As US carriers steam toward Iran, China’s CM-302 missile offer could turn a faltering energy-rich partner into a sharper spear in a widening great-power contest over power, data and energy.
Reuters recently reported that Iran is close to finalizing a deal to buy Chinese-made CM-302 supersonic anti-ship cruise missiles, according to six people familiar with the talks, a move that would sharpen tensions as the US masses naval forces near Iran amid warnings of possible strikes.
The negotiations, underway for at least two years and accelerated after last June’s 12-day Israel-Iran war, have involved senior Iranian military and government officials, including a previously unreported visit to China by Deputy Defense Minister Massoud Oraei.
The size, price and delivery schedule remain unclear, and China said it was not aware of the talks, while the US declined to comment directly as President Donald Trump set a deadline for a nuclear deal.
The prospective sale would deepen China-Iran military ties, potentially defy reimposed UN sanctions, and come as US carriers, including the USS Abraham Lincoln and USS Gerald R. Ford, move into striking distance.
According to the Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance (MDAA), the CM-302 is the export version of the YJ-12 anti-ship missile, which was designed to be launched from H-6K strategic bombers.
It says that the CM-302 is armed with a 500-kilogram warhead, can reach Mach 3, and has a range of 400-460 kilometers, depending on the variant and launch platform – either sea, air or land launchers.
MDAA says the CM-302 uses a combination of inertial and satellite guidance and can perform evasive maneuvers, complicating interception. It mentions that these capabilities – supersonic flight and evasive maneuvers – make it well-suited for anti-access/area-denial (A2/AD) roles against high-value naval targets such as aircraft carriers.
Such a capability could provide a boost to Iran’s anti-ship missile arsenal, whose performance with its Houthi proxies may leave much to be desired.
In an April 2025 US Naval Institute (USNI) News article, Heather Mongilio notes that during Operation Rough Rider, the Houthis launched multiple strikes against the USS Harry S Truman carrier strike group (CSG); none of the ships sustained damage from the Houthis’ weaponry.
As noted by Fabian Hinz in a January 2024 article for the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), Iran has supplied the Houthis with multiple types of subsonic and ballistic anti-ship missiles and possibly supplies them with intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) capabilities such as unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), nominally civilian vessels, and possibly coastal radar networks.
Still, Hinz says that the Houthis lack advanced ISR assets such as satellites and long-range maritime patrol aircraft, which limits their targeting capabilities against moving naval targets.
Aside from limited targeting capabilities, Jonathan Ruhe and Ari Cicurel argue in a Jewish Institute for National Security of America (JINSA) report that Iran’s anti-ship missile capability, largely based on cruise missiles such as Noor, Ghader, Ghadir and Abu Mahdi, remains limited and vulnerable despite its growing inventory.
They stress that Iran’s launch capacity is constrained by a finite number of vulnerable mobile and fixed launchers, creating chokepoints that can be targeted to suppress salvos, and that despite the detection challenges posed by low-altitude flight, Iran’s overall system remains vulnerable to interception and preemption because of these structural and operational weaknesses.
Against that backdrop, China’s CM-302 could provide a substantial boost to Iran’s anti-ship missile capabilities, as Can Kasapoglu writes in a September 2025 Hudson Institute report, suggesting Iran could reverse-engineer the system based on the precedent of the C-802.
Kasapoğlu further notes that China has already moved to help rebuild Iran’s depleted missile deterrent, supplying 1,000 tons of sodium perchlorate in February 2025—an ingredient for solid rocket fuel—and could extend that support to microprocessors and guidance systems.
On the ISR front, Kasapoglu says China’s Chang Guang Satellite Technology has been providing intelligence to the Houthis to enable attacks on US commercial shipping, and that the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) has cultivated ties with both Chang Guang and MinoSpace Technology to secure support for space-based ISR operations.
But what does China get in return for all its alleged assistance to Iran? Kasapoglu notes that the Houthis have spared Chinese ships in the Red Sea from their attacks and that the Houthis may have provided China with real-time data about the performance of US missiles and drones – useful in a US-China confrontation in the Pacific.
Another possible motivation for China’s assistance to Iran is that China may want to secure its energy supply with Iran in the wake of the January 2026 US operation in Venezuela that led to the arrest of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.
According to a January 2026 report by the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission (USCC), Venezuelan oil makes up about 4% to 4.5% of China’s seaborne oil imports. However, disrupting the flow of Iranian energy shipments could change the equation. Reuters reported in January 2026 that Iranian oil accounted for 13.4% of China’s seaborne oil imports last year.
Losing Iran and Venezuela as energy suppliers could enable the US to land multiple blows on China in their superpower rivalry. As pointed out by Ng Weng Hoong in a Eurasia Review article this month, China’s loss of access to Venezuelan oil at heavily discounted prices could see it lose US$4.3 billion in savings, which may weigh on its indebted economy as it is caught up in a costly trade war with the US. Ng adds that the loss of a strategic resource such as cheap Venezuelan oil could also complicate China’s war planning in the Pacific.
While he points out that it is possible for China to rely on alternative suppliers, these alternative suppliers are mainly politically unstable countries in the Middle East and Africa, and war-stricken Russia, all of which are unreliable.
In contrast, he says that the US is in a comfortable position as the world’s leading oil producer and has the advantage of being able to securely import oil from neighboring reliable producers such as Canada and Mexico – an advantage in a protracted conflict. As for China, Ng says, China’s energy supply lines run through international shipping routes that are open and vulnerable to disruption.
In that light, the CM-302 sale would be less a simple weapons purchase than a strategic transaction that helps Iran offset the exposed weaknesses of its current missile force while giving China leverage, data and a stronger hand in protecting a key energy partner.
Even if the sale stalls, it highlights how missiles, ISR and energy supply lines are becoming fused into a single strategic contest that will shape both Gulf flashpoints and any wider US-China confrontation.

What is this? Chinese scaring Democrats but not Trump. Obama would’ve given another 400 billion dollars to Iran.
Nuke Beijing and Teheran. The world would be much better off.
Beijing will still be around when your Nazi nation factures
Peking will end up like Nanking
After Mumbai is dead and gone.
Suits me
Go ahead, make sure your gravesite is ready.
Just another wait for Chump to make China great again. Everyone seen all the robots coming out of china? The west is screwed.
Elon proclaimed that this will be the biggest product in the history of the world. Unfortunately his side came up a day late and a dollar short.
and no rare earths. if he’s lucky, gotta build them in china.
Li Qiaoming the head of China’s ground forces has been sacked in a military purge that experts say is beginning to weaken the country’s defence capabilities
No need to purge the Dalit military; it is only good for monkey bike parades.
Agree
Yo momma
The CM-302 is an export variant of the YJ-12 missile. The usual reason for an export variant is to nobble it. Consider how useful the S-300 SAM system was in Iranian hands last year. I bet the CM-302 promises more than it delivers, especially when accompanied by shouts of Allah Akbar.
Chinese have very small weapons
Same as wonky roosters
Baka Capon’s weapon got chopped by Paki woman at Kashmir.
Just more iron in the fire for Trump to handle. More cards for China to play against the U.S.
Around 2023, Xi initiated a second major round of purges—this time far bolder and more extensive than before. Over the past few years, Xi purged six members of the CMC
including: former ministers of defense Wei Fenghe (魏凤和) and Li Shangfu (李尚福), CMC vice chairman He Weidong (何卫东), Director of the CMC Political Work Department
Miao Hua (苗华), Chief of the Joint Staff Department Liu Zhenli (刘振立), and finally senior vice chairman of the CMC Zhang Youxia (张又侠). Their removal has decimated
the PLA’s high command, leaving only one sitting general on the CMC, Zhang Shengmin, who was promoted to vice chairman in late 2025.
When is the Dalit Tejas going to show up?
No idea, Tiddly. I won 1st prize in the lottery of life
By flying in the Tejas exhaust.
Nope by being N European
Behold the “mighty” Yanqui, USS Ford is erupting sewerage in mutiny as Chump is either about to: 1 destroy Iranian nuclear weapons he previously destroyed or 2 sign Iran into a deal that he previously scrapped.
The Orange Swindler in Chief is past his expiry like Noxious Netanyahu. One year in and Donnie already crashed out hard – its what happens when the Zionist VIRUS kills the host. MAGA is worthless garbage and the Uniparty in America are pedo philes. Enjoy your spiral into oblivion, America. You deserve it.
How’s that Pak-Afghan thing going ?
Better than the baka Capon in Kashmir.
Any thing is better than wonky Roosters – – no life, no clue, no job. Just inane remarks.
No its the wonky bridge that the chin keys built
Similar to the methane problem that blew up the Indian aircraft carrier INS Vikramaditya.
The Philippines Coast Guard reported that two Chinese vessels collided while pursuing a Philippine patrol ship in the South China Sea.
Dalit built missiles that boomerang on its own ships, tanks that can’t get off mountains, and an airforce that holds the world record for most crashes or shot down by women.
Are you saying Ch are women? Well they are small and puny