Anonymous
(ID: spF7A2i8)
10/25/2025, 8:58:07 PM
No.519799061
[Report]
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GERMANY HANDS OVER TECH AND PRODUCTION SECRETS TO CHINA TO CONFORM WITH THE RARE EARTH SANCTIONS
We are literally doing it. We are selling out the crown jewels in order to survive just another quarterly financial report. If you want an example of FINAL AND ETERNAL KEK, look no further.
>As German firms wrestle with new Chinese controls on rare earths, they are handing Beijing sensitive supply chain information it could potentially use to squeeze manufacturers or shut down production lines in Europe's biggest economy.
>Under new rules China introduced in April and dramatically tightened in October, foreign companies must submit granular, confidential data to obtain a six-month import license for rare earth minerals.
>The forms are extraordinarily detailed, according to people who have seen them, requesting product photos showing mineral placement, manufacturing diagrams and customer details. In some cases, the application requests annual production data for the last three years and projected data for the next three years.
>"With all the information they are in the process of collecting, the Chinese authorities are likely also getting a picture of defense industrial bases in NATO countries and how intertwined they are with each other," said MERICS' Arcesati.
>Conversely, bigger firms, including Germany's automakers and other manufacturing heavyweights, are getting their licenses fast enough to keep production running. But they have all but given up on emergency stockpiling, people familiar with the matter said.
>In fact, the people added, Beijing has signaled that anyone ordering more than their production needs will be suspected of smuggling the goods for military purposes or to the US.
>As German firms wrestle with new Chinese controls on rare earths, they are handing Beijing sensitive supply chain information it could potentially use to squeeze manufacturers or shut down production lines in Europe's biggest economy.
>Under new rules China introduced in April and dramatically tightened in October, foreign companies must submit granular, confidential data to obtain a six-month import license for rare earth minerals.
>The forms are extraordinarily detailed, according to people who have seen them, requesting product photos showing mineral placement, manufacturing diagrams and customer details. In some cases, the application requests annual production data for the last three years and projected data for the next three years.
>"With all the information they are in the process of collecting, the Chinese authorities are likely also getting a picture of defense industrial bases in NATO countries and how intertwined they are with each other," said MERICS' Arcesati.
>Conversely, bigger firms, including Germany's automakers and other manufacturing heavyweights, are getting their licenses fast enough to keep production running. But they have all but given up on emergency stockpiling, people familiar with the matter said.
>In fact, the people added, Beijing has signaled that anyone ordering more than their production needs will be suspected of smuggling the goods for military purposes or to the US.