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Trump orders use of CFIUS to restrict Chinese investments in strategic areas

President Donald Trump signed a memorandum on Friday directing the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States to restrict Chinese investments in key areas, according to a White House official.

The national security memorandum aims to attract global investment while preserving US national security interests from challenges posed by foreign enemies like as China, according to the official.

The order says that China is “exploiting our capital and ingenuity to fund and modernize their military, intelligence, and security operations, posing direct threats to United States security,” the official said.

Under the directive, the United States will establish new rules “to curb the exploitation of its capital, technology, and knowledge by foreign adversaries such as China to ensure that only those investments that serve American interests are allowed,” the official said.

The official also said the Trump administration will consider new or expanded restrictions on U.S. outbound investment to China in sensitive technologies, including semiconductors, artificial intelligence, quantum, biotechnology, aerospace and more.

The steps threaten to heighten economic tensions with China after the president increased tariffs on Chinese imports as one of his first moves in office.

CFIUS, which scrutinizes foreign investment in the United States for national security risks, has already overseen a sharp decrease in Chinese investment in the United States.

According to the Rhodium Group, annual Chinese investment has dropped from $46 billion in 2016 to less than $5 billion in 2022.

The order noted that foreign entities and individuals hold roughly 43 million acres of U.S. agricultural land, which is nearly 2% of all land in the United States, the official said.

China owns more than 350,000 acres of farmland across 27 states, the official said.

Farm groups and lawmakers have expressed concerns in recent years that land buys by investors and foreign countries are driving up farmland prices and threatening national security.

The White House official also noted that Chinese hackers have repeatedly targeted U.S. entities, including recently breaching the Treasury Department’s CFIUS office, the entity responsible for reviewing foreign investments for national security risks.

The outbound regime could expand on an executive order, unveiled in 2023 by the Biden administration, to start prohibiting some U.S. investments in certain sensitive technologies in China, and requiring government notification of other investments.

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Sydney Okafor

I'm Sydney Okafor, a broadcast journalist, producer, presenter, voice-over artist and researcher, deeply intrigued by human angle stories in Nigeria and the broader African context.

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