Categories: World

China dismisses American concerns about ‘spy cranes’ as ‘paranoia’

close Video

The China spy balloon was a national humiliation: Robert O’Brien

Former National Security Advisor Robert O’Brien breaks down how the Chinese spy craft changes U.S.-China relations on ‘Sunday Night In America.’ 

A Chinese official accused the U.S. of being paranoid for expressing concerns that shipping cranes manufactured in China could be used for espionage against the United States.

National security and Pentagon officials told the Wall Street Journal they were investigating concerns that cargo cranes widely used at American ports could be using sophisticated technology to monitor U.S. logistics operations, an idea dismissed by China’s Foreign Ministry.

“The claim is complete paranoia,” Mao Ning, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson, said at a Monday news conference, according to Newsweek, adding that voicing such concerns is “misleading to the American public.”

US CRANE SHIP RETRIEVES HUGE SECTION OF CHINESE SPY CRAFT FROM ATLANTIC

Spectators watch a Chinese ship carrying giant cranes approach the entrance to Hampton Roads in Virginia. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

At issue are ship-to-shore cranes manufactured by ZPMC, a Chinese state-owned company that makes close to 80% of cranes currently in use at U.S. ports, including some used by the U.S. military.

American officials have voiced concerns about censors that could monitor U.S. logistical operations as well as technology that allows the cranes to be remotely controlled, opening the door to potential disruptions to the American supply chain.

The cranes are manufactured in China and delivered to the U.S. fully assembled, while Chinese nationals on U.S. visas are sometimes tasked with their operation.

Drone shot of a massive container ship arriving in the Port of Long Beach, California. (iStock)

LAWMAKERS DEMAND ACCOUNTABILITY FROM BIDEN ADMIN AFTER 4TH FLYING OBJECT SHOT DOWN BY MILITARY: ‘UNACCEPTABLE’

The concerns come after President Biden signed 2023’s $858 billion appropriations bill, which included a request that the Transportation Department investigate “cybersecurity and national security threats posed by foreign manufactured cranes at United States ports.”

It also comes just weeks after a Chinese high-altitude surveillance balloon was caught drifting over the U.S. and was eventually shot down off the coast of South Carolina, renewing concerns over China’s increasing use of technology for espionage activities in the United States.

A pilot looks down upon a suspected Chinese spy balloon on Feb. 3, 2023. (U.S. Air Force)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a Fox News Digital request for comment. 

Michael Lee is a writer at Fox News. Follow him on Twitter @UAMichaelLee

Share

Recent Posts

South Korea’s opposition-controlled National Assembly votes to impeach acting President Han

close Video Expert says South Korean president's failed martial law declaration attempt a ‘blunder,' to…

2 hours ago

Joe Biden poses with Hunter’s Chinese business associates in newly surfaced photos: ‘Incredibly damning’

President Biden is seen in newly uncovered photos meeting with Hunter Biden’s Chinese business associates…

2 hours ago

Armed for survival: How Oct 7 Hamas massacre transformed gun culture in Israel

close Video Hamas hostage’s sister feels the ‘wind of change’ with Trump’s election Yarden Gonen…

4 hours ago

California’s Soros-backed progressive experiment collapses after a decade

close Video California sheriff praises the passage of Prop 36 Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco…

4 hours ago

Get off my lawn! 5 times squatters took advantage of unwitting homeowners in 2024

close Video 'Squatter Hunter' discusses ongoing squatting issue in America and proposes law changes Flash…

4 hours ago

‘Greater reckoning’: Obama’s spot in the Democratic sun fading after Harris loss

Former President Barack Obama's years of dominating Democratic Party politics may be drawing to a…

4 hours ago