China-tied AI tools like DeepSeek face US federal ban over ‘threat’

Titled the “No Adversarial AI Act”, the proposed legislation aims to prohibit federal agencies from procuring or deploying AI technologies developed in China, Russia, Iran and North Korea.

The bill was introduced in the House by US congressman John Moolenaar, a Michigan Republican who chairs the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party, and Raja Krishnamoorthi of Illinois, the panel’s senior Democrat.

Rick Scott, a Florida Republican, and Gary Peters, a Michigan Democrat, introduced the companion legislation in the Senate.

“Artificial intelligence controlled by foreign adversaries poses a direct threat to our national security, our data and our government operations,” Krishnamoorthi said in a statement.

“We cannot allow hostile regimes to embed their code in our most sensitive systems. This bipartisan legislation will create a clear firewall between foreign adversary AI and the US government, protecting our institutions and the American people.”

Chinese AI systems, Krishnamoorthi added, “do not belong on government devices” and “shouldn’t be entrusted with government data”.

The act requires the government to maintain a public list of AI models developed by foreign adversaries, updated every 180 days, with limited exemptions for research or critical functions.

Federal agencies would also be barred from buying or deploying those tools unless approved by the head of an executive agency, with written notice to both Congress and the Office of Management and Budget.

Exemptions may be granted for specific purposes such as academic research, but they would be tightly controlled.

The bill, which appears largely to be targeting China’s AI giant DeepSeek, came as Washington accused the company of harbouring close ties with the country’s Communist Party and carrying out technology theft from America.

DeepSeek has allegedly supported China’s military and intelligence operations while gaining access to significant quantities of advanced Nvidia chips, Reuters reported earlier this week, citing a senior State Department official.

Moolenaar in Wednesday’s statement described AI as “the strategic technology” at the centre of a “new cold war”, referring to the Sino-American tech rivalry.

“The CCP doesn’t innovate – it steals, scales and subverts. From IP theft and chip smuggling to embedding AI in surveillance and military platforms, the Chinese Communist Party is racing to weaponise this technology.”

“We must draw a clear line: US government systems cannot be powered by tools built to serve authoritarian interests,” Moolenaar added.

“The select committee is taking action to block CCP-linked AI from infiltrating US government systems,” the House panel posted on social media on Wednesday shortly after the bill’s introduction.

The act “would ban AI tools tied to the Chinese Communist Party, like DeepSeek, from federal use, protecting national security from Beijing’s digital authoritarianism”, it added.

Liu Pengyu, a spokesperson for Beijing’s embassy in the US, called Congress’ allegations of Chinese technology theft “nothing but slander and smears”.

“China actively promotes innovation in artificial intelligence, and places high importance on AI safety and ethics,” Liu said in an emailed response to questions.

He described the Congress’ move as “the abuse of national security concepts to politicise trade and technology issues”, adding that China firmly opposes America’s “malicious suppression and containment” of China’s AI industry.

With DeepSeek leading the charge, China’s AI sector has expanded rapidly despite sweeping US restrictions aimed at curbing its access to advanced technologies.

Its cost-efficient model, seen as a rival to ChatGPT, shook US markets earlier this year and triggered a sharp sell-off in tech stocks.

Amid growing concerns over data security, several US companies and government agencies have already barred the use of DeepSeek. The Donald Trump administration is weighing a broader federal ban of the platform across government devices.

In a hearing of the select committee earlier on Wednesday, Krishnamoorthi warned that “DeepSeek is sending our data straight into the hands of the CCP”, adding that “as AI continues to get more powerful, the risks only grow greater”.

In recent years, several US bills have been introduced to restrict the use of Chinese AI technologies.

In February, US congressmen Josh Gottheimer, a New Jersey Democrat, and Darin LaHood, an Illinois Republican, introduced the “No DeepSeek on Government Devices Act”. It directed federal agencies to remove the app from use in law enforcement and national security matters.

The Senate last month introduced its own legislation to block Chinese AI, including the “Decoupling America’s AI Capabilities from China Act”. – South China Morning Post/The Star

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