Trading Sanctions for Stability
The United States has decided to pump the brakes on sanctions tied to one of China's most aggressive cyberespionage operations. According to a Financial Times report Thursday, the Trump administration is shelving plans to penalize China's Ministry of State Security over the Salt Typhoon hacking campaign—and it won't be rolling out major new export controls either.
Why the sudden restraint? Sources say the White House has shifted its China strategy toward maintaining "stability" while America works to break its dependency on Chinese rare earths. That dependency has been a significant handcuff on Washington's ability to take more aggressive action. There's also Trump's planned visit to Beijing in April, which the administration apparently doesn't want to jeopardize.
The Salt Typhoon Operation
This isn't a minor hacking incident we're talking about. Salt Typhoon represents a years-long infiltration campaign that targeted multiple US and international telecom companies, plus the network of a US state's Army National Guard. The hackers exploited vulnerabilities in routers made by Cisco Networks (CSCO), turning network infrastructure into espionage tools.
Back in March, the Justice Department indicted 12 Chinese nationals for their alleged roles in a global hacking operation. Investigators believe both China's Ministry of Public Security and Ministry of State Security have been deploying hackers to steal confidential information and track down critics around the world.
Trade Truce Takes Priority
The decision to hold back on sanctions comes as both countries are nursing a fragile trade agreement. In October, the two leaders reached a framework deal in South Korea aimed at easing longstanding trade tensions. China rolled back 24% additional tariffs on US goods for a year, while Trump signed an executive order formally cutting a fentanyl-related tariff on Chinese imports from 20% down to 10%—a key piece of the deal struck with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
So here's the calculation: Washington wants to punish Beijing for systematic cyber intrusions, but it needs Chinese rare earths and wants to preserve a trade deal that took months to negotiate. The result? Sanctions get shelved, at least for now, while the US figures out how to reduce its dependency on materials that China largely controls. It's a reminder that geopolitics often involves choosing between bad options and slightly less bad options.