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27 June 2024

Contesting the West: China’s Middle East strategy

Hasan Alhasan

Speaking at the 10th ministerial conference of the China–Arab States Cooperation Forum held on 30 May in Beijing, Xi Jinping hailed a ‘new era’ of Chinese–Arab relations. In the Middle East, where the United States’ influence looms large, China is pursuing an active regional strategy to carve out a greater political role for itself, deepen its economic ties, and form coalitions among countries of the Global South to counterbalance the US and its G7 allies in the emerging multipolar world order. Beijing’s appeal may grow in the current geopolitical climate, but it must contend with the enduring security and economic clout of the US.

China seeks a wider political role but limits engagement

As a sign of China’s ambitions to play a greater political role in the Middle East, Beijing has intensified its advocacy for the Palestinian cause since the start of the Israel–Hamas war in October 2023. The China–Arab forum’s final communiqué (the ‘Beijing Declaration’), called for an international peace conference to settle the conflict. The communiqué also condemned Israel’s invasion of Rafah and the United States’ exercising of its veto over resolutions on Palestinian statehood at the United Nations Security Council. At other international fora China has taken a similarly vocal pro-Palestinian stance and has attempted to mediate reconciliation between Fatah and Hamas, hosting them for talks in Beijing. During proceedings at the International Court of Justice in February, China defended the Palestinians’ right to armed resistance against Israel’s illegal occupation of Palestinian territories.

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