China sanctions two US firms over ‘support for arms sales to Taiwan’

11 April 2024, 13:34

An MQ9 Predator drone
China US Taiwan. Picture: PA

The announcement freezes the assets of General Atomics Aeronautical Systems and General Dynamics Land Systems held within China.

China has announced sanctions against two US defence companies over what it says is their support for arms sales to Taiwan, the self-governing island democracy Beijing claims as its own territory to be recovered by force if necessary.

The announcement freezes the assets of General Atomics Aeronautical Systems and General Dynamics Land Systems held within China. The measure also bars the companies’ management from entering the country.

Filings show General Dynamics operates half-a-dozen Gulfstream and jet aviation services operations in China, which remains heavily reliant on foreign aerospace technology even as it attempts to build its own presence in the field.

The company helps make the Abrams tank being purchased by Taiwan to replace outdated armour intended to deter or resist an invasion from China.

General Atomics produces the Predator and Reaper drones used by the US military. Chinese authorities did not go into details on the company’s alleged involvement with supplying arms to Taiwan.

Beijing has long threatened such sanctions, but has rarely issued them as its economy reels from the Covid-19 pandemic, high unemployment and a sharp decline in foreign investment.

“The continued US arms sales to China’s Taiwan region seriously violate the one-China principle and the provisions of the three China-US joint communiques, interfere in China’s internal affairs, and undermine China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity,” China’s foreign ministry said in a statement.

It insists that the mainland and the island to which Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalist forces fled amid civil war in 1949 remain part of a single Chinese nation.

Sanctions were levelled under Beijing’s recently enacted Law of the People’s Republic of China on Countering Foreign Sanctions.

US tanks M1-A1 Abrams
General Dynamics helps make the Abrams tank being purchased by Taiwan (Katsumi Kasahara/AP)

General Dynamics’ fully-owned entities are registered in Hong Kong, the southern Chinese semi-autonomous city over which Beijing has steadily been increasing its political and economic control to the point that it faces no vocal opposition and has seen its critics silenced, imprisoned or forced into exile.

Despite their lack of formal diplomatic ties — a concession Washington made to Beijing when they established relations in 1979 — the US remains Taiwan’s most important source of diplomatic support and supplier of military hardware from fighter jets to air defence systems.

Taiwan has also been investing heavily in its own defence industry, producing sophisticated missiles and submarines.

China had 14 warplanes and six navy ships operating around Taiwan on Wednesday and Thursday, with six of the aircraft crossing into Taiwan’s air defence identification zone — a tactic to test Taiwan’s defences, wear down its capabilities and intimidate the population.

So far, this has had little effect, with the vast majority of the island’s 23 million people opposing political unification with China.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Donald Trump gestures as he boards a plane

Suspect in apparent assassination bid ‘did not have line of sight to Trump’

The Titan submersible

‘All good here’ – one of last texts from Titan submersible revealed at hearing

Rupert Murdoch

Hearing that could determine future of Murdoch media empire begins in US

A man carrying an umbrella walks past fallen tree branches on a street in Shanghai, China, in the aftermath of Typhoon Bebinca

Typhoon knocks out power to some homes in Shanghai

A car drives down a road in Springfield, Ohio

Ohio city of Springfield cancels cultural festival after furore over Haitians

Sheriff vehicles near Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach, Florida

Man in court after ‘attempted assassination’ at Donald Trump’s golf club

A pipeline fire with flames shooting high into the air in La Porte, Texas

Households evacuated as pipeline explodes in Houston suburb

Dave Navarro, left, and Perry Farrell of Jane’s Addiction performing

Jane’s Addiction cancels tour in wake of onstage fracas

A destroyed bridge after recent floods in Jesenik, Czech Republic

Deadly flooding kills at least 16 people in Central Europe

The US Treasury building in Washington

US imposes sanctions on spyware firm behind tool used to spy on dissidents

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian

Iran’s president insists Tehran wants to negotiate over its nuclear programme

Israeli soldiers take up position next to buildings destroyed by the Israeli military in Gaza

Israeli airstrikes ‘kill 16 in Gaza, including four children’

French citizen Laurent Vinatier sits in a cage in a courtroom in Moscow

French citizen on trial for ‘unlawfully collecting Russian military information’

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko

Belarus president pardons 37 political prisoners

Ryan Wesley Routh takes part in a rally in central Kyiv, Ukraine, in April 2022

Trump suspect wrote book urging Iran to assassinate former US president

A hoiho or yellow-eyed penguin

Shy penguin wins New Zealand’s bird election after campaign filled with memes