Beijing built a legal weapon against US sanctions five years ago. It never used it. Until Saturday.
China told local firms to ignore US sanctions on five oil refiners tied to Iran. One of them is Hengli, hit by US sanctions last month.
This is the first time China has used the 2021 law. It was built to do this. It sat unused for half a decade.
The Five Refiners
Three of the firms are based in Shandong. The other two are Hengli in Dalian and Hebei Xinhai.
These are not the small "teapot" plants the US usually goes after. Hengli alone runs one of the most modern oil plants in north China.
Private oil firms like these handle as much as a third of all of China's refining. That is why the US sees them as the weak spot in Iran's oil chain.
China is the top buyer of Iranian oil. A lot of those barrels reach private refiners that turn the crude into gas and diesel.
China's customs data does not show this trade. The last formal Iran shipment was years ago, even as the oil keeps flowing through quiet routes.
Each of the five firms had been hit with US asset freezes and bans on US trade. Those rules cut them off from any bank or buyer that does business in the US.
What The Law Does
China called the US move an unfair limit on trade with third parties. The order bans firms in China from honoring the sanctions.
But the law goes much further than that. It lets the five refiners sue any firm that drops them to follow US rules.
Eurasia Group analysts said the targets include Chinese banks, Chinese clients, and foreign firms with offices in China.
In English: if you follow Washington, you can be sued in a Chinese court for damages.
That's a legal lever Beijing has never pulled before. The analysts said it shows China is moving from words to action on sanctions.
The Trump-Xi Backdrop
Before Hengli, the US went after smaller Chinese firms to cut Iran's oil cash. Hitting bigger firms came with more risk.
The big question now is what Washington does next. The refiners still bank with Chinese firms that have not been hit.
If the US sanctions those banks, Beijing has hinted it will push back even harder. That could mean curbs on US firms in China or new export limits.
The order also lands weeks before a Trump-Xi summit. The meeting will likely still happen. But every move from here reads through that lens.
What To Watch
Watch the banks. The refiners can keep going as long as Chinese banks keep moving cash for them.
If the US goes after those banks, the next round of moves from Beijing will be much bigger than a paper order.
Also watch what Iran does. The flow of crude to China props up Iran's budget, and a hit there changes things fast.
China kept this law on the shelf for five years. Using it now sends a message about the summit before either leader walks in.
