Evolution
of China’s Weapons Transfers to Iran Over the Decades
China
has denied claims this month by U.S. intelligence that it might have shipped arms
to Iran. In recent years, China has supported Iran with dual-use parts.
1980s
– The Boom Years
·
Context: Iran-Iraq War + Deng Xiaoping’s reforms.
·
Exports: Missiles, fighter jets, tanks, armored vehicles,
rifles.
·
Peak: 1987, with Silkworm anti-ship missiles striking
U.S.-linked tankers in Kuwaiti waters.
·
Impact: U.S. restricted high-tech exports to China;
Beijing denied direct sales but pledged tighter controls.
1990s
– Technology Transfers
·
Iran’s
Strategy: Build domestic
military-industrial base.
·
Key
Development: Noor
anti-ship missile, reverse-engineered from Chinese C-802.
·
China’s
Role: Helped build
missile facilities and test ranges near Tehran.
·
Shift: Under U.S. pressure, China moved from finished
weapons to machine tools and dual-use components.
2000s–Present
– Dual-Use Technologies
·
2006
UN Sanctions: Targeted
Iran’s nuclear and missile programs; China supported resolution.
·
Pivot: Formal arms contracts reduced; focus on
dual-use exports.
·
Support: Chemicals for missile fuel, drone components
(RF connectors, turbine blades).
·
Strategic
Balance: China deepened
ties with Gulf rivals (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar) while still aiding Iran.
·
Critical
Enabler: Iran’s reliance
on ballistic missiles and drones sustained by Chinese inputs.
·
Sanctions: U.S. Treasury targeted Chinese/Hong Kong
front companies sourcing parts.
·
Emerging
Concern: Iran’s use
of China’s BeiDou satellite navigation system for directing strikes.
Current
Tensions
·
Recent
Allegations: Possible
shipment of shoulder-fired missiles to Iran.
·
U.S.
Response: Threat
of 50% tariffs if proven.
·
China’s
Denial: Called claims
“pure fabrication,” vowed retaliation if tariffs imposed.
·
Significance: Would mark a tactical shift from indirect
support to direct arms transfers.
[ABS
News Service/15.04.2026]
For much of the last two decades, China has maintained a delicate
balance in its military relationship with Iran, offering often indirect assistance
instead of arms sales.
That approach is now drawing renewed attention after U.S. officials
said intelligence agencies were assessing whether China may have shipped shoulder-fired
missiles to Iran in recent weeks. President Trump has said he would impose an additional
50 percent tariff on Chinese goods if the assessment proves accurate. China has
denied the claim, calling it “pure fabrication” and has vowed to “resolutely retaliate”
if the Trump administration goes through with tariffs.
The American officials said the information obtained by U.S.
intelligence agencies was not definitive. But if proven true, it would be a significant
tactical change in the way Beijing supports its closest strategic partner in the
Middle East.
Chinese arms sales to Iran exploded in the 1980s and have all
but vanished in the last decade to comply with a United Nations embargo and U.S.
sanctions. Chinese support for Iran in recent years has instead come in the form
of components that could be used in both civilian technologies as well as missiles
and drones.
China has a major stake in the crisis in Iran. About a third
of its total crude oil imports come from the Persian Gulf.
Here is how China’s military support for Iran has evolved over
the years:
The 1980s: The Boom Years
The outbreak of the Iran-Iraq War in 1980 coincided with major
market reforms in China when the leader at the time, Deng Xiaoping, ordered state-owned
companies to wean themselves off government support and instead seek commercial
profit.
Chinese state-run defense companies were suddenly empowered
to export their wares. That resulted in a deluge of Chinese missiles, fighter jets,
tanks, armored vehicles and assault rifles being sold to Iran starting in 1982 and
peaking in 1987, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.
At the same time, China sold even more arms to Iraq, resulting
in a situation in which the two warring sides clashed with each other using the
same Chinese weapons.
The Reagan administration opposed China’s arms sales to Iran,
particularly Silkworm anti-ship cruise missiles. Tehran used the missiles in attacks
in Kuwaiti waters in 1987 that struck an American-owned tanker and an American-registered
tanker.
The United States responded by curbing exports of some high-technology
products to China. China denied selling arms directly to Iran, but said it would
do more to prevent its military exports from reaching Iran through intermediaries.
The 1990s: Technology Transfers
Following the war, Iran set out to develop its own military-industrial
base with the help of China. One of its key products was the Noor anti-ship cruise
missile, which had been reverse-engineered through purchases of Chinese C-802 cruise
missiles.
“China played a major role in supporting Iran’s military modernization
for decades, especially in developing Iran’s missile capabilities,” said Brian Hart,
a fellow with the China Power Project at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies.
Iran also received help from China in building missile-production
facilities and even in constructing a missile test range east of Tehran, wrote Bates
Gill, a longtime China expert, in the Middle East Review of International Affairs.
Under U.S. pressure to curtail its sale of finished weapons,
particularly missiles, to Iran, China began increasing exports of machine tools
and components that could be used for both military and civilian purposes.
The 2000s to the Present: Dual-Use Technologies
In 2006, the United Nations imposed sanctions on Iran’s nuclear
and ballistic missile programs. China voted in favor of the resolution and largely
pivoted away from new, formal arms contracts with Tehran.
The shift was as much about regional strategy as it was about
international law. Starting in the mid-2010s, China began deepening its strategic
relationships with Gulf countries including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates,
traditional rivals of Iran, as well as Qatar.
China continued to supply Iran with dual-use technologies and
materials that have helped it amass an arsenal of missiles and drones.
That included chemicals used to produce fuel for ballistic missiles
and components for drones, such as radio frequency connectors and turbine blades
But Mr. Hart said China was still “a critical form of support,
given Iran’s reliance on ballistic missiles and drones to attack U.S. and Israeli
forces and other countries in the region.”
The U.S. Treasury Department has sanctioned Chinese and Hong
Kong front companies it says were set up to source parts and ingredients for ballistic
missiles and drones for Iran.
Suspicions are also growing that Iran is using its access to
China’s BeiDou satellite navigation system, an alternative to the U.S.-owned Global
Positioning System, for military purposes. Last month, a U.S. congressional agency
said BeiDou may have been used to direct Iran’s drone and missile strikes across
the Middle East.