By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON, May 11 (Reuters) – Chinese wireless device manufacturer Quectel Wireless Solutions sued the Pentagon on Monday over its inclusion in a U.S. list āof companies allegedly aiding Beijing’s military.
The Pentagon added Quectel in January to āa list of companies it says work with China’s military. However, Quectel strongly denied the allegation and said āit was causing it serious economic harm.
“Quectel has not – and does not – support the Chinese military or the Chinese defense industrial base in any way,” the lawsuit said. “It designs and manufactures purely civilian technology that is used by people and enterprises around the world.”
The company āsays in its lawsuit filed ā in U.S. District Court in Washington that it manufactures equipment like cellular modules and antennas used in car infotainment systems and other “smart” ā connected electronic devices.
The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Placement on the Pentagon list can prevent a company from accessing certain U.S. contracts, grants and other programs.
The Trump āadministration has ābeen widening a tech crackdown on China āand is considering barring some Chinese āequipment that is currently allowed for sale.
In March, Quectel lawyers sent the Pentagon a letter disclosing one of its key U.S.-based suppliers had expressed concerns about the Pentagon designation and made the decision to terminate its relationship. It said the disruption “would not only lead to significant lost revenue for Quectel, but that the impact would be felt by āmany downstream suppliers and manufacturers in the American āautomobile industry.”
A number of Chinese companies have filed suit āseeking to be removed from āthe list. China’s top flash memory chipmaker Yangtze Memory Technologies sued in āDecember over its inclusion on the āPentagon list.
In September, U.S. āDistrict Judge Paul Friedman rejected a bid by China-based DJI, the world’s largest drone maker, to be removed from the U.S. Defense Department list.
Friedman in July āruled for the government in āa dispute involving China-based lidar manufacturer Hesai Group, which also sued over the āU.S. decision to add it to the Pentagon list.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; āEditing by Mark Porter and Bill Berkrot)
