
11 MAY 2026
This week’s edition unfolds in a regional environment where economic security is becoming less a policy category than the operating logic of diplomacy. Japan and Australia are no longer treating energy, critical minerals and defence industry as separate tracks; they are turning supply reliability into strategic infrastructure. The same logic runs through Japan’s outreach to Vietnam, Indonesia, the UAE and New Zealand’s naval renewal talks. From LNG and gallium to frigates, refineries and stockpiles, what emerges is a pattern in which resilience is being built through partnerships that are more practical, more expensive and more politically exposed than ordinary cooperation.
At the same time, the Iran crisis is now sitting inside the U.S.–China relationship rather than beside it. Washington is pressing Beijing to use its leverage over Tehran before the Trump–Xi summit, while China is trying to protect energy flows through Hormuz without appearing to enforce U.S. pressure. AI, rare earths, semiconductor controls, sanctions and Taiwan are already expected to crowd the summit agenda. Adding maritime energy security makes the meeting more consequential, but also more fragile: cooperation is possible where sea-lane access is at stake, yet every channel of coordination is surrounded by strategic mistrust.
This issue also shows how pressure is moving through less visible systems. Taiwan’s presidential travel has become a contest over airspace access, while Europe’s Huawei–ZTE warning turns telecom infrastructure into a direct field of de-risking from China. North Korea’s cyber denial brings digital operations back into the deterrence debate, and China’s sentencing of former defence ministers exposes discipline problems inside the PLA. These are not peripheral stories. They show that mobility, software, personnel trust and critical networks are now part of the region’s security terrain.
Taken together, the developments in this issue point to an Asia where strategic competition is becoming more infrastructural, more transactional, more operationally specific, and less forgiving of political delay. The central question is no longer whether states recognise vulnerability, but whether they can convert it into durable leverage before energy shocks, technology controls, airspace pressure and defence-industrial dependence define the terms of their future strategic choices.
- Key Developments
- Statistics of the Week
- Map of the Week
- Photo of the Week
- Infographic of the Week
- Regional Alliances
- Analysis
Australia–Japan Energy Deal Turns Supply Security into Economic Statecraft
Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese signed a Joint Declaration on Economic Security Cooperation in Canberra, alongside agreements on energy security and critical minerals. The deal commits both countries to strengthen supply chains for energy, food and strategic minerals, with Australia offering up to A$1.3 billion to support critical-minerals projects involving Japanese partners. Potential supplies include gallium, nickel, graphite, rare earths and fluorite. Australia provides roughly one-third of Japan’s energy supply, while Japan remains central to Australia’s LNG export market.
The significance lies in how Japan–Australia cooperation is moving from trade complementarity into explicit economic-security planning. This is not just another resources agreement. The timing matters: Middle East disruption is intensifying concern over liquid fuels and shipping resilience, while China’s dominance in critical-minerals processing makes diversification a strategic priority. Coming shortly after Japan’s A$10 billion frigate deal with Australia, the agreement shows the relationship becoming more integrated across energy, minerals, defence industry and supply-chain resilience.
Lai’s Eswatini Visit Tests China’s Airspace Pressure
Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te returned from a surprise visit to Eswatini after Taipei accused China of forcing Seychelles, Mauritius and Madagascar to deny overflight permission for an earlier trip. Eswatini, Taiwan’s only diplomatic ally in Africa and one of just 12 states with formal ties to Taipei, hosted Lai for events linked to King Mswati III’s 40th accession anniversary. Lai travelled on the king’s private A340 and returned by a circuitous Indian Ocean route that avoided airspace controlled by Mauritius and Madagascar. The United States called Taiwan a “trusted and capable” partner and said such travel should not be politicised.
The significance lies in how Taiwan’s diplomatic isolation is becoming a contest over mobility itself. This was not just a symbolic visit to a small ally. Beijing’s alleged use of third-country airspace pressure suggests a sharper method for constraining Taiwan’s external engagement, while Lai’s successful trip shows Taipei trying to preserve diplomatic agency despite operational obstacles. China’s furious response underlines that even limited presidential travel now carries wider strategic weight.
North Korea’s Cyber Denial Puts Digital Pressure Back Into Security Contest
North Korea’s foreign ministry rejected U.S. accusations that Pyongyang poses a cyber threat, calling them a fabrication designed to justify Washington’s hostile policy. A ministry spokesperson, quoted by KCNA, said claims about a North Korean “cyber threat” were politically motivated and warned that Pyongyang would take all necessary measures to defend state interests and protect its citizens’ rights in cyberspace. U.S. officials have repeatedly accused North Korea of state-sponsored hacking, cryptocurrency theft and overseas IT-worker schemes used to generate revenue for its weapons programmes.
The significance lies in how cyber activity is becoming another explicit front in the U.S.–North Korea confrontation. This is not merely rhetorical denial. Washington treats North Korean cyber operations as part of the financing architecture behind missile and nuclear development, while Pyongyang is framing U.S. allegations as information warfare and sanctions justification. The risk is a harder cycle in which cyber attribution, financial sanctions and retaliatory threats become increasingly tied to the peninsula’s broader deterrence environment.
Takaichi’s Hanoi Visit Puts Economic Security at Core of Japan–Vietnam Ties
Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and Vietnamese Prime Minister Le Minh Hung agreed in Hanoi to deepen their Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, identifying economic security as a new priority for cooperation. Talks focused on energy, critical minerals, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and space technology. Japan will also help arrange crude oil supplies for Vietnam’s Nghi Son Refinery under its $10 billion Power Asia Initiative, as Middle East conflict raises concerns over fuel prices and supply-chain disruption.
The significance lies in Japan’s effort to turn Vietnam from a manufacturing partner into a more central node in regional economic-security planning. This is not just routine bilateral diplomacy. Japan wants stronger ASEAN supply chains for petroleum products and critical minerals, while Vietnam has sizeable but underdeveloped rare earth and gallium resources constrained by technology and China’s dominance in refining. The visit also links Tokyo’s renewed Free and Open Indo-Pacific strategy to infrastructure, energy resilience and industrial diversification.
China–Belgium Talks Expose Softer Channel in EU Trade Frictions
Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng met Belgian Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Maxime Prévot in Beijing, calling for deeper China–Belgium cooperation and more stable China–EU relations. He cited 55 years of diplomatic ties and practical cooperation in medicine, chemicals, finance and logistics, while Prévot said Belgium was ready to expand economic and trade cooperation and jointly support multilateralism and free trade. Wang Yi separately urged Belgium, as an EU hub, to play a constructive role in managing China–Europe trade disputes through dialogue.
The significance lies in Beijing’s effort to soften EU pressure through member-state diplomacy. This was not a major policy breakthrough. Belgium still raised European concerns over unfair Chinese competition and the need to protect EU industrial interests. But the visit shows China trying to keep open pragmatic channels with smaller but institutionally important EU states, especially as Brussels tightens scrutiny of Chinese subsidies, technology and market access. Belgium’s position is therefore balancing, not capitulation: engagement with Beijing, but within a harder EU debate over economic security.
Japan–Indonesia Defence Deal Broadens Maritime Security Cooperation
Indonesia and Japan signed a defence cooperation agreement in Jakarta, with Indonesian Defence Minister Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin and Japanese Defence Minister Shinjiro Koizumi committing to closer cooperation in the defence industry, personnel development and disaster mitigation. The ministers did not specify exact projects, but Koizumi said their bilateral talks covered maritime security, joint military exercises, military hardware and defence technology. He described the agreement as a “compass” and a “crucial milestone” for future defence cooperation.
The significance lies in Japan’s expanding security role in Southeast Asia. This is not an alliance commitment, and Jakarta will remain careful about preserving strategic autonomy. But the agreement gives Tokyo and Jakarta a broader framework for practical defence engagement at a time when Japan is loosening arms-export restrictions and trying to strengthen its defence-industrial base. For Indonesia, the deal offers another channel for maritime capacity-building without relying on a single major-power partner.
Bessent Pushes China to Use Iran Leverage Before Trump–Xi Summit
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent urged China to intensify diplomacy with Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz to international shipping, saying President Donald Trump and Xi Jinping would discuss the issue at their May 14–15 summit in Beijing. Bessent said China, as a major buyer of Iranian energy, should help persuade Tehran and stop blocking U.N. efforts with Russia to protect commercial shipping. His remarks came as Beijing opposed new U.S. sanctions on Chinese refiners buying Iranian crude and invoked a law allowing retaliation against entities enforcing sanctions it considers unlawful.
The significance lies in how the Hormuz crisis is being pulled directly into U.S.–China diplomacy. This is not just an energy-security dispute. Washington is trying to turn China’s exposure to Iranian oil into diplomatic responsibility, while Beijing is resisting U.S. sanctions jurisdiction over its firms. The coming Trump–Xi summit therefore risks becoming a test of whether energy vulnerability can produce cooperation, or whether Iran sanctions deepen the strategic contest between the two powers.
Trump Frames Xi Summit Around AI and Strategic Leverage
President Donald Trump said he looked forward to meeting Xi Jinping later this month and would remind him that the United States is leading in artificial intelligence, as Washington and Beijing prepare for talks amid tensions over trade and technology. Trump is set to visit Beijing on May 14–15, the first visit by a U.S. leader to China in almost a decade. Reuters separately reported that the summit agenda is expected to include trade concessions, rare earths, semiconductor restrictions, Iran and Taiwan.
The significance lies in how AI is being folded into the broader U.S.–China bargaining agenda. This is not just technological boasting. Washington wants access to critical minerals and commercial concessions, while Beijing wants relief from advanced-chip controls and is using its rare-earth leverage more openly. If AI discussions are formally launched, they will sit inside a harder contest over supply chains, sanctions, export controls and military-relevant technology. The summit may stabilise dialogue, but it is unlikely to soften the underlying strategic competition.
EU Huawei–ZTE Warning Hardens Digital De-Risking from China
The European Commission recommended that EU member states exclude Huawei and ZTE equipment from telecom operators’ connectivity infrastructure, as Brussels advances cybersecurity rules that would allow the bloc to ban gear from suppliers deemed “high-risk.” The proposal would move Europe beyond uneven voluntary 5G restrictions toward a more enforceable regime for critical digital infrastructure. China has already threatened countermeasures, arguing that the rules are discriminatory.
The significance lies in how telecom security is becoming a direct arena of EU–China strategic competition. This is not only about 5G vendors. Brussels is trying to reduce exposure to Chinese technology in critical sectors, while Beijing is warning that de-risking could bring economic retaliation and heavy costs for European firms. The dispute therefore links cybersecurity, industrial policy and market access into a harder technology-security confrontation.
Australia–Japan Critical Minerals Push Elevates Supply-Chain Security
Australia and Japan agreed to deepen critical-minerals cooperation during Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s visit to Canberra, with the two governments offering A$1.67 billion in support for projects aimed at reducing supply-chain vulnerabilities in mining, refining and manufacturing. Australia plans to provide up to A$1.3 billion, while Japan has provided about A$370 million in investments and grants, with further support possible. Candidate projects include gallium recovery in Western Australia, high-purity magnesium, fluorite, mineral sands and the Kalgoorlie nickel-cobalt project.
The significance lies in how Australia–Japan resource cooperation is becoming a core pillar of economic security, not just commodities trade. This is not simply about selling more minerals to Japan. The new agreements link critical minerals, energy security, defence cooperation and economic-contingency planning, including consultation on market shocks, coercion and export restrictions. For Tokyo, Australia offers a trusted alternative in supply chains exposed to Chinese leverage; for Canberra, Japanese capital and technology support domestic processing and advanced manufacturing ambitions.
Pakistan Navy Rescue Shows Maritime Safety Cutting Across Rivalry
Pakistan’s navy assisted an Indian vessel, MV Gautam, after it became stranded in the Arabian Sea because of a critical technical failure while travelling from Oman to India. The vessel was carrying seven crew members, six Indians and one Indonesian. Pakistan’s military said the navy dispatched the ship Kashmir, whose personnel provided food, medical assistance and technical support to stabilise the vessel and ensure the crew’s safety.
The significance lies in the narrow but important separation between maritime safety and strategic rivalry. This was not a diplomatic breakthrough between India and Pakistan, and it should not be inflated into one. But it does show how distress response at sea can still function even between hostile neighbours, especially in busy Arabian Sea routes where commercial, energy and security interests overlap. The episode also follows Pakistan’s rescue of 18 crew members from another merchant vessel in the northern Arabian Sea last month, underscoring the operational value of naval presence beyond coercive signalling.
China’s Cuba Sanctions Rebuke Extends U.S.–China Contest into the Caribbean
China urged Washington to end its embargo and expanded sanctions on Cuba, calling the measures “illegal” and a serious violation of international-relations norms. Beijing’s statement followed President Donald Trump’s executive order broadening sanctions against Havana, part of intensified U.S. pressure after the capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, a close Cuban ally. China said the sanctions violated the Cuban people’s right to development and reaffirmed support for Cuba’s sovereignty and security.
The significance lies in how China is using Cuba to challenge U.S. coercive economic power beyond Asia. This is not mainly about Cuba’s economy. Beijing is framing sanctions, embargoes and regime pressure as illegitimate tools of U.S. dominance, while positioning itself as a defender of sovereignty for states under Washington’s pressure. The episode also shows how U.S.–China rivalry increasingly travels through third-country crises, linking Latin America, sanctions politics and wider arguments over the international order.
Araghchi’s Beijing Visit Puts Iran Crisis into Trump–Xi Diplomacy
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi met Wang Yi in Beijing, his first China visit since the U.S.–Israeli war on Iran triggered severe disruption to global oil supplies. The talks came a week before Donald Trump’s planned May 14–15 summit with Xi Jinping. Araghchi briefed Wang on Iran’s talks with Washington, saying Tehran was ready for diplomacy but would only accept a “fair and comprehensive” agreement. China said the situation was at a critical transition from war to peace, called for a complete halt to hostilities, and urged restoration of normal and safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz.
The significance lies in China being pulled from rhetorical neutrality toward crisis management. This is not evidence that Beijing can dictate Tehran’s behaviour. But China’s leverage matters because it bought more than 80% of Iran’s shipped oil before the war, while Hormuz disruption directly threatens Chinese energy security. Washington is now pressing Beijing to use that leverage before the Trump–Xi summit, turning Iran from a Middle East crisis into a test of U.S.–China coordination, sanctions rivalry and energy diplomacy.
New Zealand Frigate Talks Put Naval Renewal into Partner Framework
New Zealand has begun discussions with Australia and Britain on replacing its two ageing Anzac-class frigates, HMNZS Te Kaha and HMNZS Te Mana, commissioned in 1997 and 1999. Defence Minister Chris Penk said advice on a preferred path is expected to go to the government by the end of 2027. Wellington is considering Japan’s Mogami-class frigate, already chosen by Australia, and Britain’s Type 31 as part of the business case, with replacement listed for 2029–2039.
The significance lies in New Zealand trying to reverse years of defence underspend through more partner-aligned capability planning. This is not simply a ship-replacement exercise. The two frigates provide New Zealand’s main maritime combat capability, while most of the navy is expected to reach the end of its design life by the mid-2030s. Working with Australia or Britain could improve interoperability and procurement efficiency, but it also shows Wellington accepting that sea-lane protection, Pacific security and disaster response now require a more credible naval base than its current fleet can provide.
Japan’s Balikatan Missile Firing Marks Sharper Allied Maritime Strike Posture
Japan’s Self-Defense Forces fired Type 88 anti-ship missiles during a Balikatan maritime strike exercise with U.S., Australian and Philippine forces in northern Philippines, hitting the decommissioned Philippine Navy ship BRP Quezon about 75 km off Paoay, Ilocos Norte. Philippine officials said two volleys struck the target within six minutes. The exercise, observed by Philippine Defence Secretary Gilberto Teodoro and Japanese Defence Minister Shinjiro Koizumi, came as Manila and Tokyo opened talks on possible defence-equipment transfers, including Abukuma-class destroyers and TC-90 aircraft.
The significance lies in Japan’s move from rear-area security partner toward more visible maritime-strike participation in Southeast Asia. This is not just another Balikatan drill. Japan is joining the exercise as an active participant for the first time, while Manila is widening its network of security partners beyond Washington. The location matters: northern Philippines faces both the South China Sea and Taiwan approaches. China’s criticism that Japan is sending forces overseas to launch offensive missiles shows how quickly allied coastal-defence drills are being read as regional deterrence signals.
China Backs Bangladesh’s New Government as South Asia Balancing Sharpens
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told Bangladeshi Foreign Minister Khalilur Rahman in Beijing that China supports Bangladesh’s new government in maintaining stability, reviving economic development and improving public welfare. Wang said Beijing would align Belt and Road cooperation with Bangladesh’s national development strategies and deepen cooperation in trade, investment, infrastructure, water management, green development and the digital economy. Rahman called China a trustworthy and indispensable partner, welcomed Chinese investment, and reaffirmed Bangladesh’s adherence to the one-China principle.
The significance lies in Beijing’s attempt to consolidate influence with Dhaka during a political transition. This is not merely routine diplomatic language. China is presenting itself as a stabilising development partner while stressing that its South Asia ties are not directed at any third party—an implicit answer to regional concerns about India, the United States and strategic competition. The joint statement also linked bilateral diplomacy to wider issues, including multilateralism, the Rohingya issue, a Middle East ceasefire and safe navigation through Hormuz, showing how Bangladesh–China ties are being folded into broader regional and global crisis management.
China’s Ex-Defence Ministers Sentenced as PLA Purge Deepens
China sentenced former defence ministers Wei Fenghe and Li Shangfu to death with a two-year reprieve on graft charges, state media reported, marking one of the harshest outcomes in Xi Jinping’s continuing military corruption purge. Such sentences in China are typically commuted to life imprisonment if no further crimes are committed during the reprieve, but Xinhua said both men would then face life without further commutation or parole. The cases follow earlier allegations that Li took and offered large bribes, while Wei accepted money and valuables and helped others gain improper personnel benefits.
The significance lies in what the sentences reveal about political discipline inside the People’s Liberation Army. This is not just an anti-corruption announcement. Wei and Li were senior figures linked to China’s defence establishment, and the PLA’s own commentary warned cadres against “divided loyalties” to the Communist Party. The purge may reinforce Xi’s control, but it also exposes serious trust problems within a rapidly modernising military, especially after earlier turmoil in the Rocket Force and senior command structure.
Kim’s Artillery Inspection Sharpens North Korea’s Conventional Strike Posture
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un inspected production of a new 155-mm self-propelled howitzer with a range exceeding 60 km, which KCNA said would be deployed near the South Korean border. Kim said the extended range would give North Korea’s army a major advantage in land operations. Reuters noted that such artillery could threaten Seoul and other targets, adding to Pyongyang’s long-standing strategic weapons push. Kim also separately supervised manoeuvrability tests for one of North Korea’s two modern naval destroyers and has ordered construction of two more.
The significance lies in North Korea’s effort to strengthen conventional coercion, not only nuclear deterrence. This is not just another weapons-factory visit. Longer-range artillery near the border would complicate South Korean defence planning by widening the threat to rear-area military and civilian targets, while destroyer development points to Pyongyang’s ambition to expand maritime capability. The Russia–Ukraine war may also be feeding this process, with Reuters noting that North Korean arms supplied to Russia have given Pyongyang valuable battlefield data.
British MPs’ China Visit Tests Fragile UK–China Reset
A cross-party delegation of 12 Labour and Conservative MPs is expected to visit China for five days in mid-May, in a trip organised by the Great Britain-China Centre, which is funded by Britain’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. The visit follows Beijing’s January decision to lift sanctions on six serving British lawmakers after Prime Minister Keir Starmer met Xi Jinping in China, part of what both sides described as a reset in ties. Reuters corrected its report to note this would be the first UK MPs’ visit since 2024, not 2019.
The significance lies in how limited and conditional the thaw remains. This is not a clean normalisation of UK–China relations. Beijing still maintains Xinjiang-related sanctions on two British academics and lawyers and four UK-based organisations, while British MPs have made nine visits to Taiwan since 2022. Alleged Chinese spying and the proposed Chinese mega-embassy in London also continue to strain ties. The delegation therefore signals resumed parliamentary contact, but inside a relationship still shaped by human rights, Taiwan, espionage accusations and strategic mistrust.
Japan–UAE Oil Talks Put Stockpiles at Centre of Energy Resilience
Japan and the United Arab Emirates agreed to advance talks on expanded energy cooperation, including larger joint crude-oil stockpiles in Japan and increased UAE crude supplies. Japan’s Economy, Trade and Industry Minister Ryosei Akazawa visited Saudi Arabia and the UAE on May 4–5 to seek stronger energy security and stable supply arrangements. In talks with ADNOC chief Sultan Al Jaber, Akazawa proposed expanding crude and product supplies, rapidly replenishing joint reserves in Japan, boosting oil stockpiles across Asia, and restoring or expanding output and transport capacity, including alternative routes.
The significance lies in Japan’s attempt to turn stockpiling into regional crisis management, not just national insurance. This is not a settled supply deal: Tokyo declined to confirm a Nikkei report that it would procure an additional 20 million barrels from the UAE, saying volumes will be discussed later. But the direction is clear. With Middle East disruption exposing Japan’s dependence on imported energy, Tokyo is using Gulf diplomacy, producer-held reserves in Japan and supply diversification to build resilience against shocks that could quickly spill across Asian fuel markets.
China–Uzbekistan Talks Put Connectivity at Centre of Central Asia Strategy
Chinese Premier Li Qiang met Uzbek Prime Minister Abdulla Aripov in Beijing, calling for deeper cooperation in trade, investment, energy, resources, transport connectivity, digital development and the green economy. Li said China was ready to align development strategies, expand imports of high-quality Uzbek products, encourage Chinese investment and advance major joint projects, including the China–Kyrgyzstan–Uzbekistan railway. Aripov reaffirmed Uzbekistan’s commitment to the one-China principle and said Tashkent wanted broader cooperation in trade, agriculture, transport, culture and education.
The significance lies in how China is consolidating Uzbekistan as a central node in its overland Eurasian strategy. This is not just routine bilateral language. The emphasis on rail, energy and resources points to a practical effort to strengthen Belt and Road connectivity while reducing dependence on more vulnerable maritime routes. For Uzbekistan, Chinese capital and infrastructure offer growth opportunities, but also deepen exposure to Beijing’s economic weight. The cooperation is therefore mutually useful, but structurally asymmetric.
Japan–Australia Quasi-Alliance: Trade, Energy and Defence Convergence
This week’s statistics show the density of the Japan–Australia relationship as it moves beyond ordinary partnership. The BtH infographic estimates 2026 trade volume at $104 billion, labels force-access cooperation as “RAA+”, and gives the relationship a 9.5/10 defence-compatibility score. The economic-security chart points to a resource-driven trade recovery from 2021 to 2026, while the export-composition chart shows Japan’s dependence on Australian energy and LNG, followed by critical minerals, traditional ores, and food and services. Japan’s reliance is material: Australia has supplied more than 40% of Japan’s LNG in recent data.
The significance lies in how economic and defence indicators now reinforce each other. The Reciprocal Access Agreement, in force since August 2023, gives the two militaries a practical framework for operating in each other’s territory, while energy and critical-minerals cooperation strengthens the economic base of the relationship. But the “RAA+” and “9.5/10” figures should not be treated as official metrics. They are useful as strategic shorthand, not hard data.

China–Kyrgyzstan–Uzbekistan Railway: A New Overland Corridor Takes Shape
The map traces the planned China–Kyrgyzstan–Uzbekistan railway from Kashgar in China’s Xinjiang region through Irkeshtam, Osh and Andijan, before reaching Tashkent. Its strategic importance lies in geography: the route would give China a shorter overland connection into Central Asia and onward toward wider Eurasian markets, while giving Uzbekistan a more direct rail link to China. In this week’s talks in Beijing, Chinese Premier Li Qiang and Uzbek Prime Minister Abdulla Aripov placed the project inside a wider agenda covering trade, investment, energy, resources, transport connectivity, digital development and green growth.
The significance lies in how the railway turns connectivity into geopolitics. This is not just a transport project. For Beijing, the line strengthens Belt and Road infrastructure across Central Asia and reduces dependence on maritime routes vulnerable to disruption. For Tashkent, it offers access, investment and transit potential, but also deepens exposure to China’s economic gravity. The map therefore shows both opportunity and asymmetry: Uzbekistan gains infrastructure options, while China consolidates a more direct continental corridor across the Eurasian interior.

A Selfie for the Australia–Japan Strategic Upgrade
The image captures a deliberately warm moment during Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s first visit to Australia as national leader: the Australian and Japanese leaders posing with schoolchildren waving both countries’ flags. The scene is soft-power theatre, but the timing gives it strategic weight. At Parliament House in Canberra, the two governments agreed to deepen cooperation across energy security, defence and critical minerals, with the Hormuz crisis and wider supply-chain disruption forming the immediate backdrop. Australia provides almost half of Japan’s LNG, while Japan is one of Australia’s top refined-fuel suppliers, making the relationship materially important, not just diplomatically friendly.
The photograph matters because it presents the partnership as normal, popular and socially embedded at the same moment it is becoming harder-edged. The leaders committed to consulting on geopolitical shocks, economic coercion and market interruptions, while elevating critical minerals as a core pillar of economic security. Australia will provide up to A$1.3 billion to support projects involving Japan, and the visit followed contracts for Japanese-designed Mogami-class frigates for Australia. The public warmth in the image therefore sits on top of a serious strategic convergence in energy, minerals and defence.

Wang–Araghchi Meeting Puts Hormuz at Centre of China’s Iran Diplomacy
This week’s infographic captures Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi’s May 6 meeting with Wang Yi in Beijing, where China called for a complete cessation of hostilities and a return to negotiations. Wang said the regional situation was at a critical transition from war to peace, urged restoration of “normal and safe passage” through the Strait of Hormuz, and backed Iran’s right to peaceful nuclear energy while opposing renewed conflict. Araghchi described China as Iran’s close friend and strategic partner, saying Tehran remained ready for diplomacy but would defend its legitimate rights.
The significance lies in the diplomatic balancing act shown by the graphic. China wants to preserve its partnership with Iran, but its deeper interest is regional stability and secure energy flows. This is not proof that Beijing can force Tehran’s choices. But because China is a major buyer of Iranian oil, Washington is pressing it to use its leverage before the Trump–Xi summit. The Hormuz crisis is therefore no longer only a Middle East security issue; it is becoming a test of great-power diplomacy, sanctions pressure and energy resilience.
🇨🇳🤝🇮🇷 China–Iran Talks Put Hormuz Crisis at Center of Global Diplomacy
China hosted Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi in Beijing as tensions over the Strait of Hormuz continue to affect global energy security.
Beijing called for a complete cessation of hostilities,… pic.twitter.com/rX2DdtKbbi
— European Hub for Contemporary China (@EuroHub4Sino) May 7, 2026
Japan–Australia: The Quasi-Alliance Becomes Operational
Introduction
The Japan–Australia relationship is increasingly difficult to describe as a normal strategic partnership. It is not a treaty alliance, and that distinction still matters. But the accumulated evidence now points to something more consequential: a quasi-alliance built through defence access, industrial cooperation, energy dependence and shared concern about regional coercion. This week’s statistics capture that density: an estimated $104 billion in 2026 trade volume, “RAA+” force-access cooperation, and a 9.5/10 defence-compatibility score. Those figures should be treated as strategic shorthand, not official metrics. Still, they point to the central reality: Canberra and Tokyo are building a relationship in which economics and security are no longer separate tracks.
Defence Access and Industrial Trust
The clearest shift is in defence cooperation. The Reciprocal Access Agreement, in force since August 2023, gives each country’s forces a framework to operate in the other’s territory and streamlines deployments, exercises and practical military cooperation. Australia’s Defence Department describes it as Japan’s first defence treaty with an international partner since 1960, which is not a minor procedural detail; it marks a serious postwar shift in Japan’s security posture.
This has now been reinforced by the frigate programme. Japan’s supply of upgraded Mogami-class frigates to Australia, followed by planned co-production in Australia, turns defence cooperation into industrial integration. That matters because trust in warship production is a much deeper form of alignment than joint statements or occasional exercises. It requires shared assumptions about long-term threat, capability needs and operational interoperability. Asialink is right to call the relationship a “quasi alliance,” but the more precise point is that it is becoming operational rather than merely declaratory.
Energy and Critical Minerals as Strategic Infrastructure
The economic foundation of the partnership is equally important. Japan depends heavily on imported energy, and Australia remains one of its most reliable suppliers. DFAT describes Australia as a secure supplier of energy, mineral resources and food to Japan; in 2024, two-way goods and services trade reached A$107.8 billion, with Australian exports to Japan led by coal, natural gas and iron ore.
That trade profile is now being recast through economic security. The latest agreements on energy security, critical minerals and cyber cooperation show both governments treating supply chains as strategic infrastructure. Reuters reported that Australia and Japan committed A$1.67 billion to critical-minerals cooperation, with Australia offering up to A$1.3 billion and Japan contributing around A$370 million in investments and grants. This is not just resource diplomacy. It is an attempt to reduce exposure to Chinese dominance in processing and export controls, while giving Japan more secure inputs for advanced manufacturing and clean-energy technologies.
The Limits of the Quasi-Alliance
The weakness in this relationship is not lack of cooperation; it is the absence of a fully articulated regional strategy. Japan and Australia have strong habits of alignment, including through the Quad, U.S.-centred security networks, Pacific infrastructure initiatives and ASEAN-facing diplomacy. But a quasi-alliance still depends on political durability. Takaichi’s ability to sustain Japan’s strategic activism will depend on domestic politics, while Australia must manage China’s economic weight without allowing risk management to become strategic ambiguity. Asialink’s warning is sound: the partnership has grown, but its medium-term regional purpose remains underdeveloped.
Conclusion
The Japan–Australia quasi-alliance is becoming one of the Indo-Pacific’s most important regional alignments because it combines military access, defence production, energy security and critical-minerals resilience. Its strength lies in practical convergence rather than formal alliance language. Its danger lies in overstatement. This is not NATO in Asia, and pretending otherwise would be analytically sloppy. But it is a serious, increasingly institutionalised partnership that gives both countries more strategic depth in a region where supply chains, sea lanes, defence production and coercion are now part of the same security equation.
China, Iran and the Limits of Crisis Leverage
Introduction
The Iran crisis is no longer confined to the Middle East. Abbas Araghchi’s visit to Beijing placed the conflict directly inside the wider U.S.–China strategic equation, just days before Donald Trump’s planned summit with Xi Jinping. China’s language after the meeting was careful: it called for a complete cessation of hostilities, a return to diplomacy, and the restoration of normal and safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz. But behind the diplomatic phrasing is a harder reality. The disruption of oil flows has turned China from a distant commentator into an exposed stakeholder.
Beijing’s Dilemma: Partner, Mediator or Vulnerable Consumer?
China’s position is structurally uncomfortable. It has cultivated Iran as a strategic partner, opposes U.S. sanctions pressure, and wants to present itself as a defender of sovereignty against Western coercion. Yet China also needs maritime stability. Hormuz disruption directly threatens its energy security and raises costs across Asian markets. That creates a tension Beijing cannot easily avoid: it wants to support Tehran politically, but it also needs Iran not to escalate in ways that damage Chinese economic interests.
This is why Wang Yi’s message matters. His call for safe passage through Hormuz was not simply a peace statement. It was a signal that China’s tolerance for regional instability has limits when its own energy routes are at risk. Still, it would be a mistake to exaggerate Beijing’s control over Tehran. China has influence because of its oil purchases and diplomatic weight, but influence is not command. Iran will not subordinate its war aims or nuclear negotiating position to Chinese convenience.
Washington’s Pressure Tactic
The United States is trying to exploit that gap. By urging Beijing to press Tehran before the Trump–Xi summit, Washington is attempting to convert China’s dependence on Iranian energy into diplomatic responsibility. The logic is simple: if China benefits from Iranian oil and claims to be a major global stabiliser, then it should help restore safe navigation and push Iran toward a settlement.
That argument has force, but it is also politically loaded. Beijing will resist any framing that makes it appear to be enforcing U.S. pressure on Iran. It will not want to look like Washington’s subcontractor in Middle East crisis management. The more the United States publicly demands Chinese action, the more China may feel compelled to preserve distance, even if it quietly pushes Tehran toward restraint.
The Trump–Xi Summit Becomes Broader and Riskier
The timing of Araghchi’s visit is therefore critical. The Trump–Xi summit was already likely to cover trade, technology, rare earths, Taiwan and sanctions. The Iran crisis now adds energy security and maritime stability to that agenda. This makes the summit more consequential, but also more fragile. Cooperation over Hormuz is possible because both Washington and Beijing have an interest in keeping sea lanes open. Yet the surrounding context is hostile: U.S. sanctions on Iranian oil, Chinese purchases of that oil, and competing claims about international order all cut against easy coordination.
The most realistic outcome is not a grand U.S.–China bargain over Iran. It is narrower: parallel pressure on Tehran to keep Hormuz open, combined with continued disagreement over sanctions and the legitimacy of U.S. regional policy. That would still matter. In a crisis, limited alignment on maritime access may be more achievable than broader strategic trust.
Conclusion
Araghchi’s Beijing visit shows that China can no longer treat the Iran crisis as a distant conflict managed through rhetorical balance. Energy exposure has pulled Beijing into crisis diplomacy, while Washington is testing whether China’s economic leverage over Iran can be converted into restraint. But the limits are obvious. China wants stability without abandoning Iran, influence without responsibility, and diplomatic prestige without being trapped by U.S. expectations. The crisis has therefore become a test not only of Middle East diplomacy, but of whether great-power rivalry can still produce narrow cooperation when shared economic interests are under direct threat.
