The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has turned balance sheets into battlefields, reportedly stealing up to $600 billion per year in intellectual property. The Communist Party of China has implemented a strategy to dismantle the United States’ economic and technological leadership by targeting its center of gravity: private enterprise. Gen. (ret.) Keith Alexander described the looting as the largest wealth transfer in history.
In December 2024, Chinese state-sponsored hackers breached the U.S. Treasury Department’s systems, accessing the systems associated with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), the government body responsible for preventing adversarial commercial investments. Earlier that year, the hacking group Volt Typhoon, linked to the Chinese government, infiltrated U.S. critical infrastructure networks, aiming to disrupt communications during a crisis. During the last presidential election, the public learned that Chinese hackers had breached numerous U.S. telecoms. These incidents underscore the CCP’s relentless cyber espionage campaign against U.S. governmental and commercial entities.
Beyond cyber intrusions, Chinese state-owned enterprises (SOEs) have an extensive history of intellectual property theft to bolster their technological capabilities. In 2016, the Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC), a prominent SOE, was accused of stealing designs from American aerospace firms to enhance China’s military aviation technology. Such actions not only compromise U.S. economic interests but also pose significant national security risks. The CCP’s tactics extend beyond corporate espionage. Beijing frequently uses legal and financial pressure to intimidate foreign companies, as evidenced by the recent crackdown on Western consulting firms operating in China. These actions deter businesses from challenging SOEs and highlight the escalating risks for U.S. enterprises.
The Biden administration focused on dialogue and de-escalation. Dismissing compounding evidence that the CCP has no interest in either, Biden’s team failed to adopt an effective counter-strategy. Yet the reality is clear: the innovation and competitiveness of American companies, which developed the technology that helped win the Cold War, are under attack.
The Trump administration, building on its prior interactions with China’s economic statecraft, has a historic opportunity—indeed, an obligation—to expose CCP malicious activities. President Trump must augment U.S. defenses and support U.S. businesses as they work to protect U.S. jobs and strategic industries. By adopting a comprehensive strategy that addresses both systemic and tactical elements of CCP economic aggression, President Trump can shield U.S. businesses and secure their leadership in global innovation. The stakes are clear: inaction risks ceding the future of economic and technological dominance to an adversary intent on rewriting the rules.