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March 8, 2014 |
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The report was the work product of the Select Committee on U.S. National Security and Military/Commercial Concerns with the People's Republic of China. This special committee, created by a 409-10 vote of the United States House of Representatives|U.S. House of Representatives on June 18, 1998, was tasked with the responsibility of investigating whether technology or information was transferred to the People's Republic of China that may have contributed?? to the enhancement of the nuclear-armed intercontinental ballistic missiles or to manufacture of weapons of mass destruction. The chairman of the Committee was Representative Chris Cox of California, whose name became synonymous with the committee's final report. Four other Republicans and Democrats served on the panel, including Representative Norm Dicks, who served as the senior Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic member. The committee's final report was approved unanimously by all 9 members. While several groups, including the People's Republic of China, contend that the Report is overstated or inaccurate, its authors and supporters maintain that its gist is undeniable. The report's basic findings were as follows, quoted from the above document's opening summary:
In response, the PRC has maintained that its nuclear technology was indigenously developed and was not the result of espionage. The Cox Report's release prompted major legislative and administrative reforms. More than two dozen of the Select Committee's recommendations were enacted into law, including the creation of a new National Nuclear Security Administration to take over the nuclear weapons security responsibilities of the Department of Energy. At the same time, no person has ever been convicted of providing nuclear information to the PRC, and the one case that was brought in connection of these charges, that of Wen Ho Lee, fell apart. Additionally, two of the U.S. companies named in the report-- Loral Space and Communications Corp. and Hughes Electronics Corp.--were later successfully prosecuted by the federal government for violations of U.S. export control law, resulting in the two largest fines in the history of the Arms Export Control Act. Loral paid a $14 million fine in 2002, and Hughes paid a $32 million fine in 2003.
Category:Spies Category:People's Republic of China Category:Mainland China Category:Government reports This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Cox report".
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