Six House members want to use the data to assess the ‘national security damage’ caused by the decades-old U.S.-China Science and Technology Agreement.
A group of Republican lawmakers has requested that the Commerce Department disclose government-funded research that led to Chinese patents, aiming to highlight the risks they perceive in renewing a bilateral science and technology agreement.
They requested Ms. Vidal, who heads the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, tell Congress how many patents involving U.S. government-funded research and Chinese inventors have been filed at her office every year since 2010.
The lawmakers requested a breakdown of these patents, with an emphasis on identifying the Chinese companies that have recruited any of these Chinese inventors. Furthermore, they inquired whether these Chinese inventors and their employers are affiliated with the CCP’s military or any entities subject to U.S. export controls.
“Congress and the American people deserve a full understanding of the extent to which a renewal of a U.S.-PRC Science and Technology Agreement is threatening our intellectual property and national security,” the letter reads.
The Epoch Times has contacted the Commerce Department for comment but hadn’t received a response by press time.
The letter was signed by Reps. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.), Blaine Luetkemeyer (R-Mo.), Andy Barr (R-Ky.), Michelle Steel (R-Calif.), and Carlos Gimenez (R-Fla.). The lawmakers are sitting members of the House Select Committee on the CCP.
The CCP “uses academic researchers, industrial espionage, forced technology transfers, and other tactics to gain an edge in critical technologies, which in turn fuels the People’s Liberation Army modernization,” the 10 Republican lawmakers on the House panel wrote.
“The evidence available suggests that the PRC will continue to look for opportunities to exploit partnerships organized under the STA to advance its military objectives to the greatest extent possible and, in some cases, to attempt to undermine American sovereignty,” the letter reads.
“The United States must stop fueling its own destruction,” it adds. “Letting the STA expire is a good first step.”
Last December, U.S. Ambassador to China Nicholas Burns said the bilateral compact needs to be modernized as previous iterations did not account for emerging technologies, such as artificial intelligence, biotechnology, machine learning, and quantum mathematics.
While Mr. Burns emphasized the importance of the deal, calling it the bedrock of the cooperation between the research institutions in two countries, the prospect of a new one is still uncertain.
“We put down our expectations that it had to be modernized, that it’s not a given that we’re going to agree,” Mr. Burns told the audience during a Brookings Institution event in Washington. “I think that both sides agree on that.”
Reuters contributed to this report.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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