News
The Trump administration is expanding its sanctions campaign against Iranian oil trade, targeting dozens of companies, vessels, and a major Chinese refinery, in a move aimed at disrupting the secret trade network between Tehran and Beijing ahead of an expected summit between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping.
Details
• The U.S. Treasury Department announced sanctions on 40 shipping companies and vessels that it says are linked to Iran’s shadow fleet used to move oil beyond international oversight.
• The sanctions targeted Hengli Petrochemical Refinery in Dalian, one of China’s largest independent refineries, which Washington says purchased billions of dollars’ worth of Iranian oil.
• The move comes after the seizure of the Iranian vessel Touska, which Washington says was heading to Iran after stopping at a Chinese port known for loading chemicals that could be used in rocket fuel components.
• The sanctions also coincide with the seizure of two tankers in the Indian Ocean, which Washington claims were carrying around 4 million barrels of Iranian oil.
• These sanctions reflect a shift in U.S. pressure from only pursuing Iranian oil to targeting the buyers, intermediaries, and vessels linking Tehran to the Chinese market.
• China is the largest buyer of Iranian oil, while Tehran relies on a network of tankers, front companies, and ship-to-ship transfers at sea to deliver crude to small Chinese refineries that accept discounted oil outside official channels.
• The move puts Washington-Beijing relations to a new test, as China considers U.S. sanctions on its companies illegal, while Washington insists that the oil trade funds the Iranian regime and supports its military capabilities.
What’s Next?
The sanctions open a dual path of escalation: direct economic pressure on Iran, and a political message to China ahead of the Trump-Xi summit. If Washington continues seizing vessels rather than only imposing sanctions, the shadow war over Iranian oil could turn into a wider naval confrontation over trade routes between the Gulf and Asia.