Tuesday, June 9, 2026 - The Pentagon has barred Chinese tech giant Alibaba, electric car maker BYD and search engine Baidu from getting U.S. defense contracts by adding them to its list of Chinese military companies operating in America.
The Defense
Department on Monday published an updated list of non-state-owned Chinese
companies that, while not in traditional defense or security sectors, are
alleged to have ties with Beijing’s military.
Fifteen new
companies were added to the list, which was created in 2021 by a congressional
mandate that looks to identify Chinese companies considered to be a possible
threat, as Beijing sometimes uses such firms for military purposes.
In the case
of Alibaba, the Pentagon asserts it is “a military-civil fusion contributor to
the Chinese defense industrial base because it is affiliated with [China’s
Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT)],” the overseer of
China’s technology and industrial policies, according to the list.
BYD and
Baidu, meanwhile, both have affiliations with Beijing’s State-owned Assets
Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council (SASAC), and
MIIT, making them both a “military-civil fusion contributor to the Chinese
defense industrial base.”
After the
updated list was released, House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist
Party Chairman John Moolenaar (R-Mich.) called it “a warning to American
businesses, all levels of government, and the American people.”
“These
Chinese companies are working with the Chinese military against our national
interests,” he said in a statement. “Any of them that are publicly traded on
U.S. exchanges should be immediately delisted and their products should be
removed from supply chains our country depends on.”
Moolenaar
added that American companies must stop doing business with the listed
companies, “otherwise they are enabling China’s military ascendance.”
The Chinese Embassy on Monday accused the U.S. of
“overstretching the concept of national security and making discriminatory
lists to go after Chinese companies,” as reported by The Associated Press.
“The U.S. should stop its wrong practice and create a fair,
just and non-discriminatory environment for Chinese companies,” the embassy
said in a statement.
Alibaba,
BYD and Baidu all have denied that they are a military company or are working
with the Chinese military.
The updated
Pentagon list identifies a total of 188 Chinese entities, up from nearly
130 last year.
While they can still do
business in the U.S., a company’s addition to the document could damage its
reputation.
Already on
the list was Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Ltd. (CATL), which makes
batteries for Tesla, the electric car company owned by billionaire Elon
Musk; Tencent, which owns several popular video games and tech platforms like
messaging service WeChat; and
drone companies Autel Robotics and DJI.
Autel
Robotics and DJI have attracted intense scrutiny on Capitol Hill for national
security concerns.

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