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Updated August  28, 2023


Chinese Nuclear and Missile Proliferation


The U.S. government has continued to express concerns
about China's record concerning the proliferation of
nuclear- and missile-related technologies to other countries,
with more recent focus on the threat of Chinese acquisition
of U.S.-origin nuclear technology. (See CRS In Focus
IF11050, New  U.S. Policy Regarding Nuclear Exports to
China, by Paul K. Kerr and Mary Beth D. Nikitin.) Official
U.S. government reports indicate that the Chinese
government  has apparently ended its direct involvement in
the transfer of nuclear- and missile-related items, but
China-based companies and individuals continue to export
goods relevant to those items, particularly to Iran and North
Korea. U.S. officials have also raised concerns about
entities operating in China that provide other forms of
support for proliferation-sensitive activities, such as illicit
finance and money laundering.
Background
China did not oppose new states' acquisition of nuclear
weapons  during the 1960s and 1970s, the Department of
State wrote in a declassified January 1998 report to
Congress. According to a 1983 National Intelligence
Estimate (NIE), China had exported nuclear materials
since 1981 that were not subject to International Atomic
Energy Agency  (IAEA)  safeguards. Beijing did so mainly
to earn hard currency, the estimate assesses, explaining
that the

    Chinese  became  aware  in  1979 that they  had
    insufficient resources for their initially grandiose
    modernization program  and  that they needed to
    generate more revenue  through expanded foreign
    trade. Accordingly, the State Council directed its
    subordinate ministries in late 1979 to begin selling
    surpluses.
Consequently, according to the NIE, Beijing ended its
abstention from commercial trade in conventional arms
and nuclear materials. During the 1980s and 1990s, China
transferred nuclear and missile technology to other
countries' weapons programs. China provided assistance to
Pakistan's nuclear weapons program and engaged in
nuclear cooperation with Iran. Beijing exported missiles to
Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Iran. (For more information,
see CRS Report RL33192,  U.S.-China Nuclear
Cooperation Agreement, by Mark  Holt, Mary Beth D.
Nikitin, and Paul K. Kerr.)
According to U.S. government reports and official
statements, China significantly curtailed its nuclear- and
missile-related transfers during the 1990s; Beijing also
committed to improving the government's export controls.
For example, the 1998 State Department report cited above
noted China's 1996 pledge to refrain from assisting
unsafeguarded nuclear facilities and Beijing's 1997 changes


to Chinese nuclear export policy, as well as other Chinese
nonproliferation efforts.
The United States has extensive nuclear cooperation with
China, which is governed by a civil nuclear cooperation
agreement, renewed in 2015. (See CRS Report RL33192,
U.S.-China Nuclear Cooperation Agreement.) The above-
described changes in Chinese behavior took place after the
two governments concluded their first nuclear cooperation
agreement in 1985. Laws subsequently adopted by
Congress required, as a condition for U.S. implementation
of the agreement, the President to submit to Congress
certain nonproliferation-related certifications, as well as a
report about Beijing's nonproliferation policies and
practices. President William Clinton stated in a January
1998 letter to Congress that China had made substantial
strides in joining the international nonproliferation regime,
and in putting in place a comprehensive system of nuclear-
related, nationwide export controls, since concluding the
1985 agreement.
Beijing acceded in 1992 to the Nuclear Nonproliferation
Treaty (NPT) as a nuclear-weapon state (NWS) and has
voluntary IAEA  safeguards on its civil reactors. The treaty
defines NWS  as those that exploded a nuclear weapon or
other nuclear explosive device prior to January 1, 1967:
China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United
States. All other NPT states-parties are nonnuclear-weapon
states. According to the treaty, a NWS is not to transfer
nuclear weapons to any recipient whatsoever or to in
any way  ... assist, encourage, or induce any nonnuclear-
weapon  state to manufacture or otherwise acquire nuclear
weapons.
China is also a participant in the Nuclear Suppliers Group
(NSG)-a   multilateral control regime for nuclear-related
exports. The Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR)
performs an analogous function for missiles and related
items. China is not an MTCR partner but has agreed to
adhere to the regime's export guidelines.
The Chinese government  continues to express support for
the international arms control and nonproliferation regime.
According to a July 2019 Chinese government publication
titled China 's National Defense in the New Era, China
actively participates in international arms control,
disarmament  and non-proliferation and objects to arms
race and strives to protect global strategic balance and
stability. Similarly, Fu Cong, Director General of the
Department of Arms  Control of China's Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, stated during a December 2020 conference
that China is ready to enhance non-proliferation policy
exchanges and cooperation with all countries, including the
incoming U.S. administration. More recently, China's
Ambassador  for Disarmament Affairs of China Ll Song
explained in a October 2022 statement to the UN General

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