US Congress concerned Russia could be sharing insights on arms with China
A bipartisan US congressional committee has demanded that the administration of US President Joe Biden disclose what Russia may have learned about American-made weapons sent to Ukraine, and if it has been sharing this information with China.
Insights obtained by Moscow during the conflict with Kiev are “likely to proliferate to the PRC (People’s Republic of China) and other adversaries,” the Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party warned in a letter addressed to White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan on Monday.
There have been “alarming levels of Russian adaptation that have undermined the effectiveness of several US weapons systems,” the document, signed by the committee’s Republican chair, John Moolenaar, and ranking Democrat, Raja Krishnamoorthi, read. Not only older American systems, but “even newer weapons have reportedly failed thanks to Russian electronic warfare and associated countermeasures,” it added.
The lawmakers said these developments “raise important questions about the US military and industrial base’s ability to ‘counter-innovate’ to overcome or adapt to these Russian tactics.”
Considering the “no limits” partnership declared by Moscow and Beijing, Washington “should anticipate and indeed operate under the assumption that Russia is passing information about vulnerabilities or counters to American and allied weapons systems to China,” they said.
The letter noted that at the NATO summit last week, the US and its allies branded Beijing a “decisive enabler” of Moscow’s military operation against Kiev. According to the lawmakers, China has provided Russia “with significant amounts of microelectronics, dual-use equipment, imagery, and other tools to support its war machine, in addition to helping improve satellite and other space-based capabilities.”
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi responded that Beijing “will never accept” NATO’s “groundless accusations” of it being somehow involved in Russia’s military effort. China’s Mission to the EU insisted that the country “never provide[s] lethal weapons to either party of the conflict, and exercise[s] strict export control on dual-use goods.” Beijing is promoting peace talks between Moscow and Kiev, while NATO is only “fanning the flames” of the hostilities, while scapegoating others, the mission claimed.
The Washington Post reported in May that Russia’s jamming technology had rendered ineffective a whole range of US weapons supplied to Ukraine, including Excalibur GPS-guided artillery shells, HIMARS multiple rocket launch systems, and JDAM aircraft-dropped bombs. Throughout the conflict, Russian forces have also captured various pieces of American-made hardware, such as Abrams M1 tanks, Bradley fighting vehicles, and M777 howitzers.
Moscow has repeatedly warned that deliveries of weapons systems to Kiev by the US and its allies will not prevent it from achieving its military goals, but will merely prolong the fighting and increase the risk of a direct confrontation between Russia and NATO. According to the Russian officials, the provision of arms, the sharing of intelligence, and the training of Ukrainian troops means that Western nations have already become de-facto parties to the conflict.