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The order is aimed at preventing American capital and expertise from helping China develop technologies that could support its military modernization and undermine U.S. national security. The White House said Biden consulted allies on the plan and incorporated feedback from Group of Seven nations. "Today the United States is taking a strategic first step to ensure American investment does not go to fund Chinese military advancement." Last year, total U.S.-based venture-capital investment in China plummeted to $9.7 billion from $32.9 billion in 2021, according to PitchBook data. The restrictions will hurt both Chinese and American businesses, interfere with normal cooperation and reduce investor confidence in the U.S., he said.
Persons: Joe Biden, Elizabeth Frantz, Biden, Chuck Schumer, Marco Rubio, Emily Benson, David Shepardson, Andrea Shalal, Stephen Nellis, Max Cherney, Krystal Hu, Karen Freifeld, Idrees Ali, Lincoln, Jonathan Oatis, Cynthia Osterman Organizations: White, REUTERS, Wednesday, U.S, Treasury, Biden, Seven, Democratic, Republicans, REPUBLICAN, The Semiconductor Industry Association, Center for Strategic, International Studies, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, WASHINGTON, China, U.S, Japan, Netherlands, United States, Washington
REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz/File PhotoNEW YORK/WASHINGTON, Aug 9 (Reuters) - President Joe Biden on Wednesday signed an executive order that will narrowly prohibit certain U.S. investments in sensitive technology in China and require government notification of funding in other tech sectors. The long-awaited order authorizes the U.S. Treasury secretary to prohibit or restrict certain U.S. investments in Chinese entities in three sectors: semiconductors and microelectronics, quantum information technologies, and certain artificial intelligence systems. Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer praised Biden's order, saying "for too long, American money has helped fuel the Chinese military’s rise. Today the United States is taking a strategic first step to ensure American investment does not go to fund Chinese military advancement." Most investments captured by the order will require the government be notified about them.
Persons: Joe Biden, Elizabeth Frantz, Biden, Chuck Schumer, Biden's, Emily Benson, Benson, David Shepardson, Andrea Shalal, Karen Freifeld, Idrees Ali, Lincoln, Jonathan Oatis Organizations: White, REUTERS, Wednesday, U.S, Treasury, Democratic, Embassy, Reuters, Group, U.S . Department of Commerce, Center for Strategic, International Studies, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, WASHINGTON, China, United States, U.S, Washington, States
A central processing unit (CPU) semiconductor chip is displayed among flags of China and U.S., in this illustration picture taken February 17, 2023. Following are some key details:'COUNTRIES OF CONCERN'The order lays out the intention to regulate investments in certain "countries of concern," with a separate annex naming China, Hong Kong and Macau, as the initial targets. Administration officials insisted the proposed rule would require notification of many investments while prohibiting a few. The rules will not be retroactive, applying only to future investments, an administration official said. RULEMAKING PROCESSBiden's executive order authorizes the U.S. Treasury Department to regulate certain U.S. investments.
Persons: Florence Lo, Joe Biden, Janet Yellen, Andrea Shalal, Karen Freifeld, David Shepardson, Jonathan Oatis Organizations: REUTERS, Wednesday, U.S . Treasury Department, Reuters, Administration, China, Treasury, European Union, Thomson Locations: China, U.S, Hong Kong, Macau, Beijing, Britain
REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz/File PhotoNEW YORK/WASHINGTON, Aug 8 (Reuters) - The White House on Wednesday will detail its plans to prohibit some U.S. investments in sensitive technology in China, and require that the government be notified of other investments, a senior government source told Reuters. Reuters reported on Friday that President Joe Biden was expected to soon issue the long-awaited executive order to screen outbound investments in sensitive technologies to China this week. The administration is expected to target active investment such as U.S. private equity, venture capital and joint venture investments in China in semiconductors, quantum computing and artificial intelligence. Most investments captured by the order will require that the government be notified about them, sources have said. The details are still a work in progress, but it is unlikely to cover passive or securities investments, the person said.
Persons: Joe Biden, Elizabeth Frantz, Biden, Jake Sullivan, Gina Raimondo, Emily Benson, Benson, David Shepardson, Karen Freifeld, Lincoln, Jonathan Oatis Organizations: White, REUTERS, Reuters, National, . Commerce, The New York Times, U.S . Department of Commerce, Center for Strategic, International Studies, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, WASHINGTON, China, U.S, Beijing, United States
U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks on access to mental health care in the East Room of the White House in Washington, U.S., July 25, 2023. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz/File PhotoNEW YORK/WASHINGTON, Aug 8 (Reuters) - The White House on Wednesday will detail its plans to prohibit some U.S. investments in sensitive technology in China, and require that the government be notified of other investments, a senior government source told Reuters. Reuters reported on Friday that President Joe Biden was expected to soon issue a the long-awaited executive order to screen outbound investments in sensitive technologies to China this week. The White House declined to comment on Tuesday. Most investments captured by the order will require that the government be notified about them, sources have said.
Persons: Joe Biden, Elizabeth Frantz, Biden, Jake Sullivan, Gina Raimondo, Emily Benson, Benson, David Shepardson, Karen Freifeld, Lincoln Organizations: White, REUTERS, Reuters, National, . Commerce, The New York Times, U.S . Department of Commerce, Center for Strategic, International Studies, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, WASHINGTON, China, U.S, Beijing, United States
A central processing unit (CPU) semiconductor chip is displayed among flags of China and U.S., in this illustration picture taken February 17, 2023. Following are some key details:'COUNTRIES OF CONCERN'The order lays out plans to regulate investments in certain "countries of concern," with a separate annex naming China, Hong Kong and Macau as initial targets. The outbound investment program would require notification of many investments while prohibiting only a few. It was considering requiring notification for investments in firms working on the design, fabrication, and packaging of less advanced integrated circuits. U.S. investments in Chinese production of quantum computers, development of certain quantum sensors, and quantum networking and communication systems could also be banned.
Persons: Florence Lo, Joe Biden, Janet Yellen, Andrea Shalal, Karen Freifeld, David Shepardson, Jonathan Oatis, Matthew Lewis Organizations: REUTERS, Wednesday, U.S . Treasury Department, Reuters, China, United, Treasury, European Union, Thomson Locations: China, U.S, Hong Kong, Macau, United States, Beijing, Washington, Britain, New York
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File PhotoAug 4 (Reuters) - President Joe Biden is expected to issue his long-awaited executive order to screen outbound investments in sensitive technologies to China early next week, according to people familiar with the matter. The order is expected to target U.S. private equity, venture capital and joint venture investments in China in semiconductors, quantum computing and artificial intelligence. Most investments captured by the order will require that the government be notified about them. The regulations are not expected to take effect right away and the administration will solicit comment on its proposals, according to sources. Sources have told Reuters the investments that will be restricted are expected to track export control rules for China issued by the U.S. Department of Commerce in October.
Persons: Joe Biden, Jonathan Ernst, Cordell Hull, Janet Yellen's, Laura Black, Emily Kilcrease, Karen Freifeld, Anna Driver Organizations: Auburn Manufacturing, REUTERS, U.S . Commerce Department, U.S, Foreign Investment, Reuters, U.S . Department of Commerce, Thomson Locations: U.S, Auburn , Maine, China, Yellen, United States
Former U.S. President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally in Erie, Pennsylvania, U.S., July 29, 2023. Less than two hours after news of the charges broke, Trump's campaign blasted out an email to supporters seeking donations, titled: BREAKING: PRESIDENT TRUMP INDICTED. In the week following the indictment, the campaign sent out 34 fundraising emails directly referencing the criminal charges, according to a Reuters review of campaign communications. Following the indictment, Trump's support rose to 49% in an April 21-24 survey while DeSantis slipped to 23%. He raised much less money in the days after his second indictment, according to campaign finance disclosures.
Persons: Donald Trump, Lindsay DeDario, Ron DeSantis, Trump, speechwriters Ross Worthington, Vince Haley, Haley didn't, grapples, Attorney Alvin Bragg, TRUMP, Chris Jackson, DeSantis, Bragg, DANIELS, reimbursements, Michael Cohen, Stormy Daniels, reimbursing Cohen, Daniels, Trump's, Adam Geller, Republican pollster, Geller, Nathan Layne, Karen Freifeld, Tim Reid, Jason Lange, Ross Colvin, Pravin Organizations: U.S, Republican, REUTERS, White, Conservative Political, Trump, Reuters, Worthington, Manhattan, Attorney, Republicans, Prosecutors, Manhattan District, Thomson Locations: Erie , Pennsylvania, U.S, Maryland, York, Georgia, East Palestine , Ohio, Florida, Manhattan, Miami, Bedminster , New Jersey
July 28 (Reuters) - Here is a list of legal troubles facing former U.S. President Donald Trump, the front-runner for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination. Trump said his attorneys met on Thursday with U.S. Justice Department officials, in a sign charges could come soon. Trump said on his Truth Social platform that the Department of Justice had not told his attorneys when action was likely. Officials have testified that during his final months in office, Trump pressured them with false voter fraud claims. Legal experts said Trump may have violated at least three Georgia criminal laws: conspiracy to commit election fraud, criminal solicitation to commit election fraud and intentional interference with performance of election duties.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, JAN, General Merrick Garland, Trump's, Smith, Walt Nauta, Carlos De Oliveira, De Oliveira, Fani Willis, Brad Raffensperger, Michael Cohen, Stormy Daniels, Daniels, reimbursing Cohen, Cohen, Jean Carroll, Carroll, Letitia James, James, Donald Jr, Eric, Joseph Ax, Luc Cohen, Karen Freifeld, Susan Heavey, Sarah N, Lynch, Jonathan Stempel, Jacqueline Thomsen, Noeleen Walder, Howard Goller, Daniel Wallis Organizations: CAPITOL, U.S, Capitol, U.S . Justice Department, Department of Justice, White, Trump, Prosecutors, Republican Georgia, U.S . Constitution, Trump's, CNN, NEW, GENERAL, New York, Trump Organization, Thomson Locations: Miami, Lago Florida, New Jersey, GEORGIA, Fulton County, Georgia, U.S ., York, Manhattan, Lago, Florida, New York
There's no need to identify the country, all you need to do is control the item," a Japanese industry ministry official told Reuters. Two of them, deposition machinery maker Kokusai Electric and Japan's leading chip tool maker Tokyo Electron (8035.T), said they expect Japan's controls to have a limited business impact. COORDINATIONDovetailing Japan's controls with those of the U.S. and the Netherlands will require close coordination. He has met with Japanese trade officials and believes Tokyo is committed to curbing certain exports. Tokyo remains worried that targeting China will provoke damaging retaliation, such as a ban on Japanese electric cars, a third Japanese industry official said.
Persons: Emily Benson, Kevin Wolf, Jim Lewis, Lewis, Joe Biden's administrationis, Tim Kelly Karen Freifeld, Kentaro Sugiyama, Toby Sterling, Yoshifumi, Lincoln Organizations: TOKYO, Reuters, Center, Strategic, International Studies, Tokyo, Advantest Corp, Nikon Corp, Canon Inc, Screen Holdings, U.S . State Department and Commerce Department, Center for Strategic, U.S, U.S . Commerce Department, Thomson Locations: Tokyo, Beijing, Japan, U.S, China, backdown, Washington, Netherlands, Amsterdam
Companies Trump Organization Inc FollowWASHINGTON, July 21 (Reuters) - Donald Trump's onetime lawyer and fixer Michael Cohen is expected to settle his lawsuit against the Trump Organization over missed reimbursements of legal fees and costs, a person familiar with the matter told Reuters on Friday. Cohen originally sued in March 2019 to recoup $1.9 million in fees, plus $1.9 million he was ordered to forfeit in a criminal case. The fees kept growing, and the Trump Organization has paid some of them, court papers show. The New York Times reported the proposed settlement earlier on Friday. Cohen, a longtime employee of the firm and of Trump, became a critic of the former president and testified that Trump had directed him to break the law.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Michael Cohen, Cohen, Trump, Karen Freifield, Katharine Jackson, Ismail Shakil, Kanishka Singh, Doina Organizations: Companies Trump Organization Inc, WASHINGTON, Trump Organization, Reuters, New York Times, Times, Trump, Thomson Locations: Trump, Russia
Companies Trump Organization Inc FollowWASHINGTON/NEW YORK, July 21 (Reuters) - Michael Cohen, the onetime personal lawyer and fixer for Donald Trump, has settled his lawsuit accusing the Trump Organization of failing to cover millions of dollars of legal bills he incurred over his work for the former U.S. president. Cohen and a lawyer for the Trump Organization issued statements that the matter "has been resolved in a manner satisfactory to all parties." Once a strong supporter of Trump, Cohen is now a vocal critic, whose 2020 memoir "Disloyal" was a New York Times bestseller. He claimed that the Trump Organization reneged on its agreement to paying his bills after he began cooperating with several probes into his work for the former president. Despite Friday's settlement, Cohen is expected to be a star prosecution witness against Trump in a criminal trial next March.
Persons: Michael Cohen, Donald Trump, Cohen, Trump, Stormy Daniels, Democrat Joe Biden, Karen Freifeld, Katharine Jackson, Ismail Shakil, Jonathan Stempel, Kanishka Singh, Doina Chiacu, Daniel Wallis, Sharon Singleton Organizations: Companies Trump Organization Inc, WASHINGTON, Trump Organization, Trump, New York Times, Republican, White, Democrat, Washington , D.C, Thomson Locations: New York, Manhattan, Florida, Washington ,
July 19 (Reuters) - A U.S. judge on Wednesday denied Donald Trump's bid to move from New York state court to federal court the criminal case against the former U.S. president stemming from a hush money payment to a porn star. Trump, the front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination in 2024, had argued the case belonged in federal court, claiming that the indictment related to his 2016 presidency and involved federal election law. U.S. District Judge Alvin Hellerstein in Manhattan bought none of his arguments. "The evidence overwhelmingly suggests that the matter was purely a personal item of the President -- a cover-up of an embarrassing event," Hellerstein wrote in a 25-page decision. In the hush-money case, Justice Juan Merchan of New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan has set a trial for March 2024.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Trump, reimbursements, Michael Cohen, Stormy Daniels, Alvin Hellerstein, Hellerstein, E, Jean Carroll, Juan Merchan, District Judge Hellerstein, Daniels, Stephanie Clifford, Karen Freifeld, Chris Reese, Leslie Adler, Jonathan Oatis Organizations: Republican, U.S, Trump, New York, Court, District, Thomson Locations: U.S, New York, Manhattan, New, York
WASHINGTON, July 18 (Reuters) - The U.S. Commerce Department on Tuesday added two European-based surveillance firms to its economic trade blacklist as part of the Biden administration's efforts to counter the misuse of commercial spyware. The department added Cytrox, a Hungary-based surveillance company and Greek firm Intellexa, another cyber-surveillance firm and two related entities in Ireland and Macedonia. Attempts to reach representatives from Cytrox and Intellexa were not immediately successful. The journalist's allegation came as the European Union (EU) was beginning to follow the United States in taking a harder look at spyware merchants and the use of powerful surveillance software. Reuters reported in 2020 that Intellexa was working with intelligence agencies in Southeast Asia and Europe.
Persons: Biden, Intellexa, Tal Dilian, Cytrox, Jarrett Renshaw, David Shepardson, Karen Freifeld, Raphael Satter, Christopher Bing, Doina Chiacu, Alexandra Hudson Organizations: U.S . Commerce Department, Reuters, Intellexa, The Commerce Department, European Union, Alexandra Hudson Our, Thomson Locations: Hungary, Ireland, Macedonia, Cytrox, Greece, United States, Southeast Asia, Europe
July 17 (Reuters) - The U.S.-based Semiconductor Industry Association trade group on Monday called on the Biden administration to "refrain from further restrictions" on chip sales to China as chief executives from the biggest U.S. semiconductor firms planned to visit Washington this week to press their views on China policy. The statement came as the Biden administration considers updating a sweeping set of rules imposed in October to hobble China's chip industry and a new executive order restricting some outbound investment. Reuters reported last week that the chief executives of Intel Corp (INTC.O) and Qualcomm Inc (QCOM.O) planned to meet with government officials to discuss their views on China policy. The statement also comes after China moved to restrict exports of raw materials such as gallium and germanium that are used in making chips. The industry group said that further rule-tightening by U.S. officials risks "disrupting supply chains, causing significant market uncertainty, and prompting continued escalatory retaliation by China."
Persons: Biden, hobble, Stephen Nellis, Karen Freifeld, Nick Zieminski Organizations: Semiconductor Industry Association, Reuters, Intel Corp, Qualcomm Inc, U.S, Thomson Locations: U.S, China, Washington, San Francisco, New York
The executives plan to hold meetings with U.S. officials to talk about market conditions, export controls and other matters affecting their businesses, one of the sources said. Intel and Qualcomm declined to comment, and officials at the White House did not immediately return a request for comment. The sources said other semiconductor CEOs may also be in Washington next week. The chip industry has been warmly received in Washington in recent years as lawmakers and the White House work to shift more production to the U.S. and its allies, and away from China. Many U.S. chip firms get more than one-fifth of their revenue from China, and industry executives have argued that reducing those sales would cut into profits that they reinvest into research and development.
Persons: Arnd, Biden, Pat Gelsinger, Cristiano Amon, Andrea Shalal, Stephen Nellis, Karen Freifeld, Chris Sanders, Edmund Klamann Organizations: Intel Corporation, REUTERS, Intel Corp, Qualcomm Inc, Intel, Qualcomm, White, Huawei Technologies Co, Reuters, Huawei, Nvidia, Nvidia Corp, Thomson Locations: Davos, Switzerland, Washington, China, U.S, Beijing, Many U.S, San Francisco, New York
July 14 (Reuters) - Two U.S. senators are pursuing a legislative plan to track U.S. investments in China, as the White House works to complete long-awaited action that would also restrict investment in certain, highly targeted sectors. The Biden administration, meanwhile, is finalizing an executive order that would also restrict certain investment in sectors including advanced semiconductors, quantum computing and artificial intelligence. A senior administration official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the aim was to wrap up legal and other reviews of the outbound investment order by Labor Day. Reuters reported in February that the proposed order was likely to track restrictions on artificial intelligence chips, chipmaking tools and supercomputers, among other technologies, imposed on exports to China in October. The senators' proposed legislation was filed as an amendment to the annual National Defense Authorization Act.
Persons: Bob Casey, Republican John Cornyn, Casey, Biden, Janet Yellen, Joe Biden, Karen Freifeld, Andrea Shalal, Susan Heavey Organizations: White, Democratic, Republican, Labor, Treasury, Reuters, National Defense, U.S . House, Republicans, Thomson Locations: China
REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann/File PhotoJuly 14 (Reuters) - The chief executives of Intel Corp (INTC.O) and Qualcomm Inc (QCOM.O) are planning to visit Washington next week to discuss China policy, according to two sources familiar with the matter. The executives plan to hold meetings with U.S. officials to talk about market conditions, export controls and other matters affecting their businesses, one of the sources said. Intel and Qualcomm declined to comment, and officials at the White House did not immediately return a request for comment. The sources said other semiconductor CEOs may also be in Washington next week. U.S. officials are considering tightening export rules affecting high-performance computing chips and shipments to Huawei Technologies Co Ltd, sources told Reuters in June.
Persons: Arnd, Biden, Andrea Shalal, Stephen Nellis, Karen Freifeld, Edmund Klamann Organizations: Intel Corporation, REUTERS, Intel Corp, Qualcomm Inc, Intel, Qualcomm, White, Huawei Technologies Co, Reuters, Huawei, Nvidia, Thomson Locations: Davos, Switzerland, Washington, China, U.S, San Francisco, New York
ASML said in March it expects the Dutch regulations to affect its TWINSCAN NXT:2000i and more sophisticated models. But the company's older DUV models, like one called the TWINSCAN NXT:1980Di, could also be kept from about six Chinese facilities by the U.S. The new Dutch regulations will not take effect immediately, sources said, with one person expecting the effective date to be September, two months after publication. ASML is Europe's largest chip equipment company due to its dominance in lithography, one of the central steps in the computer chip making process. Other companies that could be impacted by the new Dutch rules include atomic layer deposition firm ASM International.
Persons: Liu Pengyu, ASML, Karen Freifeld, Toby Sterling, Anna Driver, Stephen Coates Organizations: . Commerce Department, Lam Research, Materials, Embassy, Nikon Corp, Tokyo Electron, U.S, SMIC, International, Thomson Locations: United States, Netherlands, U.S, China, Washington, Japan, ASML'S, Almere, Amsterdam
The Wall Street Journal on Tuesday reported that the Biden administration was considering new restrictions on exporting AI chips to China. The possible rule tightening would hardest hit Nvidia, whose strong position in the AI chip market helped make it worth $1 trillion earlier this year. The current rule around AI chips involves two restrictions. One restriction focuses on how fast chips can communicate with each other, which is important because AI systems such as ChatGPT require thousands of chips to be chained together. The other restriction focuses on how much computing power the chip can have.
Persons: Florence Lo, Biden, Colette Kress, Nvidia's Kress, Stephen Nellis, Karen Freifeld, Kenneth Li, Chris Sanders, Nick Zieminski Organizations: REUTERS, U.S . Commerce, Nvidia, Nvidia Corp, Devices Inc, Intel Corp, Reuters, Tencent Holdings, Intel, AMD, Thomson Locations: of China, U.S, China, HK, San Francisco, New York
June 27 (Reuters) - Donald Trump's lawyers will ask a U.S. federal judge on Tuesday to transfer from state court a criminal case accusing the former president of falsifying business records tied to a hush money payment to a porn star. Trump asserts that federal court is the proper venue for the case, arguing that his actions were related to the presidency, that the charges involve federal election law, and that he is immune from state prosecution. The Manhattan District Attorney's office, which brought the case, says the conduct had nothing to do with Trump's duties as president. Federal election law does not preempt state regulation of fraud, the prosecution says, and Trump is not immune from state prosecution because his actions involved no official duty. Should the case remain in state court, it is scheduled for trial in March.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Trump, reimbursements, Michael Cohen, Stormy Daniels, Daniels, Stephanie Clifford, Alvin Hellerstein, Cohen, reimbursing Cohen, Karen Freifeld, Howard Goller Organizations: Trump, Manhattan District, Thomson Locations: Manhattan, U.S
Companies Trump Organization Inc FollowJune 20 (Reuters) - Donald Trump's bid to oust the judge overseeing the criminal case against him over a hush-money payment to a porn star should be rejected, the Manhattan District Attorney's office said in a filing on Tuesday. Trump has a "history of baselessly accusing state and federal judges around the country of bias," prosecutors wrote in opposing Trump's motion for New York state Justice Juan Merchan to remove himself from the case. Prosecutors said the payment was meant to buy her silence about a sexual encounter she claims she had with Trump. They also said "at no point" did Merchan "induce" Weisselberg to cooperate against Trump. Finally, prosecutors said, Trump's history of attacking courts and judges, "makes clear that this motion is based on tactics, not ethics."
Persons: Donald Trump's, Trump, Juan Merchan, Merchan, Allen Weisselberg, Stormy Daniels, Prosecutors, Merchan's recusal, Joe Biden, Karen Freifeld, Cynthia Osterman Organizations: Companies Trump Organization, Manhattan District, Republican, Trump Organization, Trump, Democrats, Thomson Locations: New York
But his defense team is still evolving after at least three key members left in recent weeks. Trump has also sought to add a Florida-based criminal defense lawyer to his team in the days since his indictment, according to sources familiar with the conversations. Kise, a former Florida solicitor general who has primarily handled civil cases, was brought on to Trump’s team last year after the FBI seized classified documents kept at Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate. Trump has struggled in recent weeks to bolster his defense team as the documents investigation intensified. The day the indictment was unsealed, the pair abruptly announced their resignation from Trump’s legal team.
Persons: Donald Trump, Todd Blanche, Chris Kise, Jim, John Rowley –, Blanche, Kise, Trump, Lindsey Halligan, Rowley, Evan Corcoran, Halligan, Tim Parlatore, Boris Epshteyn, Parlatore, Epshteyn, Trump’s, Andrew Goudsward, Sarah N, Lynch, Jacqueline Thomsen, Karen Freifeld, David Bario, Alistair Bell Organizations: Trump, FBI, Trump's, New, Reuters, U.S . Justice Department, CNN, Epshteyn, Thomson Locations: Miami, Florida, Lago, New York, Manhattan, Epshteyn, Washington
June 12 (Reuters) - The Biden administration on Monday added 43 entities to an export control list, including Frontier Services Group Ltd, a security and aviation company previously run by Erik Prince, for training Chinese military pilots and other activities that threaten U.S. national security. The Test Flying Academy of South Africa, a flight school under scrutiny by authorities in Britain for recruiting British ex-military pilots to train Chinese military fliers, was also added to the U.S. Commerce Department's Entity List. The aviation-related companies were listed for providing training to Chinese military pilots using Western and NATO sources, according to a rule posted for the Federal Register. Thirty-one Chinese entities in total were added to the list, some for acquiring U.S.-origin items in support of China's military modernization, such as hypersonic weapons development. Nine Chinese and Pakistani companies were added based on their contributions to Pakistan’s ballistic missile program and other weapons contributions.
Persons: Biden, Erik Prince, Prince, Karen Freifeld, Chris Sanders, Alistair Bell Organizations: Frontier Services Group Ltd, Flying Academy of South, U.S . Commerce, Frontier Services Group, United, United Arab Emirates, Federal Register, U.S, Shanghai Supercomputing Technology, Solutions, Thomson Locations: U.S, Flying Academy of South Africa, Britain, China, Kenya, Laos, United Arab Emirates, South Africa, United Kingdom, Xinjiang, China's, Latvia
Trump mishandled classified documents that included information about the secretive U.S. nuclear program and potential domestic vulnerabilities in the event of an attack, the federal indictment said. Unauthorized disclosure of classified documents posed a risk to U.S. national security, foreign relations, and intelligence gathering, prosecutors said. Former U.S. President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump attends a campaign event in Manchester, New Hampshire, U.S., April 27, 2023. The indictment also alleges Trump conspired with Nauta to keep classified documents Trump had taken from the White House and hide them from a federal grand jury. The case does not prevent Trump from campaigning or taking office if he were to win the November 2024 presidential election.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, John Rowley, Jim, Walt Nauta, Jack Smith, Smith, General Merrick Garland, Trump’s, Matt Bennett, Joe Biden, Biden, Brian Snyder, Lago, Nauta, Aileen Cannon, Cannon, Sarah N, Lynch, Jonathan Stempel, Jack Queen, Jacqueline Thomsen, Karen Freifeld, Nathan Layne, Heather Timmons, Nandita Bose, Andy Sullivan, Noeleen Walder, Howard Goller Organizations: U.S, White House, The Justice Department, Trump, Republican, Reuters, Democratic, Former U.S, REUTERS, White, Mar, Pentagon, CIA, National Security Agency, Department of Energy, Prosecutors, Defense Department, FBI, TRUMP, AS, Democrat, Biden, Thomson Locations: Lago, Florida, Miami, United States, U.S, Former, Manchester , New Hampshire, New Jersey, Mar, New York, Georgia
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