Home China US Lawmakers Line Up Bills Targeting China Over Fentanyl Trade

US Lawmakers Line Up Bills Targeting China Over Fentanyl Trade

China, a major supplier of fentanyl precursors and hub for money laundering, faces proposed U.S. bills targeting its role in the crisis and holding the Communist Party accountable.
Kristen Ingram, a U.S. Customs and Border Protection officer, trains Soyer to detect narcotics in a simulated mail room, at a government training facility for drug-sniffing dogs who work to combat the transit of fentanyl and other drugs, in Front Royal, Virginia, U.S., June 18, 2024. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo

A bipartisan group of U.S. lawmakers on Tuesday introduced three bills targeting China’s role in the fentanyl crisis, proposing a U.S. task force to combat narcotics trafficking and sanctions on Chinese entities.

China is the dominant source of chemical precursors used by Mexican cartels to produce fentanyl, while Chinese money launderers have become key players in the international drug trade, U.S. authorities say.

The proposed legislation would help hold China’s ruling Communist Party (CCP) accountable for “directly fueling the fentanyl crisis through its state subsidies of precursors,” said the House of Representatives’ select committee on China, on which all of the sponsors of the bills sit.

One bill, The CCP Fentanyl Sanctions Act introduced by Democratic Representative Jake Auchincloss, would codify authorities for the U.S. to cut off Chinese companies from the U.S. banking system, including vessels, ports and online marketplaces that “knowingly or recklessly” facilitate shipment of illicit synthetic narcotics.

“This is state-sponsored poisoning of the American people,” Auchincloss said at an event introducing the legislation. “The genesis of this is squarely on the mainland of the People’s Republic of China.”

Two other bills would create a task force of U.S. agencies to conduct joint operations to disrupt trafficking networks, and allow for the imposition of civil penalties on Chinese entities that fail to properly manifest or follow formal entry channels when shipping precursors to the U.S., the committee said.

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There is growing consensus in Republican circles close to President-elect Donald Trump that Beijing has exploited, even engineered, the synthetic opioid epidemic to harm Americans, something Beijing denies.

China says it has some of the strictest drug laws in the world, and that the U.S. needs to curb narcotics demand at home.

China’s anti-drugs authorities have always cracked down on incidents linked to missing drug-making chemicals, Lin Jian, a spokesperson for China’s foreign ministry, told a regular news conference on Wednesday, when asked about the bills.

With little time remaining in the current congressional term, the bills would likely need to be reintroduced next year after the new Congress is sworn in on Jan. 3.

Raja Krishnamoorthi, the top Democrat on the select committee, wrote in an article this month that it was “time to get tough” on Beijing over fentanyl.

(With inputs from Reuters)