Alibaba sues the US Defense Department in a bid to remove 'Chinese
military company' designation
[June 25, 2026] By
DIDI TANG
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Chinese tech giant Alibaba has sued the U.S.
Department of Defense, demanding that it be removed from the Pentagon's
list of Chinese military companies that prohibits them from landing U.S.
defense contracts and carries reputational damage.
In the petition filed this week in the San Jose division of the U.S.
District Court in the Northern District of California, Alibaba, which is
publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange, argued that the
designation, announced on June 8, has “no basis in fact or law" and that
the Pentagon failed to reach its conclusion through any fair process.
It is the latest lawsuit by a Chinese company against the Pentagon over
such national security labels.
In 2021, with some in Washington seeing China as a growing military
threat, Congress asked the department to create a list of Chinese
companies directly controlled by the Chinese military and security
forces, as well as those it believed had contributed to the country's
defense industrial base.
The current list includes 188 entities ranging from state-owned defense
businesses, to private-sector tech companies like Alibaba and the
robotics company Unitree. The designations have drawn protests from both
the Chinese government and some of the targeted companies.
On Monday, Beijing announced sanctions on 10 American military-related
companies, raising the risk of elevating tensions between the two
countries at a time when Beijing and Washington are seeking to stabilize
relations.

WuXi AppTec Co., a company that provides research, development and
manufacturing services to hundreds of U.S. pharmaceutical and life
sciences companies, has also been added to the list. According to the
Pentagon, the company is “indirectly owned” by China's state-owned
Assets Supervision and Administration Commission. The Pentagon says it's
also “indirectly affiliated” with the State Administration of Science,
Technology and Industry for National Defense and the People's Liberation
Army.

[to top of second column] |

A man stands near a poster promoting the AI agent from Alibaba at
the China International Supply Chain Expo in Beijing on Monday, June
22, 2026. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
 WuXi AppTec is challenging the
decision in the federal district court in the District of Columbia.
In the petition filed on June 11, the company said the label has
“already caused and will continue to cause several and irreparable
harms.” It called the designation “the product of political pressure
and inaccurate, unsupported assertions.”
In a petition Tuesday, Alibaba said the company is losing backers in
the U.S. and that the damage is significant because the company
depends on the trust of its U.S. partners.
The Pentagon asserts that Alibaba not only is affiliated with the
China's Assets Supervision and Administration Commission, but that
it contributes to the nation's industrial defense complex through
its affiliation with China's Ministry of Industry and Information
Technology.
Alibaba said in its petition that it is governed by an independent
board and holds no military certification or license. The company
has no relationship with the Assets Supervision and Administration
Commission, it said, and that like all companies operating in China,
including U.S. companies, regulatory compliance with the ministry is
mandatory.
“A regulator is not an affiliate,” reads the petition.
A U.S. judge last year ruled against DJI Technology, a Chinese drone
maker, in its bid to be removed from the Pentagon's list. DJI is
appealing the case.
__
AP Business Writer Chan Ho-him in Hong Kong contributed
All contents © copyright 2026 Associated Press. All rights reserved |