Analysis · Geopolitics · May 2026
Washington Lingers in Chaos, Beijing Corrects the Course
During Covid, China’s diplomats retreated and the United States squandered the opening. Now, consumed by wars of choice in Gaza and Iran, America is making the same mistake twice — and China is not waiting.
There is a bitter symmetry to the current moment in global diplomacy. In the worst years of the Covid pandemic, China’s international standing took a severe battering. Its diplomats were cautious, defensive, largely housebound — the architects of wolf-warrior posturing found the world in no mood to be lectured by Beijing. Washington had a rare window to reassert moral and strategic leadership in the spaces China had vacated.
It did not take it.
Now the tables have turned, with a precision that should alarm anyone who believes American primacy is a natural condition of world order rather than something that must be actively maintained.
“The United States is not in diplomatic retreat — it is diplomatically absent. And nature, in geopolitics as in ecology, abhors a vacuum.”
The Iran Trap
The United States is now mired in the consequences of not one but two wars it chose to back or prosecute in the Middle East. The assault on Gaza consumed the first phase of American diplomatic capital — estranging partners across the Global South, isolating Washington at the UN, and placing its envoys in the impossible posture of defending the indefensible while claiming to lead a rules-based order. The Iran war has completed the destruction.
The strikes on Iranian nuclear and military infrastructure — presented in Washington as a decisive act of strategic clarity — have in practice produced the opposite. Iran has not collapsed. The Arab street is not grateful. American forces are stretched. And the foreign policy bandwidth that might have been deployed across Southeast Asia, the Indo-Pacific, Africa, and Latin America is now entirely consumed by consequences no one in the administration appears to have fully modelled before the first sortie.
American diplomats are not absent because they lack talent or resources. They are absent because their government has made choices that make showing up, in most of the world, a liability rather than an asset. Every ambassador in Hanoi, Nairobi, or Dhaka now carries the weight of Gaza and Tehran in every meeting. China’s representatives carry none of it.
United States
Consumed & Constrained
Two active Middle East conflicts. UN isolation. Global South alienation. Diplomatic bandwidth near zero. Credibility deficit in every room outside NATO.
China
Present & Moving
Seven major diplomatic engagements in four months. Patient, senior-level, institutionally serious. Offering infrastructure, not lectures. No wars. No UN vetoes to explain.
Beijing has noticed. And it has moved.
China’s Recent Diplomatic Gains
Vietnam
Presidential visit secured alongside a landmark high-speed rail agreement — locking in infrastructure dependency in a country long wary of Chinese encroachment. If Beijing can make gains in Hanoi, the credibility collapse argument becomes very hard to rebut.
Cambodia
First-ever 2+2 defence and foreign ministers meeting — the institutional language of genuine strategic partnership. China is adopting the format Washington uses with Japan and South Korea. The signal is deliberate.
Myanmar
Sustained engagement with the junta as Western powers shun it, cementing China as the indispensable outside power in a strategically critical state that sits astride critical overland corridors to the Indian Ocean.
Pakistan
Presidential visit reinforcing the CPEC corridor and signalling that Beijing — not Washington — is Islamabad’s reliable great-power partner. A message heard loudly in every South Asian capital.
Russia
Foreign Minister Lavrov’s visit underscores the durability of the no-limits partnership. Whatever pressure mounts on both capitals, this axis is not cracking. Beijing is demonstrating it can hold multiple relationships Washington considers incompatible.
North Korea
Quiet engagement preserves China’s role as the only outside power with meaningful leverage over Pyongyang — a card Beijing has no interest in playing, but every interest in holding.
Mozambique & Madagascar
Senior-level engagement in two Indian Ocean nations. Their geography says everything: both sit along critical maritime shipping lanes. This is not development aid — it is strategic positioning under commercial cover.
The Pattern
Neighbours, buffer states, maritime chokepoints, commodity suppliers. Every engagement is chosen for its strategic geometry. This is not opportunism filling a vacuum — it is a deliberate architecture being assembled while Washington looks away.
“The Covid window was missed through negligence. The Iran window is being missed through choice. The question is whether Washington has the strategic self-awareness to see the difference — and the cost.”
What is striking about this list is not any individual diplomatic event — each has its own bilateral logic — but the shape they form together. China is building a durable architecture of relationships in precisely the geographies where American credibility has collapsed: Southeast Asia, South Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, and the post-Soviet space. The Vietnam HSR deal alone is a significant strategic signal. Vietnam is not a Chinese ally. It has a long history of resistance to Chinese domination, a live territorial dispute in the South China Sea, and a political class that plays great powers against each other with considerable sophistication. That Beijing could secure both a presidential visit and a major infrastructure commitment from Hanoi — while Washington was occupied with Tehran — reflects a hedging calculation that is moving.
The Cambodia 2+2 is different in kind but equally significant. That format — defence and foreign ministers meeting jointly — is how Washington formalises its most serious partnerships. China adopting it with Phnom Penh signals an intent to institutionalise what has been an informal client relationship into something with genuine strategic weight. That it happened without any American countermove is a measure of just how thin the US diplomatic bench has become.
Africa is the slowest-burning story but perhaps the most consequential. Mozambique and Madagascar are not prominent names on the diplomatic circuit, but their geography on the Indian Ocean speaks for itself. China’s engagement there is part of a decade-long project of securing maritime positioning under the cover of development partnerships. The United States has no equivalent project, no equivalent patience, and — after Iran — no equivalent reputation.
What a Real Response Would Require
The parallel to the Covid moment is instructive but not identical. During the pandemic, China’s diplomatic retreat was largely involuntary — a consequence of international anger it could not immediately manage. America’s current paralysis is self-inflicted: a product of choices made in Washington that have placed it on the wrong side of world opinion on the two defining crises of this decade. The mechanism differs; the strategic consequence is the same.
A genuine American response would require, at minimum, an honest accounting of what the Iran and Gaza policies have cost in diplomatic terms — not just in the Global South, but among European and Asian partners exhausted by the contradiction between American rhetoric about rules-based order and American practice in the eastern Mediterranean and Persian Gulf.
It would require a renewed investment in the patient, unglamorous work of relationship-building in Southeast Asia and Africa, where China’s advantage is not primarily military or even economic, but diplomatic: they show up, consistently, at the level of seriousness the relationship demands. It would also require something harder — a willingness to reckon with the fact that the unipolar moment is over, and that maintaining American relevance in a multipolar world requires a different toolkit than the one that worked in 1995.
China is not winning through coercion alone. In most of these relationships, it is winning through presence, investment, and the projection of reliability. The United States, for all its enduring structural advantages, is currently projecting the opposite.
The window that opened during Covid was missed. The window that exists today — created by two wars of choice and a diplomatic corps stretched to breaking — is closing. Whether Washington has the strategic clarity to see it, let alone act on it, remains, at best, an open question.