Pentagon adds Chinese firms to military list then withdraws filing

Weeks before a Trump-Xi summit, the Pentagon added major Chinese firms including Alibaba Group Holding, Baidu and BYD to a list of supposed “Chinese military companies,” only to withdraw the filing shortly after. The move highlights mixed signals from Washington and injects fresh uncertainty into the fragile US-China truce.

The Pentagon recently updated its Section 1260H list, which identifies companies the US government believes are “Chinese military companies” or contributors to China’s military-civil fusion efforts. The updated designation added giants like Alibaba Group Holding, Baidu and BYD, spanning the biotech, AI, drone and semiconductor sectors, including WuXi AppTec and RoboSense Technology. Chinese memory chip manufacturers Yangtze Memory Technologies and ChangXin Memory Technologies were removed from the list.

The document was removed from the Federal Register on Friday morning upon agency request for withdrawal. According to a letter acquired by the South China Morning Post, the US Defence Department’s Privacy, Civil Liberties and Transparency Directorate requested the removal of its notice on Friday without explaining the reason. The Pentagon told the South China Morning Post in an email that it had nothing to announce at this time.

Friday’s move underscores the inconsistency and mixed messaging emanating from the Trump administration, as some in Washington policy circles suggested that arms of the administration had not coordinated on the announcement.

Liittyvät artikkelit

US official and Taiwanese executive shaking hands over semiconductor tariff deal document, with flags, chips, and tariff graphs in background.
AI:n luoma kuva

US official says Trump administration will seek separate semiconductor tariff deals

Raportoinut AI AI:n luoma kuva

The Trump administration will pursue separate semiconductor tariff agreements with individual countries, a US official said, following a deal with Taiwan this week. The agreement allows Taiwanese firms building US chip capacity to import materials tariff-free up to 2.5 times planned output during construction. South Korea's trade minister assessed the impact on local chipmakers as limited.

Chinese authorities have instructed domestic companies to stop using cybersecurity software from more than a dozen US and Israeli firms due to national security concerns. The directive supports Beijing's drive to replace Western technology with homegrown alternatives amid intensifying tech competition with the United States. Three sources familiar with the matter said the notice was issued in recent days.

Raportoinut AI

In a sharp reversal, the US Commerce Department and FCC have abandoned their December plan to blacklist new Chinese-made drones over national security risks, following the FCC's addition of foreign drones to its 'Covered List.' The decision supports the trade framework agreed by Presidents Trump and Xi, ahead of Trump's April visit to Beijing.

President Donald Trump has announced a 25% tariff on certain advanced AI chips from Nvidia and AMD, allowing their export to China while claiming a share of the sales revenue. The policy reverses a prior export ban on Nvidia's H200 chips but imposes the levy to fund US interests. Industry executives view it as a way to shield the arrangement from legal challenges.

Raportoinut AI

US President Donald Trump has directed federal agencies to immediately cease using Anthropic's AI technology. The order follows a dispute with the Pentagon, where the company refused unconditional military use of its Claude models. Anthropic has vowed to challenge the Pentagon's ban in court.

The European Union has excluded Chinese organizations from its most advanced collaborative technology programs, covering fields like artificial intelligence, quantum technologies, semiconductors, and biotechnology. The EU cites concerns over research security and potential military applications. Chinese space scientist Wu Ji expresses doubt that the policy will significantly harm China and suggests it may instead isolate Europe further.

Raportoinut AI

Hundreds of employees from Google and OpenAI have signed an open letter in solidarity with Anthropic, urging their companies to resist Pentagon demands for unrestricted military use of AI models. The letter opposes uses involving domestic mass surveillance and autonomous killing without human oversight. This comes amid threats from US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to label Anthropic a supply chain risk.

 

 

 

Tämä verkkosivusto käyttää evästeitä

Käytämme evästeitä analyysiä varten parantaaksemme sivustoamme. Lue tietosuojakäytäntömme tietosuojakäytäntö lisätietoja varten.
Hylkää