By Worldwide Observer News Desk | April 7, 2026
China’s delegate to the United Nations Security Council has opposed the passage of a resolution on the Strait of Hormuz, arguing that advancing such a measure while the United States threatens to “annihilate a civilization” would send a dangerous and contradictory message to the world.
The statement, delivered during UN proceedings, effectively positions Beijing as a diplomatic shield for Tehran at a moment of heightened US-Iran tensions. Chinese officials framed the proposed resolution not as a neutral peace measure, but as cover for American aggression in the region.
The Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman, is one of the most strategically critical chokepoints on earth. Approximately one-fifth of the world’s oil supply transits through it daily, making any military escalation in the area a direct threat to global energy stability.
Analysts see China’s move as a calculated dual play — expressing solidarity with Iran while simultaneously checking US influence at the Security Council. Beijing has increasingly positioned itself as a counterweight to Washington’s unilateral approach in the Middle East, a posture that has grown more assertive following its brokering of the 2023 Saudi-Iran normalisation deal.
The reference to “annihilating a civilization” points to recent statements by US officials regarding military options against Iran — language that China is now leveraging in multilateral forums to frame America as the aggressor.
With China holding veto power as a permanent Security Council member, any Hormuz resolution now faces an effectively insurmountable obstacle in the near term. The standoff reflects the deepening fracture between Western-aligned blocs and the China-Russia axis on Middle Eastern security matters.
Worldwide Observer will continue to monitor developments at the UN Security Council.






