[co-authors: Nick Russell, and Alasdair Kan]
Key Points
The U.S. government has recently imposed controls pertaining to “Communist Chinese Military Companies” (CCMCs or “1237 entities”); Chinese “Military End Users” (MEUs); and Chinese “Military-Intelligence End Users” (MIEUs). The U.S. government has also been adding Chinese companies to the Entity List based on concerns regarding the companies’ relationships to the Chinese military industrial complex.
Although the names and underlying policy concerns are similar, the scope and source of the prohibitions regarding each set of Chinese entities are quite different. Companies on one of the lists are not automatically on others, but overlap is possible as the lists evolve. These lists are in addition to the Chinese entities that are on the Unverified List (UVLs), the Denied Persons List (DPLs), and the Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons List (SDNs).
Trump Blacklisting Jolts Chinaâs Ambitions to Take on Boeing
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January 15, 2021
(Bloomberg) A U.S. move to increase pressure on Chinese companies could threaten the nationâs ambitions to compete with Boeing Co. and Airbus SE.
The Trump administrationâs addition of Commercial Aircraft Corp. of China, better known as Comac, to a Defense Department list of companies with alleged Chinese military ties comes just days after a breakthrough in the state-backed jet manufacturerâs effort to win customers when an Indonesian airline agreed to buy its planes.
Read more: U.S. Targets Xiaomi, Cnooc in Trumpâs Late Anti-China Push
U.S. blacklists Chinese firms, executives over South China Sea
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A file picture dated May 11, 2015, shows an areal view of alleged artificial islands built by China in disputed waters in the South China Sea, west of Palawan, Philippines. Photo by Ritchie B. Tongo/EPA
Jan. 15 (UPI) The Trump administration imposed fresh sanctions against Chinese firms and military over its reckless and belligerent actions in the South China Sea as well as labeled nine companies including Xiaomi as military controlled and added a government oil company to its Entity List.
The Departments of Commerce, State and Defense separately announced actions targeting the People s Republic of China on Thursday, moves that are expected to further fray an already fraught relationship between Washington and Beijing in the days before the Biden administration assumes power.
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Sputnik International
On Saturday, China announced new rules banning Chinese firms and citizens from complying with “unjustified” foreign laws and sanctions. The order also allows Chinese firms to sue in.