China's New Train Line To Iran Sends A Message To Trump

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
New freight train connections usually only
have a limited potential to make global headlines, but a new service launched from China on Thursday could be different
Its cargo - 1,150 tons of sunflower seeds - may appears unremarkable, but its destination, however, is far more interesting: Tehran, the
capital of Iran.The launch of a new rail connection between Bayannur in China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region and Iran was announced by
the official news agency Xinhua on Thursday
Its exact path was not described in the dispatch, but travel times will apparently be shortened by at least 20 days in comparison to cargo
shipping
The sunflower seeds are now expected to arrive in Tehran in about two weeks.While the seeds are making their steady progress across Asia,
there's a growing risk of Iran and Israel breaking into open conflict in the meantime
French President Emmanuel Macron has already predicted that the U.S
decision to pull out of the Iran deal would lead to war, especially after Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif warned that the
country may restart its nuclear program if U.S
sanctions are imposed
Iranian rocket attacks on Wednesday and the subsequent Israeli retaliatory attacks on Thursday indicated how quickly the situation could
indeed escalate.While the United States is now urging foreign companies to wind down their operations in Iran, China appears to be doing the
opposite
Thursday's freight train connection launch was only the latest measure Beijing has taken to intensify trade relations with Iran and there
seem to be no plans so far to give in to U.S
demands. China has indicated it might defy US President Donald Trump's sanctions on Iran by doing business with it.During a press briefing
on Wednesday, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said that Iran and China would "maintain normal economic ties and trade.""We
will continue with our normal and transparent practical cooperation with Iran on the basis of not violating our international obligations,"
he said
China faces the same problem U.S
allies in Europe are currently facing: Even if European governments are opposed to new sanctions on Iran, European companies would have to
abide by those rules or risk severe fines by the United States.Even though they have expressed their outrage, some high-ranking European
officials have already acknowledged that they would have few options to rein in the United States if it decided to punish European companies
for continuing to trade with Iran.China, however, appears more defiant. Iran's Hassan Rouhani had established a track record for
bridge-building in nuclear talks with European powersWhen asked whether China would order its companies to withdraw from Iran to avoid U.S
sanctions, the Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman indicated that Beijing might defy the Trump administration
"I want to stress that the Chinese government is opposed to the imposition of unilateral sanctions and the so-called long-arm jurisdiction
by any country in accordance with its domestic laws," he said.China has to some extent managed to circumvent U.S
sanctions in the past and may be able to do the same again this time
Some analysts have even suggested that Chinese entities could act as intermediaries for European companies that want to continue trading
with Iran, but fear violating U.S
sanctions
Such sanctions would be particularly damaging to European businesses operating in the United States, such as plane manufacturer
Airbus.Speaking to CNBC, former U.S
diplomat Carlos Pascual said that oil sales from Iran via China or Russia to the rest of the world could circumvent U.S
measures. A new rail will connect Bayannur in China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region and Iran"It's those types of leakages from Russia
and China that are the most obvious ones where the Iranians could still find outlets to be able to export their product," he said.Iranian
exports to the European Union increased by 375 percent from 2015 to 2016, and European companies have already invested a significant amount
of money in Iran, raising the stakes of any decision that could result in the deal's collapse.China also has an interest in upholding its
trade ties with Iran
Tehran sells more to China than to any other country and celebrated a 25 percent increase in exports there last year
The value of Chinese exports to Iran also increased by over 20 percent.With Europe potentially turning to Chinese know-how to circumvent U.S
sanctions, the United States might find that the country being isolated in this situation is not Iran after all, but itself.(Except for the
headline, this story has not been edited by TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)