Advertisement
Sino File | US-Iran crisis: a Middle East war risks drawing in China and Russia, too
- Beijing and Moscow have stood by Iran in the face of Washington’s belligerence.
- Now they must decide: how true a friend is Tehran, really?
Reading Time:4 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP

America’s assassination of Iran’s second-most powerful commander, Major General Qassem Soleimani, has sparked fears of a war in the Middle East.
But it is not just the United States that risks getting drawn into a conflict, given the emerging Moscow-Beijing-Tehran axis.
Days before the US strike on January 3 – which also killed Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, the head of Iraq’s Kataib Hezbollah militia group – China and Russia completed unprecedented joint military drills with Iran. Further evidence of growing ties can be seen in the four visits that Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif made to Beijing over the past year.
The Middle East was already a powder keg – with conflicts in Syria, Libya and Yemen, unrest in Iraq and Lebanon, as well as conflict between Israel and the Palestinians – but America’s most recent move has the potential to be more provocative and consequential for regional security than either the 2011 killing of al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden or last year’s assassination of Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
Advertisement
Just look at the anti-US fervour on show at the events held in Iran and across the region to mourn Soleimani for evidence of that fact.

Advertisement
Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei vowed to take revenge against the “criminals” who killed Soleimani, prompting US President Donald Trump to respond with a threat of his own: that “52 Iranian sites” would be “hit very fast and hard” if Tehran acts.
Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x
