China sanctions 7 companies over US military assistance to Taiwan
						
		 
		
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		 [December 28, 2024]   
		BEIJING (AP) — The Chinese government placed sanctions on seven 
		companies on Friday in response to recent U.S. announcements of military 
		sales and aid to Taiwan, the self-governing island that China claims as 
		part of its territory. 
		 
		The sanctions also come in response to the recent approval of the U.S. 
		government's annual defense spending bill, which a Chinese Foreign 
		Ministry statement said “includes multiple negative sections on China.” 
		 
		China objects to American military assistance for Taiwan and often 
		imposes sanctions on related companies after a sale or aid package is 
		announced. The sanctions generally have a limited impact, because 
		American defense companies don't sell arms or other military goods to 
		China. The U.S. is the main supplier of weapons to Taiwan for its 
		defense. 
		 
		The seven companies being sanctioned are Insitu Inc., Hudson 
		Technologies Co., Saronic Technologies, Inc., Raytheon Canada, Raytheon 
		Australia, Aerkomm Inc. and Oceaneering International Inc., the Foreign 
		Ministry statement said. It said that “relevant senior executives” of 
		the companies are also sanctioned, without naming any. 
		 
		Any assets they have in China will be frozen, and organizations and 
		individuals in China are prohibited from engaging in any activity with 
		them, it said. 
  
						
		
		  
						
		 
		U.S. President Joe Biden last week authorized up to $571 million in 
		Defense Department material and services and military education and 
		training for Taiwan. Separately, the Defense Department announced that 
		$295 million in military sales had been approved. 
		 
		
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            The American and Chinese flags wave at Genting Snow Park, Feb. 2, 
			2022, in Zhangjiakou, China. (AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato, File) 
            
			  The U.S. defense bill boosts 
			military spending to $895 billion and directs resources toward a 
			more confrontational approach to China. It establishes a fund that 
			could be used to send military resources to Taiwan in much the same 
			way that the U.S. has backed Ukraine. It also expands a ban on U.S. 
			military purchases of Chinese products ranging from drone technology 
			to garlic for military commissaries. 
			 
			Zhang Xiaogang, a Chinese Defense Ministry spokesperson, said 
			earlier this week that the U.S. is hyping up the “so-called” threat 
			from China to justify increased military spending. 
			 
			“U.S. military spending has topped the world and keeps increasing 
			every year,” he said at a press conference. "This fully exposes the 
			belligerent nature of the U.S. and its obsession with hegemony and 
			expansion.” 
			 
			The Foreign Ministry statement said the U.S. moves violate 
			agreements between the two countries on Taiwan, interfere in China’s 
			domestic affairs and undermine the nation's sovereignty and 
			territorial integrity. 
			 
			Taiwan's government said earlier this month that China had sent 
			dozens of ships into nearby seas to practice a blockade of the 
			island, a move that Taiwan said undermined peace and stability and 
			disrupted international shipping and trade. China has not confirmed 
			or commented on the reported military activity. 
			
			
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