US Intelligence Believes China Weighing Sending Iran Advance Radar Systems
US intelligence is flagging early signs that Beijing may have been eyeing a move into the Iran conflict – quietly considering sending advanced radar systems, which it is said to have been mulling since near the opening of the US-Israel war which kicked off last month.
These anti-Beijing allegations are contained in fresh CBS News reporting, citing analysts at the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), who conclude China was actively weighing whether to equip Tehran with upgraded radar capabilities.
It should be recalled that earlier parallel reports said Moscow was feeding Iran intelligence on US military positions across the Middle East – raising the specter of a broader shadow alignment forming behind the scenes.
“This technology would significantly enhance Iran’s ability to detect and track incoming threats, like low-flying drones and cruise missiles, and could help protect its air defense systems against advanced strikes,” CBS writes.
The report continues, “It remains unclear whether China ultimately moved forward with the transfer but the assessment underscores Washington’s concern that the Iranian war is drawing in not only regional adversaries but also global competitors willing to provide critical support, short of direct military involvement, the officials said.”
The ability of the Iranians to hit faraway precision targets, including for example an expensive US radar base in Jordan, suggested it may have already had some external satellite and targeting help. Any new China radar transfer could help Iran rebuild its largely decimated defenses.
The significant Iranian retaliation against US regional bases and against Gulf facilities last month came as a surprise or even shock to the US administration, which appeared somewhat unprepared – and this has been subject of much recent reporting. For example:
Such anti-China allegations have been previewed before, but the idea of advanced Chinese radar technological on the ground in Iran might have been a game-changer in terms of preserving more of its own anti-air and missile capabilities.
All of these allegations, which come anonymously via unnamed US intel officials, must be treated with appropriate skepticism, however – given that war propaganda will inevitably be thick in such a hot conflict.
China, for its part, has been vehemently denying these repeat charges of some kind of deepened support for the Islamic Republic amid the war. It says it stands for peace and dialogue, and has called for urgent de-escalation and the unblocking of the Hormuz Strait.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 04/17/2026 – 10:05
via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/30q7aFu Tyler Durden
