Google AI
The Times Australia

Times Media Advertising

The Real Winner of the Iran War? Why Beijing May Have Benefited Without Firing a Shot

  • Written by: The Times

The Chinese Leader

When wars end, attention naturally turns to those who fought, those who won and those who lost. Yet history often tells a different story. Sometimes the nation that gains the most is the one that never entered the battlefield.

As the fighting involving Iran subsides, China may find itself in precisely that position.

Beijing did not launch aircraft, deploy troops or fire missiles. Instead, it watched events unfold while calculating what the conflict meant for its long-term ambitions.

Whether China has emerged stronger is open to debate. What is difficult to dispute is that it has learned valuable lessons.

The United States was occupied elsewhere

Military operations require enormous resources. Aircraft carriers, strategic bombers, intelligence assets, logistics and diplomatic effort are all finite.

Every week spent managing a crisis in the Middle East is a week in which American policymakers have less time and fewer resources to devote elsewhere.

From Beijing's perspective, that is significant.

China's principal strategic concerns lie much closer to home, particularly in the western Pacific. Any period in which Washington's attention is divided inevitably attracts close interest in Beijing.

A free intelligence lesson

Modern warfare is increasingly fought with drones, cyber operations, electronic warfare, satellite intelligence and precision-guided weapons.

China has now had the opportunity to observe many of these systems being employed in real combat without exposing its own personnel or equipment.

Military planners study conflicts in extraordinary detail. Every missile intercepted, every drone destroyed and every air defence system tested provides data.

The value of those lessons cannot easily be measured, but they are considerable.

Diplomacy without deployment

China has consistently presented itself as favouring negotiation over military intervention.

Whether or not every nation accepts that position, the conflict allowed Beijing to reinforce its message that dialogue and economic engagement should take precedence over armed conflict.

Many developing nations are increasingly seeking relationships with both Washington and Beijing rather than choosing one side.

That balancing act potentially enhances China's diplomatic influence.

The economic picture is more complicated

Not every consequence has favoured China.

The country remains one of the world's largest importers of oil, and much of that supply originates in the Middle East.

Any disruption to shipping routes or sustained increase in oil prices raises costs for Chinese manufacturers, exporters and consumers.

Iran has also been an important supplier of discounted crude oil to China. Interruptions to those supplies create additional economic pressure.

In that respect, stability remains very much in Beijing's interests.

Watching while others spend

Wars are extraordinarily expensive.

The financial cost extends well beyond military operations. Equipment must be replaced, supply chains repaired and strategic stockpiles replenished.

Countries directly involved in conflict inevitably emerge with larger defence budgets and greater fiscal pressure.

China has largely avoided those immediate costs.

Instead, it has been able to continue investing in infrastructure, advanced manufacturing, artificial intelligence and technology while observing developments from a distance.

The longer game

China's strategic planning is frequently measured in decades rather than election cycles.

Viewed through that lens, the Iran conflict was less about one regional war and more about understanding how the international balance of power continues to evolve.

The greatest benefit may not be territorial or financial.

It may simply be knowledge.

Knowing how modern alliances operate.

Knowing how advanced military technology performs.

Knowing how financial markets react.

Knowing where diplomatic opportunities emerge.

The Times View

The Iran war may ultimately be remembered not only for what occurred on the battlefield, but for what happened beyond it.

While others measured victory in destroyed targets and military objectives, China quietly gathered intelligence, observed strategy, expanded diplomatic opportunities and avoided the immense human and financial costs of war.

Sometimes the greatest advantage belongs not to the country that wins the battle, but to the nation patient enough to learn from it.

That may prove to be one of the most important geopolitical lessons of this conflict.

Times Magazine

Offshore vs Inshore Centre Console Boats: Which One Should You Buy?

Centre console boats have become one of the most popular choices among modern anglers. Their open ...

Why Australian Enterprises Are Rethinking Their Core Communication Technologies

The corporate landscape in Australia has undergone a permanent structural shift over the past few ...

Road safety risk: New data reveals almost 2 in 3 Australian drivers are letting car maintenance slide as cost of living pressures bite

Australians are putting off vehicle maintenance and new research released on the eve of National R...

Technology

Why Australian Enterprises Are Reth…

The corporate landscape in Australia has undergone a permanent structural shift over the past few ...

Local News

QLD Day

On Saturday 6 June, parkrun events across the state will be a sea of maroon, with communities  str...

Culture

Ramsay Health Care launches Australian-first …

In an Australian first, an innovative new bladder cancer treatment clinical trial that harnesses t...

Travel

Virgin's Northern Territory Sale Puts th…

Australians thinking about a holiday in the Northern Territory have another reason to start planni...

The Times Features

Virgin's Northern Territory Sale Puts the Spotligh…

Australians thinking about a holiday in the Northern Territory have another reason to start planni...

Australians are tapping housing wealth to stay put and …

Homesafe Wealth Release says More Australians Are Using Housing Wealth to Fund Ageing at Home As mo...

Ramsay Health Care launches Australian-first trial for …

In an Australian first, an innovative new bladder cancer treatment clinical trial that harnesses t...