China’s Economic Aggression Escalates: Beijing Bans American Defense Giants in Latest Blow to U.S. Interests
In a brazen display of economic warfare, Communist China has moved to punish American industry for daring to protect national security. On June 22, 2026, China’s Ministry of Finance issued an immediate ban barring government entities from purchasing products from 46 U.S. companies, including defense titans Lockheed Martin and Raytheon. This is no isolated spat—it is retaliation for the U.S. Department of Defense’s responsible decision to expand its list of Chinese military-linked companies, shining a light on Beijing’s military-civil fusion strategy that weaponizes everything from EVs to drones against American interests.
For years, conservatives have warned that relying on a hostile regime like the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) for critical supply chains, technology, and manufacturing was suicidal. The free market works when partners play by the rules. When one side is a totalitarian dictatorship stealing intellectual property, subsidizing its champions, and building a military explicitly aimed at dominating the United States, “engagement” becomes surrender. President Trump’s first-term tariffs and decoupling efforts were derided by globalist elites as reckless. Today, they look prescient.
The Biden-Harris administration’s weakness invited this latest provocation. After years of soft rhetoric and half-measures, the Pentagon finally added major Chinese players—Alibaba, Baidu, BYD, NIO, and dozens more—to its Section 1260H list of entities tied to China’s military. These are not innocent businesses. They are extensions of the CCP’s ambition to achieve technological supremacy and global hegemony. Beijing’s response? Blacklist American firms that keep our military strong and add U.S. drone and rare earth companies to its own export controls.
This tit-for-tat reveals the CCP’s true nature: a bully that thrives on American openness while ruthlessly guarding its own markets. American taxpayers have subsidized China’s rise for decades through massive trade deficits, technology transfers, and supply chain dependence. Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and Boeing’s defense units aren’t just corporations—they represent American innovation and strength that secures freedom around the world. Denying them access to Chinese procurement is Beijing’s attempt to intimidate U.S. resolve.
Conservatives have long argued for an America First approach: reshore critical manufacturing, invest in domestic rare earth production, accelerate friend-shoring with allies who actually share our values, and maintain overwhelming military superiority. The days of pretending China is a “responsible stakeholder” are over. Decoupling isn’t a choice anymore—it is a necessity for survival in the 21st century great power competition.
While some on the left wring their hands about “escalation,” clear-eyed realists understand that strength deters aggression. Ronald Reagan faced down the Soviet Union with peace through strength, not endless concessions. Today’s leaders must do the same with the CCP. Congress should respond by further restricting U.S. capital flows into Chinese military-adjacent firms, accelerating export controls on sensitive technologies, and passing legislation that penalizes companies still deeply entangled with Beijing.
The American people are tired of being played for fools. They want leaders who put U.S. workers, U.S. security, and U.S. sovereignty first. China’s latest move is a wake-up call. The question is whether Washington will finally answer it—or continue sleepwalking into the next decade of strategic vulnerability. The conservative position is clear: America must compete, not appease. Our prosperity and freedom depend on it.


