In early October, the U.S. Department of Commerce issued nine sanctions, stipulating that chip companies need to obtain licenses to sell advanced chip products or technical services for artificial intelligence and supercomputers to China, and also required personnel from American

Recently, the United States has taken consecutive ruthless measures in blocking China's technology field.

In early October, the U.S. Department of Commerce issued nine sanctions, stipulating that chip companies need to obtain licenses to sell advanced chip products or technical services for artificial intelligence and supercomputers to China, and also required personnel from American semiconductor companies to stop providing services to Chinese chip companies, with the goal of obstructing China's development of advanced chips.

This is not counting. Immediately afterwards, the Federal Communications Commission (FCCh) issued an announcement on October 14 stating that the US government will prohibit the approval of the new US communication device on the grounds of national security to use products from Chinese technology companies Huawei and ZTE .

It is said that once the proposal is approved by Congress in mid-November, these Chinese companies will not be able to sell new equipment in the United States without authorization. "The Federal Communications Commission remains committed to protecting national security and ensuring that unreliable communication equipment is not authorized to be used in the United States, and this work will continue to be relentless."

The US Federal Communications Commission has been making things difficult for Chinese technology companies in recent years.

In 2019, Huawei, Hikvision and other companies will be included in the economic blacklist. In 2019, the US Congress passed a law requiring US telecom operators to replace equipment such as Huawei, , ZTE, and , and provide subsidies.

In 2020, the FCC declared that Huawei and ZTE's communication network equipment posed a threat to U.S. national security and banned U.S. companies from using the $8.3 billion government funds provided by the government to purchase these companies' equipment.

In June 2021, the FCC voted to promote the plan to ban U.S. telecom networks from using Huawei and ZTE equipment.

In March 2021, the FCC included five Chinese companies on the list of "National Security Threats" in accordance with the law promulgated in 2019 with the purpose of protecting the US telecom network, including Huawei, ZTE, HEION , Hikvision and Zhejiang Dahua Technology .

This year, the FCC included Russia's Kaspersky Laboratory, China Telecom Americas, China Mobile International (US) Co., Ltd., Pacific Network and China Unicom Americas on the blacklist of posing a threat to the U.S. national security.

In addition to curbing the development of Chinese technology companies, the United States also encourages other countries to not use China Telecom devices, and even prevents Latin American countries from using Chinese digital network devices.

It is said that the United States and EU plan to join forces in June this year to provide funds and technology to some developing countries to help countries that might have received Chinese funding and help them build network infrastructure. This is the first time the United States and Europe have cooperated in this regard. The initial project will start from Africa and Latin America and is expected to begin by the end of this year.

In this regard, China's Ministry of Commerce spokesperson Gao Feng once said that the United States generalized the concept of national security, abused the power of the state, maliciously suppressed Chinese telecommunications companies without factual basis, violated the most basic principles of non-discrimination and fair competition, violated recognized international economic and trade rules, and disrupted normal market order.

In fact, the United States' slander and smearing remarks against Chinese telecom companies are completely nonsense. China and many African countries have had many telecommunications cooperation over the years. During the cooperation process, there has never been a network security accident or monitoring surveillance.

It can be said that the United States’ suppression of China’s technology is simply possessed.

The recent U.S. Inflation Reduction Act stipulates that from next year, electric vehicles that meet subsidies must have a specific proportion of battery raw materials and parts from the United States, or from countries with a free trade agreement (FTA) with the United States, and this threshold will be raised year by year. In addition, from 2024, any battery parts from "concerned foreign entities" such as Russia and China will not be included in the subsidy scope. Starting from 2025, the key minerals inside the battery must not come from the above-mentioned foreign entities.

new law aims to reduce the dependence on Chinese battery materials. Most of the materials are generally processed in China even if they are not mined in China.According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), China accounts for about 70% of the global cathode material production and about 85% of the anode material production. China also has more than half of the world's lithium, cobalt, graphite, processing and refining production capacity. At present, it seems that it is not easy to bypass China and obtain these raw materials in the short term. (Frog in Inoue)