WASHINGTON — The Trump administration may have softened its language on China to maintain a fragile truce in their trade war, but Congress is charging ahead with more restrictions in a defense authorization bill that would deny Beijing investments in highly sensitive sectors and reduce U.S. reliance on Chinese biotechnology companies.
Included in the 3,000-page bill approved Wednesday by the House is a provision to scrutinize American investments in China that could help develop technologies to boost Chinese military power. The bill, which next heads to the Senate, also would prohibit government money to be used for equipment and services from blacklisted Chinese biotechnology companies.
In addition, the National Defense Authorization Act would boost U.S. support for the self-governing island of Taiwan that Beijing claims as its own and says it will take by force if necessary.
''Taken together, these measures reflect a serious, strategic approach to countering the Chinese Communist Party,'' said Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, the top Democrat on the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party. He said the approach ''stands in stark contrast to the White House's recent actions.''
Congress moves for harsher line toward China
The compromise bill authorizing $900 billion for military programs was released two days after the White House unveiled its national security strategy. The Trump administration dropped Biden-era language that cast China as a strategic threat and said the U.S. ''will rebalance America's economic relationship with China,'' an indication that President Donald Trump is more interested in a mutually advantageous economic relationship with Beijing than in long-term competition.
The White House this week also allowed Nvidia to sell an advanced type of computer chip to China, with those more hawkish toward Beijing concerned that would help boost the country's artificial intelligence.
The China-related provisions in the traditionally bipartisan defense bill ''make clear that, whatever the White House tone, Capitol Hill is locking in a hard-edged, long-term competition with Beijing,'' said Craig Singleton, senior director of the China program at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a Washington-based think tank.