The addition of these companies to the list, which now encompasses 188 entities, potentially restricts their ability to conduct business with U.S. partners. Baidu and Alibaba have both publicly contested the designation, characterizing the claims as baseless and pledging to pursue legal avenues to reverse their inclusion. Baidu specifically stated that no credible justification exists for labeling it a military-linked firm.
In section Startups & Technology
Pentagon Expands Blacklist of Chinese Tech Giants
The U.S. Department of Defense has officially designated Alibaba, Baidu, BYD, and robotics developer Unitree as entities supporting the Chinese military. This expansion of the 1260H list intensifies the regulatory pressure on major Chinese corporations and deepens existing friction between Washington and Beijing over industrial policy and national security.

This update follows a period of heightened trade hostility, marked by aggressive tariff policies and proposals to potentially acquire equity stakes in Chinese artificial intelligence leaders. The list, mandated by the 2021 National Defense Authorization Act, has become a primary instrument for monitoring the intersection of Chinese commercial technology and military capabilities. The automotive sector faces particularly heavy scrutiny in this latest round, with electric vehicle manufacturers Nio and BYD joining battery producers like CALB Group and EVE Energy under the Pentagon's watch. Lidar technology firms, including RoboSense, were also integrated into the registry, signaling a broad effort to constrain China’s technological advancements across autonomous systems and AI.
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