Nearly two months of open conflict stemming from the Iran war have sent deep, systemic shocks across the Gulf region, upending two core assumptions that have anchored regional stability for close to a century. For decades, the Gulf’s economic model flourished under a framework built on perceived geopolitical stability, reinforced by competitive policy incentives including zero-tax regimes, flexible regulatory frameworks, and a rapidly growing, diversified startup ecosystem. Parallel to this economic structure, the region’s security order rested on the decades-old oil-for-security pact with the United States, backed by a dense network of U.S. military installations and advanced defense hardware across the region.
Today, both foundational pillars have suffered tangible erosion after weeks of cross-region missile and drone strikes that have hit all Gulf states. This new reality has forced Gulf capitals into a painful period of strategic re-evaluation, particularly over Washington’s reliability as a long-term security guarantor. As a result, the region is turning its gaze eastward with a new urgency that did not exist before the outbreak of war.
In this post-conflict landscape, economic diversification is no longer just an ambitious long-term goal—it is a growing necessity for long-term survival. Among potential partners, China stands out as the most logical option for deepening cooperation, given its already massive and expanding economic footprint across the Gulf built on decades of growing trade, cross-border investment, and large-scale infrastructure partnerships.
While the Sino-Gulf relationship is not without its inherent constraints, the sheer scale of Chinese economic engagement in the region has created a gravitational pull that can no longer be ignored. The bilateral partnership evolved into a formal comprehensive strategic alignment after Chinese President Xi Jinping’s landmark 2022 visit to Riyadh for the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Summit. By 2025, annual multilateral trade between China and the GCC hit approximately $300 billion, cementing China’s position as the GCC’s largest single trading partner. Where Chinese investment was historically concentrated almost exclusively in the energy sector and large-scale port developments, the post-war shift is pushing both sides to explore far deeper economic integration across new sectors.
The future of this expanding partnership is set to be shaped by three key sectors where China’s industrial leadership and Gulf capital create natural synergies. The first is green energy transition, a field where China already holds undisputed global dominance, controlling more than 80% of the world’s total solar panel manufacturing capacity. Chinese exports of wind turbine generators grew by roughly 50% in 2025, and the country accounts for 70% of global electric vehicle (EV) production—an alignment that perfectly matches Gulf nations’ long-term goals to diversify their economies away from overreliance on hydrocarbon exports. For Gulf states, partnering with Chinese firms is a pathway to access the cutting-edge technology needed to transform their domestic power grids and transportation sectors, with major Chinese brands including BYD, Geely, and Changan already positioned to lead this transition.
The second area of growing cooperation is being enabled by the expansion of the BRICS+ framework, which provides a formal platform for cross-regional financial integration that can act as a hedge against overreliance on the Western-dominated global financial system. While a full shift to a yuan-denominated oil trade system remains distant due to the entrenched dominance of the petrodollar, both sides have already begun testing new alternative mechanisms. For example, the mBridge project, a joint initiative between the central banks of China and the United Arab Emirates, is currently piloting a central bank digital currency (CBDC) platform that allows cross-border trade settlements to bypass Western intermediary banks entirely. These trials allow Gulf states to diversify their financial risk exposure while preserving their long-standing traditional economic and political ties with Western powers.
The third key area of collaboration centers on China’s flagship Belt and Road connectivity project, the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). With a total cumulative investment of roughly $62 billion, CPEC offers a strategic solution to China’s long-standing “Malacca Dilemma” — the geopolitical vulnerability that sees roughly 80% of China’s total oil imports pass through the narrow Strait of Malacca, a chokepoint vulnerable to external disruption. By expanding investment in CPEC and the deep-water Gwadar Port, Gulf nations can integrate their existing maritime trade routes with overland corridors leading directly into Central Asia. This positioning allows Gulf states to reemerge as central nodes in a new multipolar global trade map, a particularly valuable strategic shift given that 42% of China’s total 2025 crude oil imports came from the Middle East, with Saudi Arabia accounting for 14% and the UAE contributing 7% of that total.
That said, it is critical to acknowledge clear boundaries to the growing Sino-Gulf closeness, most notably the vast structural gap in military commitments between China and the U.S. in the region. While the post-war security shock has acted as a major wake-up call for Gulf leadership, it should not be misinterpreted as a desire to fully replace the United States with China as the region’s primary security partner.
Gulf leadership has long been deeply pragmatic, with no interest in exchanging one form of single-partner dependency for another. The security domain remains the single most significant barrier to a full strategic shift away from the U.S. Currently, the U.S. maintains a formidable military presence of between 40,000 and 50,000 personnel across roughly 10 regional countries, with Qatar’s Al Udeid Air Base alone hosting more than 10,000 U.S. troops. In stark contrast, China’s only military footprint in the broader region is a single logistical support base in Djibouti, consistent with Beijing’s long-standing foreign policy principle of non-interference in other nations’ internal affairs. Even in defense procurement, the gap between the two powers remains substantial and cannot be closed quickly. While China has grown into a more prominent global arms exporter, it still lags far behind the U.S. in regional market share.
Data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) underscores this gap: between 2021 and 2025, the U.S. accounted for 54% of all arms imports to the Middle East, with Saudi Arabia — the largest global recipient of U.S. arms exports — importing 12% of total U.S. defense exports over that period. By comparison, Chinese arms exports to the entire Middle East between 2016 and 2025 totaled just 732 million in Trend-Indicator Value (TIV), SIPRI’s standardized metric for tracking defense trade trends. That is a tiny fraction of the $19.5 billion TIV in U.S. arms exports to the region over the same 10-year period. While Chinese unarmed drones have grown in popularity for their lack of attached political conditions, they cannot yet match the fully integrated air and missile defense systems that the U.S. military provides to regional allies.
In the end, the post-war regional shift is not a radical, binary pivot from Washington to Beijing. Instead, it is a deliberate push by Gulf middle powers to gain greater strategic autonomy. Gulf states do not see China as a replacement for the U.S., but rather as a necessary strategic hedge. By diversifying both their security and economic partnerships, they are building a multipolar “insurance policy” that carries far less long-term risk than continuing to rely entirely on a single, increasingly fraying security umbrella.
This logic of seeking alternatives to Western-dominated frameworks is not about replacement; it is about building a more resilient multipolar foundation for the region that delivers lower long-term costs and greater economic benefits for Gulf states’ long-term survival. This shift eastward is a calculated, pragmatic response to a changing global order where the old certainties of the decades-old oil-for-security pact no longer hold.