A MOFCOM spokesperson said the U.S. Department of Defense’s move to place certain Chinese firms on a "Chinese military companies" list ignores leaders’ consensus from the Beijing meeting, overextends national-security grounds and abuses state power to pressure Chinese firms. The ministry said the action undermines international trade order, risks global supply-chain stability and harms Chinese firms’ lawful rights, urged the U.S. to immediately revoke the measures and restore constructive, stabl

2026-06-13

A MOFCOM spokesperson said the U.S. Department of Defense’s move to place certain Chinese firms on a "Chinese military companies" list ignores leaders’ consensus from the Beijing meeting, overextends national-security grounds and abuses state power to pressure Chinese firms. The ministry said the action undermines international trade order, risks global supply-chain stability and harms Chinese firms’ lawful rights, urged the U.S. to immediately revoke the measures and restore constructive, stable bilateral ties and fair, non‑discriminatory treatment for Chinese companies, and warned that if the measures remain China will take resolute countermeasures and hold the U.S. fully responsible for the consequences.