South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

China to issue sanctions on US arms suppliers

- By Joe McDonald

BEIJING — China’s government saidMonday that it will impose sanctions on U.S. military contractor­s including BoeingCo.’s defense unit and Lockheed Martin Corp. for supplying weapons to rival Taiwan, stepping up a feud with Washington over security and Beijing’s strategic ambitions.

Raytheon Technologi­es Corp. and “relevant American individual­s” associated with the sales also will be affected, said aForeignMi­nistry spokesman, Zhao Lijian. He gave no details of what penalties might be imposed or when.

The ruling Communist Party claims Taiwan, which split with the mainland in

1949 during a civil war, as part of its territory and has threatened to invade. Washington promised in the

1980s to reduce and eventually end weapons sales to Taiwan but insists its dispute with Beijing must be settled peacefully.

“In order to safeguard national interests, China decided to impose sanctions on the American companies that were involved in arms sales to Taiwan,” Zhao said.

Chinese-U.S. relations have plunged to their lowest level in decades amid disputes about security, technology, the coronaviru­s pandemic and human rights.

Taiwan has long been an irritant in relations. Washington has no formal relations with Taiwan’s democratic­ally elected government but is its main ally. U.S. law requires the government to ensure the island can defend itself. Weapons sales to Taiwan have increased in quantity and quality.

Last week, Beijing demandedWa­shington cancel a planned sale of 135 precision land attack missiles valued at just over $1 billion to improve its defenses.

The sale “seriously undermined China’s sovereignt­y and security interests,” said Zhao, the government spokesman.

China has stepped up military activity around Taiwan in an attempt to force concession­s from the proindepen­dence administra­tion of President Tsai Ingwen. The Communist Party is using the mainland’s growing economic weight to pressure other government­s to cut diplomatic and unofficial tieswithTa­iwan.

Beijing regularly pressures American companies including Boeing Co. in an effort to influence U.S. policy. China is one of Boeing’s biggest markets for commercial aircraft, which might make it vulnerable to a boycott, but Zhao mentioned only Boeing’s military arm, BoeingDefe­nse.

Lockheed Martin and Raytheon also supply radar and other technology for civilian aviation.

The two government­s have put sanctions on companies and individual­s on both sides over complaints about human rights, computer hacking and other issues, though it is unclear whether they have any effect.

Washington has imposed travel and financial bans on Chinese officials and companies it says are linked to abuses in the northweste­rn region of Xinjiang, where Muslim minorities have been detained in re-education camps, or Hong Kong after Beijing tried to tighten control by imposing a national security law.

Beijing has retaliated by announcing sanctions against someU.S. legislator­s.

The Chinese spokesman, Zhao, called onWashingt­on to “stop arms sales to Taiwan and stop any military interactio­n withTaiwan.”

“We will continue to take necessary measures to safeguard national sovereignt­y andsecurit­y interests,” Zhao said.

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