March 25, 2026

ICAS Bulletin (online ISSN 2836-3418, print ISSN 2836-340X) is published every other week throughout the year at 1919 M St NW, Suite 310, Washington, DC 20036.
The online version of ICAS Bulletin can be found at chinaus-icas.org/bulletins/.

- What's Going On? -

Trump Delays China Trip Amid Iran War

Operation Epic Fury Gallery. (whitehouse.gov)

– On March 16, President Trump requested to delay his state visit to China originally scheduled at the end of March by “a month or so” due to the ongoing war in Iran. 

– On March 19, Trump delayed the trip further by “about a month and a half,” meaning the Trump-Xi summit likely won’t happen before the end of war in Iran. 

– China, having never officially confirmed the state visit, appears open to delaying the Trump-Xi summit.

– U.S. and Chinese officials led by U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent ​and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng held “remarkably stable” trade talks on March 15-16 in Paris.

– The trade talks covered increased Chinese purchases of U.S. agricultural goods, cooperation on rare earth supply chains, and investment.

– U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer on March 16 said the U.S. and China discussed establishing a “US-China Board of Trade” to oversee bilateral economic ties.

– On March 15, Trump suggested the China summit could be delayed as he pressures Beijing to help reopen the Strait of Hormuz, but Secretary Bessent walked back those remarks on the following day, saying any delay would be a logistical decision, not a demand over Hormuz. 

– Bessent also urged markets not to react negatively to a potential postponement, saying the Paris talks with Chinese counterparts went well and that a statement reaffirming stability in the bilateral relationship would follow.

– U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who was sanctioned by China and had previously shown little interest in visiting, is now expected to accompany President Trump on his upcoming trip to Beijing.

Oil Prices Rise as Iran War Stretches into Fourth Week

Royalty Free, Getty Images

– The International Energy Agency (IEA) on March 11 announced the largest emergency oil reserves release in its history at 400 million barrels, representing roughly 20 days of lost Strait supply.

– On March 14-15, President Trump appealed to “China, France, Japan, South Korea, the UK, and others” as well as members of NATO to send warships to help secure the Strait of Hormuz. The request came as the White House is looking to reassure financial markets with high-level statements of support.

– Japan, the UK, France, Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands on March 19 issued a joint statement condemning Iranian attacks on Persian Gulf states and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, expressing readiness to help ensure safe passage through the waterway while commending the IEA’s decision to release oil from member reserves.

– On March 23, President Trump ordered a five-day postponement of strikes on Iranian power plants and energy infrastructure, saying the U.S. and Iran have had “very good and productive conversations” with “major points of agreement” toward a resolution, and that Iran must give up its enriched uranium stockpile for a deal. 

– Iran’s Foreign Ministry denied any dialogue with Washington and said Trump’s move was aimed at reducing energy prices and buying time for military plans, while the IRGC warned it would target power plants supplying U.S. bases and Gulf energy infrastructure if Trump carried out earlier threats.

– On March 19, China repeated its rhetoric to call for an end to the conflict in Iran and undisturbed waterway safety. 

– Iran has continued exporting roughly 1 million barrels of oil per day through the Strait of Hormuz since the war began, while selectively allowing passage for non-allied countries, with India securing transit for two vessels after releasing three seized Iranian tankers. 

– As of March 16, Iran is also considering allowing a limited number of oil tankers through the strait on the condition that cargoes are traded in Chinese yuan rather than U.S. dollars.

– It was reported on March 24 that Iran has begun charging transit fees of up to $2 million per voyage on some commercial vessels passing through the Strait of Hormuz and is considering formalizing the charges as part of a postwar settlement.

– On the same day, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi urged his Iranian counterpart Abbas Araghchi to engage in negotiations with the U.S. as soon as possible to end the war, saying “talking is better than fighting.”

– The Trump administration on March 12 temporarily lifted sanctions on roughly 130 million barrels of Russian oil already at sea until April 11 in an effort to contain soaring energy prices from the Iran war.

– Later, the U.S. Treasury authorized the purchase of roughly 140 million barrels of Iranian oil already at sea until April 19, with Secretary Bessent framing it as using “Iranian barrels against Tehran to keep the price down.”

– China ordered an immediate ban on exports of gasoline, diesel, and aviation fuel in March to pre-empt a potential domestic shortage caused by the Iran war, going beyond the previous halt issued on March 4.

– It was reported on March 16 that China has effectively halted exports of most fertilizer types except ammonium sulfate and has begun releasing commercial stockpiles early to secure domestic supplies for spring planting, as the war in Iran disrupted global supply and pushed Chinese urea spot prices up by nearly 40%.

– Iranian authorities confirmed on March 17 that Ali Larijani, a top Iranian security official believed to be running the country since Supreme Leader Khamenei’s death, was killed in an Israeli strike.

U.S.–Japan Alliance Tested Amid Iran War

President Donald J. Trump greets Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi before dinner in the State Dining Room of the White House, Thursday, March 19, 2026. (Official White House Photo by Joyce N. Boghosian)

– Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi paid her first trip to the U.S. since taking office from March 19-21, the first leader of the G7 to visit after the war in Iran. The visit covered the Iran war, Japan’s investment, and technological cooperation. 

– During the summit, Prime Minister Takaichi cited constitutional constraints under Article 9 in declining to dispatch Self-Defense Forces to the Strait of Hormuz though Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi raised the possibility of Japanese minesweeping operations after a ceasefire. 

–  Post summit, both sides announced a second round of Japanese-financed projects in small modular reactor plants and natural gas facilities, amounting to $109 billion of Japan’s $550 billion capital commitment.

– On the same day, the U.S. and Japan released an action plan to develop alternatives to China for critical minerals supply chains, focusing on coordinated trade policies including border-adjusted price floors for select minerals, while announcing potential investment deals such as Albemarle’s North Carolina lithium project and Mitsubishi Materials’ talks with Indiana-based ReElement Technologies.

– Prime Minister Takaichi said that Japan may begin stockpiling U.S. crude oil domestically to diversify its energy procurement.

– Released during her visit, the Annual Threat Assessment characterized Prime Minister Takaichi’s remarks on Taiwan as a “significant shift for a sitting Japanese prime minister.” The report backed away from previous projections that China plans to invade Taiwan by 2027, instead saying Beijing has no fixed timeline and would prefer unification without force. 

– On March 19, Japan rejected the characterization, with Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara saying the assessment “is not accurate” and that Tokyo’s position has been consistent. 

U.S.–China Trade Tensions Deepen, Strong Chinese Export Growth Reshaping Dynamics

Yangshan Port in China. ("Yangshan Port(Shanghai) HDR” by lwtt93, CC BY 2.0)

– The Trump administration on March 11 launched Section 301 trade investigations on China, Mexico, the EU, and 13 other economies over “structural excess capacity” in manufacturing, aiming to replace the reciprocal tariffs struck down by the Supreme Court. Treasury Secretary Bessent predicted that tariff rates will return to pre-ruling levels within five months.

– China’s Commerce Ministry on March 16 spoke against the USTR’s new Section 301 investigation, calling it “extremely unilateral, arbitrary and discriminatory” and an abuse of the investigation process to build trade barriers, while urging Washington to resolve disputes through dialogue.

– The U.S. Federal Communications Commission on March 23 banned the import of all new foreign-made consumer routers, citing severe cybersecurity risks. The move is estimated to control at least 60% of the U.S. home router market.

– Chinese Premier Li Qiang on March 22 pledged to further open China’s economy to foreign firms and pursue more balanced trade with global partners at the China Development Forum. Central bank governor Pan Gongsheng sought to alleviate concerns about the country’s record $1.2 trillion trade surplus by noting China also runs the world’s largest services deficit.

– China’s economy showed stronger-than-expected momentum in January-February, with industrial output rising 6.3%, retail sales jumping 2.8%, and fixed asset investment unexpectedly rebounding 1.8%.

– China’s exports surged 21.8% in January-February, far exceeding the 7.1% forecast, driven by a 66.5% jump in semiconductor shipments and strong electronics demand, pushing the trade surplus to $213.6 billion and putting the economy on track to surpass last year’s record, though the Iran war’s impact on energy prices and shipping could disrupt the momentum.

U.S.–China Tech Competition Intensifies, AI Expansion and Market Reopening

(Source: UnSplash)

– March 12 reports indicated that ByteDance is assembling computing power outside China through a Southeast Asian company called Aolani Cloud, with plans to deploy around 36,000 Nvidia Blackwell B200 chips in Malaysia worth over $2.5 billion to fuel its global AI ambitions.

– On March 18, it was confirmed Nvidia won Beijing’s approval to sell its H200 AI chips to China after months of regulatory delays, with CEO Jensen Huang saying the supply chain is “getting fired up”. The company is also preparing a version of its Groq inference chip for the Chinese market, expected to be available in May.

– Super Micro Computer co-founder Yih-Shyan “Wally” Liaw, employee Ruei-Tsang “Steven” Chang, and contractor Ting-Wei “Willy” Sun were indicted on March 19 for allegedly directing a scheme to smuggle $2.5 billion dollars worth of Nvidia AI chip-equipped servers to China in violation of U.S. export-control laws. Liao and Sun were subsequently arrested on the same day. 

– Tencent on March 22 launched ClawBot, a tool integrating its WeChat messaging platform with the OpenClaw AI agent for its over 1 billion users.

– More than 80 global executives from companies including Apple, Eli Lilly, and Volkswagen attended the China Development Forum in Beijing from March 23-24, signaling renewed interest in the Chinese market as Premier Li Qiang pledged to ease foreign access to the services sector and increase imports of healthcare and digital technology products.

- What Are We Reading? -

- What's Happening Around Town? -

- What ICAS Is Up To -

Commentary

Energy volatility is turning AI’s power demand into a near term US challenge
By Zhangchen Wang
March 24, 2026

The combined effects of the rapid expansion of artificial intelligence (AI) and renewed volatility in global energy markets, amid geopolitical tensions centered on the Iran crisis, are bringing U.S. energy security strategy into a new phase. AI-driven electricity demand was previously framed as a medium-term challenge, with projections suggesting that data center energy demand could nearly double by around 2030. However, recent disruptions in global energy markets are pulling this issue into the realm of near-term strategic concern, as energy shocks could transmit into electricity markets and lead to sharp price volatility over a very short period of time…

MAP Commentary

Mining Code Countdown: Inside the ISA’s March Window—and the Interest-Group Fault Lines Shaping Deep-Sea Governance
By Nong Hong
March 19, 2026

From 9–19 March 2026, the International Seabed Authority (ISA) Council met in Kingston, Jamaica, following the Legal and Technical Commission (LTC) session held 23 February–6 March (largely behind closed doors). The ISA’s 31st Session effectively operates in two stages: a March negotiating window and a July decision window. That sequencing matters because it creates a practical test of institutional credibility: can the ISA still produce a workable multilateral rulebook before deep-sea mining governance normalizes into parallel, fragmented pathways?

MAP Commentary

Rome’s Arctic Message: Observer Participation and Competing Greenland Narratives
By Nong Hong
March 12, 2026

The Arctic Circle Rome Forum – Polar Dialogue: From Glaciers to Seas (Rome, March 3–4, 2026) was not simply another polar science meeting. Hosted at Italy’s National Research Council (CNR) headquarters, it brought together participants from over 40 countries across governments, research institutions, Indigenous communities, and civil society—an unusually broad mix for a forum held outside the Arctic region itself. The organizers framed the discussions around five keywords—science, diplomacy, security, education, and research—which are a concise snapshot of where Arctic governance is heading: toward a blended space where knowledge production, geopolitical risk, and institutional design increasingly sit in the same room.

ICAS In the News

On Saturday, March 21, 2026, Senior Fellow Sourabh Gupta was quoted by South China Morning Post on Trump’s delayed China state visit.

 

  • “They preferred not to host a US president at a time when he might have been undertaking a bombing campaign.”

 

On Thursday, March 19, 2026, Senior Fellow Sourabh Gupta was quoted by China Daily on Paris U.S.-China Trade Talks.

 

  • “The talks ‘seemed to hint for the first time that the two sides may be moving beyond their mutually assured destruction framework to framing their tech, trade and investment relationship on a more positive-minded basis’ that is more ‘durable’.”

 

On Wednesday, March 18, 2026, Senior Fellow Sourabh Gupta was interviewed by CGTN’s Dialogue on Paris trade talks.

 

  • “…the United States with regard to China is focused predominantly on the trade and technology relationship and trying to lock down that bargain that the two leaders made in Busan in October 2025. While China is looking at this relationship and looking at that Busan bargain as kind of a foundation for stabilizing the broader relationship for initiating a conversation on other broader issues that would help keep the relationship on an even keel going forward…”

 

On Tuesday, March 17, 2026, Senior Fellow Sourabh Gupta was interviewed by China Daily on China’s economic adjustments.

 

  • “This is a welcome development, going for a lower growth target. It’s not that China cannot achieve the 5% growth target if it wanted to. The government does not feel the need to be as aggressive in its stimulus and would like the economy to run on its own and run on its own means, run on its own steam, on its own two legs, and without that much government support if need be.”

 

On Tuesday, March 17, 2026, Senior Fellow Sourabh Gupta was quoted by South China Morning Post on Trump’s China visit delay.

 

  • “[It] seems fairly clear to me that the Chinese side sought a postponement of the Trump-Xi meeting during their talks in Paris.”

 

On Monday, March 16, 2026, Senior Fellow Sourabh Gupta was quoted by China Daily on China’s 15th Five-Year Plan.

 

  • “The 4.5-5 percent GDP range ‘is a welcome development, going for a lower growth target’.”
  • “The reason is it’s not that China cannot achieve the 5 percent growth target if it wanted to, but that would have to happen with the government putting extra stimulus, throwing more money into the economy, and just hitting an artificial growth target.”

 

On Wednesday, March 11, 2026, Senior Fellow Sourabh Gupta was interviewed by CGTN’s America’s The Heat on analyzing China’s Two Sessions.

 

  • “…from a strategic standpoint because this was such an important economic meeting. My first takeaway was from the strategic economic side and that was that doubling down on technology self-sufficiency.”
  • “…from a broader strategic perspective, I think and Foreign Minister Wangyi made this place very clearly, in an unstable and disruptive disrupted world China will be a pillar of stability and China will be a supporter of multilateralism. I think that was the most important thing that did come out.”
  • “ The other important message that came out also aside from multilateralism was that we want to make the major power relationships as stable as possible…”
Senior Fellow Sourabh Gupta on CGTN America's The Heat on March 11.
Senior Fellow Sourabh Gupta on CGTN's Dialogue on March 18.