BEIJING/WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - China's Commerce Ministry has condemned a $1.1-trillion
spending bill passed by the U.S. Congress last week over clauses that
limit technological purchases from the Asian giant, saying they clash
with the principles of fair trade.
The bill,
signed by President Barack Obama on Friday, included a cyber-espionage
review process for federal purchases of technology from China, a measure
incorporated last year amid growing U.S. concern over Chinese cyber
attacks.
In a weekend
statement, China's Commerce Ministry said the move "went against the
principles of fair trade" as it sought to curb purchases of Chinese
technology and export of satellites and parts to China.
"China is resolutely opposed," the ministry said in comments attributed to an unnamed official in its U.S. trade division.
"We have noted that U.S. business groups have already made noises opposing the bill. The U.S. side should correct its mistaken ways, and create good conditions for the healthy development of Sino-U.S. trade and business cooperation."
Last year's funding legislation bars U.S. space agency NASA and the
Justice and Commerce Departments from buying information technology
systems without the approval of federal law enforcement officials.
U.S. Representative Frank Wolf, the Republican chairman of the House
Appropriations Commerce-Justice-Science subcommittee, said he directed
the language to be included last year because of concerns about
potential cyber threats from Chinese firms such as Huawei Technologies
Co Ltd and ZTE Corp.
Wolf
cited a 2012 congressional intelligence report that found such firms
were closely connected to China's army, which coordinates cyber
espionage against the United States.
"A slightly modified version of this language was continued again this
year by bipartisan agreement with the Senate, and I believe it should be
maintained and expanded to all civilian federal agencies in the year
ahead," Wolf said in a statement on Friday.
U.S. curbs on foreign access to satellite technology since 1999 have
effectively banned the export, re-export or transfer of this equipment
or know-how to China.
The
restriction followed a 1996 Chinese rocket launch accident that claimed a
U.S.-manufactured satellite. In the course of the investigation, the
company was accused of inadvertently transferring restricted technology
to China.
But there were no
new curbs on satellite exports in the latest spending bill, Kevin Wolf, a
U.S. Commerce Department official, told Reuters in Washington.
"Since the late 1990s, there has been, under U.S. law, an absolute
prohibition on the export and re-export to China of all satellites and
related items," said Wolf, who is no relation to the congressman. "This
was reconfirmed in the National Defense Authorization Act of 2013."
"The Chinese have complained about it a lot over the decades - that's not new," he said on Saturday.
China and the United States have clashed repeatedly over trade issues.
(Reporting by Ben Blanchard and Norihiko Shirouzu; Additional reporting
by Doina Chiacu, Richard Cowan, David Lawder and Patricia Zengerle in
WASHINGTON; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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