China is infiltrating US space industry with
investments
Recent actions by China illuminate growing concerns
regarding their influence in the technology industry and the national security
implications for the U.S. Echoed by reports from the national security community
regarding Chinese investments in U.S. emerging and critical technologies,
concerns indicate the political landscape is shifting towards a more aggressive
posture with respect to China. Increasingly, U.S. policymakers are dedicating
attention and resources to this issue, creating a rift between regulators and
industry that the space industry will not be immune from.
The most recent
act of Chinese aggression, announced last week by the U.S. Department of
Justice, charged hackers who allegedly stole data from over 45 technology
companies and government agencies, including NASA.
Months of trade
tensions between the U.S. and China culminated in a 90-day standstill agreement
struck between President Trump and People's Republic of China's Xi Jinping at
the 2018 G-20 Summit in December. But even with the temporary truce, the U.S. is
unafraid to show strength, as was the case in the arrest of Huawei CFO Meng
Wanzhou earlier this month.
Huawei has played a major role in China's
strategy for global telecommunications supremacy and is considered a national
security risk by U.S. officials. Beijing has undertaken a similarly aggressive
approach in the space industry, actions that could eventually prompt equally
confrontational responses from U.S. officials.
China's interactions with
the U.S. space industry include commercial investment in U.S. startups, civil
and commercial competition, and hostile cyberattacks. On Dec. 6, Boeing
announced that it would be canceling a satellite order with Global IP, a Los
Angeles-based startup, following The Wall Street Journal investigation that shed
light on a $200 million investment by a Chinese company into the startup. Boeing
acted swiftly once the report was released, citing payment concerns as the
primary reason for abandoning the project.
While Global IP is the most
recent U.S.-based space company caught in between the two rival powers, it is
not the only one. China's Tencent Holdings has invested in Moon Express, a
commercial lunar exploration company. Moon Express has worked closely with NASA,
a relationship that recently paid off when NASA announced that it had been
selected for the agency's new Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS), a
program that partners with commercial entities on delivering payloads to the
Moon.
Tencent Holdings has also invested in U.S.-based Planetary
Resources and World View Enterprises. Similarly, in March 2018 Shenzhen-based
Kuang-Chi initiated a "commercial partnership" with U.S.-based Nanoracks on a
helium fueled spacecraft.
In January, a Defense Department white paper
assessed the economic and national security implications of China's investments
in the U.S. tech industry and expressed concerns about the U.S.'s ability to
respond effectively. The report stated that "Chinese participation in
venture-backed startups is at a record level of 10-16% of all venture deals
(2015-2017)."
Tensions between the U.S. and China over tech have also led
to recent Department of Commerce and Treasury regulations devised to monitor and
deter foreign investment and restrict the flow of high-tech exports across
borders. In October, Vice President Mike Pence referenced China's influence in
U.S. technology as a key concern during remarks on the administration's China
policy at Hudson Institute.
Chinese access points into the U.S. space
industry do not end with investments and commercial partnerships. In 2018,
China-based hackers infiltrated U.S. defense contractors, satellite operators,
and telecommunications companies, infecting satellite operating systems that
controlled positioning and data transfers. A similar attack in 2014 hacked U.S.
satellite weather systems.
China's space ambitions fit in well with
their broader goal of becoming a global technology leader. Earlier this month
the country launched its Chang'e-4 spacecraft with the intention of becoming the
first nation to land on the far side of the Moon. China is also building up its
Beidou system, a satellite network that recently launched its 42nd and 43rd
satellites. With Beidou, China intends to compete globally with the U.S. GPS
system. Beijing has a number of other space-related goals on its agenda that
will require advanced technologies in areas such as launch vehicles and
robotics.
China is flexing its financial muscle to become a global
technology leader, resulting in increased attention from U.S. policymakers. In
the wake of The Wall Street Journal investigation into Global IP and the fallout
that has resulted from the recent arrest of Huawei Technologies' CFO, U.S. space
companies should be cautious about their interactions with China. And
participating, when appropriate, in policy conversations regarding the future of
U.S.-Sino relations couldn't hurt.
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