from the Persian Gulf, but between its own need for Gulf oil and the effects of the Iran war on China’s neighbors and trading partners, the conflict is having major effects on Beijing. Some effects are positive, from Xi Jinping’s point of view. China’s return to its program of building new islands in the South China Sea has passed almost unnoticed in Washington, where attention is firmly fixed on the Middle East. But China doesn’t welcome higher fuel prices, and its export-dependent economy will be hard hit by any global recession.

Read the full article in The Wall Street Journal.