China Vetoes UN Strait of Hormuz Resolution

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- Fu Cong voted against the draft resolution on the Strait of Hormuz at a UN Security Council meeting in New York on 7 April 2026.
- China exercised its veto power to block the draft resolution concerning the Strait of Hormuz.
- Domestic pressure within China influenced the decision to veto the resolution.
- Pragmatism in China's foreign‑policy calculations also drove the veto.
- Iran crisis is testing China's UN diplomatic approach, according to the Lowy Institute analysis.
Why it matters: The veto lets China preserve domestic political credibility and demonstrate independent foreign‑policy pragmatism, but it undercuts the Security Council’s ability to present a unified front on the Strait of Hormuz, limiting Iran’s diplomatic isolation. The move also signals to regional partners that China may prioritize its own strategic calculations over collective security measures, potentially reshaping alliance dynamics in the Gulf.

