The geopolitical landscape surrounding Iran remains in a state of suspended animation as Tehran appears to be delaying substantive concessions to US demands until after the critical March 31 summit between Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping. This strategic pause allows Iranian leadership to assess the summit’s outcomes and potentially secure China’s backing—a calculated risk that may present more favorable prospects than immediate capitulation.
The upcoming presidential meeting carries significant implications for how China will perceive American power projection—whether strengthened or diminished—which in turn will influence Beijing’s positioning toward Iran. Multiple variables could sway China’s assessment, including potential market volatility, oil price fluctuations, Russian intervention, wavering Gulf state commitments, and shifting Israeli and American strategic confidence.
Should events unfold along this trajectory, Iranian hardliners could potentially regain political dominance within a month, regardless of the summit’s results. This scenario might prompt heightened resistance and potentially trigger miscalculations from a frustrated Trump administration. The escalating situation underscores the urgency for the United States to achieve a swift resolution—declaring victory within one to two weeks while allowing the Iranian situation to evolve organically.
Iran currently faces a significant power vacuum, with its defensive and nuclear capabilities potentially degradable within a brief timeframe. A strategic pause by the United States could alter the conflict’s trajectory substantially. While theoretical control might be maintained for 30-90 days, the overall situation remains highly volatile, with Iran representing a fundamentally different challenge than previous conflicts in Gaza or Ukraine.
The temptation of Iran’s complete surrender must be balanced against realistic timelines and costs, particularly considering the wild cards represented by Russian and Chinese involvement. A victory achieved solely through military force without political resolution risks reinforcing dangerous international perceptions that raw power represents the only solution to geopolitical problems.
This approach potentially catalyzes a multipolar nuclear arms race, with North Korea’s paranoid realpolitik becoming the diplomatic standard rather than liberal global norms. The emerging multipolar world order has abandoned collective governance in favor of narrowly defined national interests, creating significant gaps in global stability management.
The conflict’s prolongation risks transforming Iran into a failed state, creating a geopolitical void spanning Iraq, Iran, and Afghanistan that could destabilize Central Asia, Pakistan, Turkey, the Caucasus, and the Gulf region. This disruption of post-World War II international rules establishes a paradigm where “the law of force has replaced the force of law,” according to Cardinal Pietro Parolin’s acute observation.
China approaches this complex situation with characteristically cautious strategy, unlike the expansionist Soviet model. Beijing’s hedgehog doctrine—extending quills that remain connected to the core but can be severed if problematic—reflects a pragmatic focus on systemic survival rather than ideological export. China maintains significant advantages in industrial capacity, rare earth dominance, and manufacturing efficiency, potentially positioning it for medium-to-long-term competition with the United States.
However, Beijing may be miscalculating the strategic landscape. America’s efforts to reduce industrial reliance on China and widen technological gaps mean time may not necessarily favor China. Even with US attention diverted to the Middle East, Japan and regional allies are preparing coordinated resistance against Chinese expansion. Paradoxically, a weaker America might complicate rather than simplify China’s regional position.
If global chaos intensifies, the United States might retreat into hedgehog isolationism, potentially triggering opposition that requires escalating force to contain. This could transform the world into a field of defensive hedgehogs where even the most powerful nation might ultimately falter.