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House China Panel Urges NSF to Halt $67 Million Research‑Security Grant Over China Military Ties at Lead Universities

The House Select Committee on the Strategic Competition Between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party has asked the National Science Foundation to pause a $67 million research‑security program after concluding that its lead institutions, the University of Washington and Texas A&M University, have maintained 'high‑risk' research relationships with Chinese military‑linked entities. In a letter to NSF Interim Director Brian Stone, Chair Rep. John Moolenaar, R‑Mich., says UW is slated to receive about $50 million and Texas A&M $17 million through the SECURE initiative, even as faculty at both schools have coauthored work in artificial intelligence, advanced materials and other dual‑use fields with the PLA’s National University of Defense Technology, the Academy of Military Medical Sciences, Harbin Institute of Technology and other 'Seven Sons of National Defense' universities that appear on U.S. national‑security lists. The committee argues that institutions entrusted to design tools and processes to safeguard taxpayer‑funded research should not simultaneously be enabling access by a foreign adversary’s defense sector, and it is pressing NSF to conduct a full review of participating universities’ China ties before releasing funds. The push fits into a wider Washington backlash against U.S. academic collaborations with Chinese entities, where national‑security hawks claim systemic vulnerability while many researchers warn that blanket crackdowns risk undercutting scientific openness and driving talent and partnerships elsewhere. Online, the story is already being folded into broader debates over foreign influence on campus, with some users demanding aggressive funding bans and others calling for more transparent, evidence‑based risk assessments instead of broad-brush accusations.

China–U.S. Research Security Higher Education and National Security

📌 Key Facts

  • The House Select Committee on China sent a letter to NSF Interim Director Brian Stone urging a pause of the $67 million 'SECURE' research‑security initiative.
  • The University of Washington is designated to receive about $50 million and Texas A&M about $17 million under the grant.
  • The committee cites joint research by faculty at those universities with PLA‑linked and other Chinese defense‑affiliated institutions, including the National University of Defense Technology, Harbin Institute of Technology, the Academy of Military Medical Sciences, and the 'Seven Sons of National Defense,' in areas such as AI and advanced materials.

📊 Relevant Data

The U.S. government funded almost $1 billion in research projects involving defense labs in China in recent years.

US Funded $1 Billion in Research With Chinese Labs, Report Says — Bloomberg

More than 500 U.S. universities and institutes have collaborated with People's Liberation Army-linked entities.

AP: "More than 500 U.S. universities and institutes have ..." — Strider Intel

China has provided $4.1 billion in funding to U.S. universities, according to a Department of Energy database.

DOE Releases Database Showing Foreign Funding for Universities ... China Ranked Fourth — The Maine Wire

In the 2018/19 academic year, Chinese students comprised 16% of all U.S. students in STEM fields at the graduate level, despite international students overall making up a smaller proportion of the student body.

Estimating the Number of Chinese STEM Students in the United States — Center for Security and Emerging Technology (CSET)

There were 265,919 Chinese students enrolled in U.S. higher education institutions in the 2024/25 academic year, representing about 23% of all international students in the U.S.

United States Hosts 1.2 Million International Students at Colleges and Universities, Totaling 6% of U.S. Higher Education — Institute of International Education (IIE)

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