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China ‘strongly dissatisfied’ with Pentagon move against top Chinese tech firms

By Thomson Reuters Jun 12, 2026 | 9:41 PM

(Removes erroneous word ‘later’ in paragraph 3)

BEIJING, June 13 (Reuters) – China is “strongly dissatisfied” with a U.S. move to add several large Chinese companies to the ​Pentagon’s list of firms it says are ‌aiding China’s military, the commerce ministry said on Saturday.

The foreign ministry has also expressed concern about the U.S. Defense Department’s long-awaited update to its list on Monday, which included such top ‌technology ​names as e-commerce giant Alibaba, internet ⁠search provider Baidu and ⁠automakers BYD and NIO.

The list also includes the world’s largest solar panel makers: Trina Solar and JA Solar Technology.

The list includes a broad swathe of ​China’s top technology firms key to advancing Beijing’s military and industrial prowess, reflecting Washington’s security concerns amid ⁠intense geopolitical competition between the ⁠countries.

“China is strongly dissatisfied and firmly opposes ​this,” the commerce ministry said in a statement. “China urges ​the U.S. to immediately stop its erroneous practices, immediately ‌withdraw relevant measures and return to the correct track of building a constructive strategic and stable China-U.S. relationship.”

If Chinese firms are not treated fairly, it said, ⁠Beijing will “inevitably retaliate resolutely and forcefully”.

The Pentagon update supersedes a list from early 2025 and comes a month after Presidents ⁠Donald Trump and ‌Xi Jinping met in Beijing and ⁠maintained a delicate trade-war truce.

The ministry statement ​said ‌the Pentagon’s move “ignored the consensus” reached between ​the two ⁠leaders.

Under U.S. law, the Defense Department will be prohibited from contracting directly with companies on the list and restricted from buying their products or services through third parties from 2027.

(Reporting by Beijing newsroom and Greg Torode ​in Hong Kong;)