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    Home»Tech»China Cracks Down: Beijing Blacklists U.S. Defense Firms and Chip Researchers Over Huawei Exposé
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    China Cracks Down: Beijing Blacklists U.S. Defense Firms and Chip Researchers Over Huawei Exposé

    Updated:December 25, 20253 Mins Read
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    China Cracks Down: Beijing Blacklists U.S. Defense Firms and Chip Researchers Over Huawei Exposé
    China Cracks Down: Beijing Blacklists U.S. Defense Firms and Chip Researchers Over Huawei Exposé
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    The Chinese government has escalated its trade retaliation by placing several U.S. defense contractors and cybersecurity researchers on a blacklist after they exposed alleged hidden foreign components in Huawei’s AI chips. The blacklist includes aerospace and anti-drone firms such as Alliant Techsystems, DZYNE Technologies, Dedrone (by Axon) and Epirus, and defense suppliers linked with Taiwan like AeroVironment. In parallel, Beijing added Canadian semiconductor analysis firm TechInsights to its “Unreliable Entity List,” specifically citing its tear-down reports that identified chips from TSMC, Samsung, and SK Hynix inside Huawei’s Ascend processors. China is barring domestic actors from cooperating with these blacklisted entities, effectively cutting off Chinese market access. The move signals Beijing’s aggressive posture in the intensifying tech rivalry with the U.S. and its efforts to shield Huawei from foreign scrutiny.

    Sources: Epoch Times, Bloomberg

    Key Takeaways

    – China’s blacklisting of defense contractors and cybersecurity researchers is a direct retaliation for exposing Huawei’s reliance on non-Chinese chip components.

    – The addition of TechInsights to China’s “Unreliable Entity List” underscores Beijing’s resolve to control narratives about semiconductor supply chains.

    – The dual offensive—targeting both defense firms and analysts—reflects China’s strategy to deter both technological rivalry and external scrutiny of its flagship firms.

    In-Depth

    In a bold move signaling a new phase in the technological rivalry between the United States and China, the Chinese government has blacklisted a range of defense firms and cybersecurity researchers for exposing alleged secrets in Huawei’s chip supply chain. On October 9, Beijing announced that it had placed nearly a dozen firms, many rooted in aerospace or anti-drone technologies, on a blacklist for cooperating with Taiwan or engaging in analysis deemed harmful to Chinese national interests. At the same time, the Ministry of Commerce added Canadian chip analysis firm TechInsights to its “Unreliable Entity List,” cutting off domestic access to the firm’s proprietary data and forbidding Chinese parties from transmitting sensitive information.

    This dual approach reflects Beijing’s message: exposing internal tech dependencies is now a punishable act. The firms implicated include Alliant Techsystems, DZYNE Technologies, Dedrone (by Axon), Epirus, and AeroVironment—some of which have worked in U.S. defense or drone sectors and others with links to Taiwanese contracts. The common thread is that they either challenged Chinese technological claims or provided scrutiny that embarrassed Beijing’s narrative of self-reliance. In the case of TechInsights, the firm’s teardown reports alleged that Huawei’s AI chip, the Ascend 910B, employed advanced manufacturing from TSMC, Samsung, and SK Hynix—raising questions about whether Huawei complied with U.S. export curbs.

    China’s response is to sever cooperation: domestic entities are now forbidden from sharing data, engaging in transactions, or otherwise working with these blacklisted firms. The ramifications are wide. For the defense firms, the blacklist limits their ability to engage in the Chinese market—but the more lasting impact may be chilling effects across tech analysis, export verification, and third-party audits. For researchers and audit firms, the move increases risk: exposing technological truths now carries consequences beyond reputational backlash.

    Viewed in the broader context of escalating tensions over semiconductors, national security, and trade, Beijing’s action is a clear signal that it will deploy economic and legal levers to defend its tech champions and deter exposure. It also raises questions about how supply chain transparency, export enforcement, and conflicting narratives will shape future diplomacy between leading powers.

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