The Maine Wire
  • News
  • Commentary
  • The Blog
  • About
  • Support the Maine Wire
  • Store
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending News
  • Investigation at Madawaska Elementary School Leads to Drug Arrest of Special-Ed Teacher
  • Collins Celebrates Support from Bernie Sanders on Insulin Bill After He Endorsed Platner
  • Penobscot Deputies Deal with Two Firearm Related Incidents Within an Hour In Kenduskeag
  • Chelsea Man Pleads Guilty After Installing Secret Cameras in Firehouse Ceiling
  • Dick’s Sporting Goods Plans Major South Portland Expansion Plus New Digs In Augusta
  • Platner Wants to Impose a Global Wealth Tax
  • Angus King Signs Onto Letters Whining About Reflecting Pool, Pretending Fiscal Responsibility, and Opposing Triumphal Arch
  • Nine Days Later, Maineโ€™s Ranked-Choice Voting Count Still Drags On
Facebook Twitter Instagram
The Maine Wire
Thursday, June 18
  • News
  • Commentary
  • The Blog
  • About
  • Support the Maine Wire
  • Store
The Maine Wire
Home ยป News ยป News ยป DCNF EXCLUSIVE: Pentagon, Energy Dept. Nuclear Research Projects Tapped Sanctioned Chinese Communist Party Supercomputers
News

DCNF EXCLUSIVE: Pentagon, Energy Dept. Nuclear Research Projects Tapped Sanctioned Chinese Communist Party Supercomputers

By Philip Lenczycki of the Daily Caller News Foundation, Originally Published March 20, 2025.
DCNFBy DCNFMarch 21, 2025Updated:March 21, 20253 Comments8 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Email LinkedIn Reddit
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

The Department of Defense (DOD) and Department of Energy (DOE) have funded more than 100 research projects using Chinese government supercomputers sanctioned by the U.S. for collaborating with Chinaโ€™s military, a Daily Caller News Foundation investigation found.

The DCNF compared federally-funded research project reports against entities sanctioned by the U.S. Department of Commerce (DOC). The DCNF identified 102 projects, primarily conducted through U.S. national labs, involving at least one of five sanctioned Chinese supercomputer centers in Beijing, Changsha, Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Tianjin.

While itโ€™s unclear what information may have been shared with the sanctioned supercomputers, intelligence analysts and lawmakers say the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is committed to weaponizing research with dual civilian and military applications.

โ€œIt is unacceptable that federally-funded researchers continue to use Chinese supercomputing centers that have been blacklisted for supporting Chinaโ€™s military buildup,โ€ Michigan Republican Rep. John Moolenaar, chairman of the House Select Committee on the CCP, told the DCNF. โ€œThese systems have been instrumental in Chinaโ€™s hypersonic missile research, nuclear weapons development, and other strategic capabilities that directly threaten U.S. national security. The use of these centers by American researchers poses serious risks of U.S. technology transfer and cyber exploitation.โ€

Additionally, some research projects included China-based co-authors belonging to other sanctioned institutes serving the Chinese military, such as universities subordinate to Chinaโ€™s Central Military Commission.

Spokesmen for Argonne, Los Alamos, and Oak Ridge national laboratories told the DCNF their personnel had not used the sanctioned CCP supercomputers. Yet, when asked directly if the research projects involved China-based co-authors who had used the sanctioned Chinese supercomputers, the spokesmen did not respond.

DOD and DOE did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

The DOC sanctioned the Chinese supercomputing centers in question for โ€œactivities contrary to the national security and foreign policy interests of the United Statesโ€ related to Chinaโ€™s weapons of mass destruction programs. The sanctions prohibit items of U.S. origin from being exported to the listed entities.

However, L.J. Eads, a former U.S. Air Force intelligence analyst, said thereโ€™s a major loophole in U.S. export control regulations that national labs seem to be exploiting.

โ€œOne major loophole is that while U.S. export controls restrict direct access, Chinese researchers can still exploit U.S. research by having China-based collaborators run simulations on sanctioned supercomputers,โ€ Eads told the DCNF. โ€œThis loophole also allows DOD and DOE researchers to circumvent restrictions by outsourcing computations to China, which poses serious national security risks.โ€

โ€˜Military-Civil Fusionโ€™

After reviewing the DCNFโ€™s findings, Eads said the majority of identified research projects relying on sanctioned Chinese supercomputers have both civilian and military applications, such as space weather modeling, which impacts satellite communications as well as โ€œballistic-missile early warning radar systems,โ€ according to the U.S. Space Force.

Supercomputers are orders of magnitude faster than conventional computing technology, and, thus, are used to perform complex calculations, such as rapidly modeling advanced ballistics and nuclear reactions, Eads said.

โ€œThe power of these supercomputers equates to using tens of thousands of the newest MacBooks all at once,โ€ Eads told the DCNF.

Consequently, U.S. entities using sanctioned Chinese supercomputers for advanced research may be exposing American technological assets to the threat of technology transfer through the CCPโ€™s so-called โ€œMilitary-Civil Fusionโ€ strategy, which the State Department has warned โ€œseeks to exploit the inherent โ€˜dual-use’โ€ of technologies with both military and civilian applications.

โ€œ[CCP supercomputers] linked directly to the [Peopleโ€™s Liberation Army], risk transferring sensitive U.S. algorithms and models that could significantly enhance Chinaโ€™s capabilities in critical areas such as nuclear simulation and hypersonic weaponry,โ€ Eads said.

โ€˜No Such Thing As Harmless Cooperationโ€™

Since October 2015, the DOD has funded at least 25 research projects using sanctioned CCP supercomputers, according to a DCNF review of U.S. government websites and scholarly databases.

In one instance, federal records show several Pentagon grants supported an October 2020 report conducted by a team of Chinese government personnel and a U.S. university professor researching โ€œhigh-entropy alloys,โ€ which have both aerospace and advanced nuclear applications. The teamโ€™s 2020 report thanks the โ€œcomputational resource provided by the TianHe-1 supercomputer at the National Supercomputer Center in Changsha,โ€ which the DOC sanctioned five years prior in February 2015 for activities contrary to U.S. โ€œnational security or foreign policy interestsโ€ and its use in โ€œnuclear explosive activities.โ€

The DOD also funded a September 2024 report conducted by U.S. and China-based university professors, as well as Chinese government personnel, concerning hydrogen production. Eads noted the research may benefit the development of nuclear energy. The 2024 research report expressed gratitude for โ€œthe computational resources provided by the TianHe-1A, TianHe II supercomputer,โ€ both of which were sanctioned by the DOC in 2015.

A third Pentagon-funded report from October 2018 conducted by U.S. and Chinese university professors, as well as DOD researchers, investigated atomic interactions, which Eads said could have dual-use applications related to developing nuclear weapon systems.

The 2018 research report thanked the โ€œNational Supercomputer Center in Guangzhou,โ€ which houses the sanctioned TianHe-2 supercomputer, according to the U.S. government. Guangzhouโ€™s National Supercomputer Center was involved in 68 of the 102 research reports identified by the DCNF, the most of any of the sanctioned Chinese supercomputers.

โ€œThe CCPโ€™s comparative advantage is surveillance, not science or fundamental research,โ€ Jacqueline Deal, an advisory board member at State Armor, a nonprofit focused on countering the CCP, told the DCNF. โ€œThe Party has wired its universities and overseas research institutions in order to sense and detect work with military or intelligence applications. Thereโ€™s no such thing as harmless cooperation on dual-use topics with people subject to the reach of Chinaโ€™s surveillance apparatus.โ€

โ€˜Loopholesโ€™

The DOE and U.S. national laboratories have also supported at least 77 research projects using sanctioned CCP supercomputers, according to a review of government websites and scholarly databases.

Illinoisโ€™ Argonne National Laboratory (ANL), known for its work on the Manhattan Project to develop the atom bomb, has been involved in at least 29 research projects using sanctioned CCP supercomputers.

One DOE-funded ANL research project published in December 2020, titled โ€œMemory-Efficient and Skew-Tolerant MapReduce Over MPI for Supercomputing Systems,โ€ used Guangzhouโ€™s TianHe-2 supercomputer and focused on optimizing memory storage for supercomputers.

In addition, ANL and U.S. university researchers collaborated with personnel from Chinaโ€™s National University of Defense Technology (NUDT), which the Commerce Department sanctioned in February 2015.

An ANL spokesperson told the DCNF by email that its researchers had โ€œnot used any of the sanctioned Chinese national supercomputing centers or their associated supercomputers,โ€ and said that compliance with federal regulations was โ€œa top priority.โ€

Yet, ANL did not respond to questions about whether or not it had supported research projects relying on China-based researchers using sanctioned CCP supercomputing centers.

New Mexicoโ€™s Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), which was established in 1943 to build the atomic bomb, has been involved in at least 22 research projects using sanctioned Chinese supercomputers, 15 of which involved collaboration with personnel from sanctioned Chinese universities.

Among other examples, in August 2022, LANL published a DOE-funded research project concerning spacecraft physics that leveraged simulations from Guangzhouโ€™s TianHe-2 supercomputer.

The project also included personnel from Beihang University, which the Department of Commerce sanctioned in May 2001 under its former name, Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics. Beihang University is one of Chinaโ€™s so-called โ€œSeven Sons of National Defense,โ€ which serve as โ€œdefense science, technology and industry work unitsโ€ subordinate to the main driver of the CCPโ€™s Military-Civil Fusion strategy, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, according to the House Select Committee on the CCP.

A LANL spokesperson told the DCNF by email that โ€œno LANL researchers worked on Chinese supercomputers, and there was no violation of export controls or Department of Commerce sanctions.โ€

However, the LANL spokesperson said certain research projects involving sanctioned Chinese supercomputers included LANL personnel who had participated in โ€œscientific interpretationโ€ or had โ€œcollaborated on the fundamental science.โ€

A LANL โ€œcode expertโ€ who has allegedly developed a โ€œlarge, open-source codeโ€ that was โ€œused by the space physics communityโ€ and the sanctioned CCP supercomputers was also a research project co-author to โ€œensure that the code is working properly,โ€ the LANL spokesperson told the DCNF.

โ€œItโ€™s disconcerting that esteemed DOE scientists, who are fully aware of the departmentโ€™s critical national security role, persist in engaging with these sanctioned platforms,โ€ Eads said. โ€œTheir actions contradict the very mission they are supposed to uphold.โ€

Tennesseeโ€™s Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), another Manhattan Project landmark, has likewise participated in 26 research projects using sanctioned CCP supercomputers.

In November 2018, ORNL published a DOE-funded research project investigating the production of an exotic material called graphane, which may have applications in solar cells, and is related, but not to be confused with graphene. The research acknowledged that โ€œcalculations were performed on the TianheII supercomputer at the Chinese National Supercomputer Center in Guangzhou.โ€

โ€œORNL has not violated Department of Commerce rules related to foreign entities,โ€ an ORNL spokesperson told the DCNF by email. โ€œNo U.S. researchers performed work on Chinese supercomputers, and no government resources were used to support Chinese research conducted at the Chinese supercomputing centers.โ€

However, the spokesperson acknowledged that Chinese personnel involved in ORNL research projects had โ€œused an ORNL instrument for non-sensitive, open science experimentsโ€ and had โ€œused Chinese computers to analyze data.โ€

โ€œLoopholes in current regulations and enforcement have allowed this dangerous practice to persist, exposing sensitive U.S. research to potential exploitation by Beijing,โ€ Rep. Moolenaar told the DCNF. โ€œCongress must act swiftly to close these gaps and ensure that taxpayer-funded research does not, in any form, contribute to strengthening our top geopolitical adversary.โ€

Previous ArticleTrump Administration Removes Biden-Era Advisory Designating Gun Violence as a ‘Public Health Crisis’
Next Article Doubling-Down on What Went Wrong, the Bidens Want to Come Back to Save the Democratic Party: Report
DCNF
  • Website

The Daily Caller News Foundation is a non-profit foundation that trains young American journalists.

Latest News

Investigation at Madawaska Elementary School Leads to Drug Arrest of Special-Ed Teacher

June 18, 2026

Collins Celebrates Support from Bernie Sanders on Insulin Bill After He Endorsed Platner

June 18, 2026

Penobscot Deputies Deal with Two Firearm Related Incidents Within an Hour In Kenduskeag

June 18, 2026
0 0 votes
Article Rating
3 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Larry Lander
Larry Lander
1 year ago

If there were vaccinations for stupidity the intellectual lightwieghts involved in this massive ClusterF*&K, should be required to get a shot once a month. That might cure them but it’s doubtful.

4
Sarah J
Sarah J
1 year ago

I just started 3 weeks ago this web income system that my friend recommended to me and I’ve gotten 2 checks for a total of $9,200… this is the best decision I made in a long time! This extra b6651 cash has changed my life in so many ways, thank you!

Here is I started_______ tinyurl.com/homestar2?/6651

-2
dts
dts
1 year ago

There’s something awry in Reno.

0
Recent News

Investigation at Madawaska Elementary School Leads to Drug Arrest of Special-Ed Teacher

June 18, 2026

Collins Celebrates Support from Bernie Sanders on Insulin Bill After He Endorsed Platner

June 18, 2026

Penobscot Deputies Deal with Two Firearm Related Incidents Within an Hour In Kenduskeag

June 18, 2026

Chelsea Man Pleads Guilty After Installing Secret Cameras in Firehouse Ceiling

June 18, 2026

Dick’s Sporting Goods Plans Major South Portland Expansion Plus New Digs In Augusta

June 18, 2026
Newsletter

News

  • News
  • Campaigns & Elections
  • Opinion & Commentary
  • Media Watch
  • Education
  • Media

Maine Wire

  • About the Maine Wire
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Commentary
  • Complaints
  • Maine Policy Institute

Resources

  • Maine Legislature
  • Legislation Finder
  • Get the Newsletter
  • Maine Wire TV

Facebook Twitter Instagram Steam RSS
  • Post Office Box 7829, Portland, Maine 04112

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

wpDiscuz