For years, China has quietly worked around US sanctions on Iranian oil. Opaque shipping networks. Disabled tracking signals. Indirect payment routes. Enough plausible deniability to avoid a direct confrontation.
That era is apparently now over.
China has now ordered companies to disregard US sanctions targeting Iranian oil, forcing a direct test of Washington’s ability to enforce its crackdown on Iran. A new directive, issued through China’s Commerce Ministry on Sunday, invokes a 2021 “blocking statute” that prohibits firms from complying with foreign sanctions deemed illegitimate. The order applies to several Chinese refiners accused by the United States of purchasing Iranian crude, including major independent processors known as “teapot” refineries.
The question is no longer whether China is evading US sanctions. It is now openly defying them. And Washington must decide how to respond.

A Major Escalation
The move represents a shift from years of opaque workarounds to more explicit state-backed resistance. Beijing is signaling that it will not cooperate with US efforts to cut off a key source of revenue for Iran.
“This is unprecedented. It’s a major escalation in terms of China’s response to US economic statecraft. It is a measure of defiance by Beijing,” said Max Meizlish, a research fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.
The escalation comes as the Trump administration intensifies its sanctions campaign, targeting Chinese refiners and warning financial institutions they could face penalties for facilitating oil transactions between Iran and China. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has accused Beijing of effectively financing Iran’s military activity through its oil purchases, arguing that Chinese demand is sustaining Tehran’s economy.
“Iran is the largest state sponsor of terrorism,” Bessent said in a Fox News interview Monday. “China has been buying 90 percent of their energy, so they are funding the largest state sponsor of terrorism.”
China remains the primary destination for Iranian crude, with much of the country’s sanctioned oil exports flowing to Chinese refiners despite mounting US pressure.
The Trap for Chinese Firms
The new directive puts Chinese companies in an impossible position. Comply with Beijing’s order, and they risk US sanctions. Comply with US sanctions, and they risk legal action in China, where the blocking statute allows Chinese companies to seek damages in domestic courts.
The law, passed in 2021 during the Trump-Biden transition, was designed to counteract what China called “unjustified” foreign sanctions. It was largely dormant until now. Sunday’s directive brings it to life.
For Chinese refiners, the calculation is this: the US is a major trading partner, but Beijing is their direct regulator. When forced to choose between Washington and Beijing, the choice is not really a choice at all. The question is how aggressively the Trump administration will punish Chinese companies that continue to buy Iranian crude — and whether those punishments will be enough to change behavior.
The US Options
Washington has several tools at its disposal. It can impose secondary sanctions on Chinese financial institutions that process payments for Iranian oil. It can blacklist individual Chinese refiners, cutting them off from the US financial system. It can target Chinese banks that facilitate transactions. And it can pressure third-country shipping insurers and flag states to refuse business with Chinese tankers.
Each option carries risks. Aggressive sanctions on Chinese banks could disrupt global trade and trigger retaliation from Beijing. China could respond by dumping US Treasury bonds, restricting exports of critical minerals, or imposing its own sanctions on US companies.
The Trump administration has shown little hesitation in using economic pressure to achieve its foreign policy goals. But China is not Iran. It is the world’s second-largest economy and a major trading partner of the United States. A full-scale economic confrontation would have consequences far beyond the oil market.
The Iranian Lifeline
For Iran, Chinese demand is a lifeline. The country’s economy has been decimated by US sanctions, but oil exports to China continue to generate billions of dollars in revenue. Those funds help Tehran finance its military activities, support its regional proxies, and keep its economy afloat.
The Trump administration’s goal is to cut that lifeline. Beijing’s new directive is an effort to keep it open.
The outcome of this clash will determine whether the US can effectively enforce its sanctions on Iran — or whether China’s economic weight is enough to shield Tehran from American pressure.
The Bottom Line
China has ordered its companies to ignore US sanctions on Iranian oil, invoking a 2021 “blocking statute” that prohibits firms from complying with foreign sanctions deemed illegitimate. The directive applies to several Chinese refiners accused by the United States of purchasing Iranian crude. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has accused Beijing of funding “the largest state sponsor of terrorism” by buying 90 percent of Iran’s energy exports.
The move represents a major escalation in US-China economic tensions. For years, China quietly worked around sanctions. Now it is openly defying them. Chinese firms are caught between Beijing’s order and US penalties. Washington must decide how aggressively to respond — and whether the risk of a broader confrontation with China is worth cutting off Tehran’s last remaining oil lifeline.




