Beijing expanded its export blacklist to 40 Japanese defense-linked entities, escalating a technology war that now spans missiles, drones, and nuclear materials.
China placed 20 Japanese defense institutes and contractors on an absolute export prohibition list and 20 more on a watch list Monday, widening controls first imposed Feb. 24 as Tokyo deepens military cooperation with Washington.
"Japan has shown no signs of repentance, but has instead gone further down the wrong path, accelerating its new militarism," a Ministry of Commerce spokesperson said, citing Japan's deployment of offensive weapons and missile launches.
The control list includes the National Institute for Defense Studies, three military research centers — Ground Systems, Naval Systems, and Air Systems — and multiple Mitsubishi-affiliated defense contractors. Entities on the watch list, including Mitsui E&S and OKI Circuit Technology, face enhanced end-user reviews, with Chinese exporters required to submit risk assessments and written guarantees that dual-use items will not enhance Japan's military capabilities. Review periods are not subject to standard statutory time limits.
The escalation comes two weeks after the U.S. stored a Typhon midrange missile system in Japan — the first permanent deployment of ground-launched missiles on Japanese soil since the Cold War. The Typhon can fire Tomahawk cruise missiles with a range of roughly 1,600 kilometers, reaching portions of China's eastern coastline from positions along the first island chain. U.S. Marines have also deployed NMESIS anti-ship and MADIS air-defense systems in Okinawa, creating a distributed strike network that analysts say forces Beijing to confront the same anti-access dilemmas it originally designed against American forces.
Export controls as a retaliatory tool
The Feb. 24 controls marked China's initial response to what it called Japan's "remilitarization." Monday's expansion adds entities across the defense supply chain, from research institutes to drone and nuclear-related firms. Chinese exporters are now prohibited from shipping any dual-use items — goods and technologies with both civilian and military applications — to the 20 listed entities, with ongoing activities required to cease immediately. The restriction also bars overseas organizations from transferring Chinese-origin dual-use items to these entities.
The Ministry of Commerce said the measures target only a small number of Japanese entities and apply solely to dual-use items, and will not affect normal economic and trade exchanges. "Japanese entities that act in good faith and comply with the law have absolutely no cause for concern," the spokesperson said.
Missile deployments reshape regional deterrence
The export controls coincide with a broader shift in military posture along the first island chain. The U.S. decision to store the Typhon system in Japan — breaking with the precedent of post-exercise withdrawal — signals a permanent land-based missile presence that the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty had prohibited for three decades. The treaty's collapse in 2019 reopened the door for Washington to deploy ground-launched missiles with ranges between 500 and 5,500 kilometers, a capability China had built without constraint as a non-signatory.
Tetsuo Kotani, chief research fellow at the Japan Institute of International Affairs, said that while pre-positioning missile systems may strengthen deterrence, it could also heighten concerns among local communities that hosting such weapons would make them priority targets in any future conflict. Sebastian Maslow, an associate professor at the University of Tokyo, noted that debates over strengthening defense capabilities have become "increasingly normalised" within both political discourse and broad segments of the Japanese public.
The emerging denial network extends southward to the Philippines, where the latest Balikatan exercises saw the U.S. Army conduct the first firing of a ground-launched Tomahawk from Philippine soil and U.S. Marines deploy NMESIS launchers to the Batanes Islands, just 190 kilometers from Taiwan. Japan's Ground Self-Defense Force conducted its first overseas live-fire in northwestern Luzon during the same drills.
Market implications
Japanese defense stocks face headwinds from restricted access to Chinese materials and components. The expanded controls add geopolitical risk premium to Japan-exposed equities, particularly for Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and other contractors named on the control list. The broader bilateral trade relationship, already strained by U.S.-Japan missile cooperation and China's Feb. 24 controls, faces further deterioration as both sides deepen their technological and military competition.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.