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The United States on Friday imposed sanctions on three Chinese companies accused of supplying satellite imagery that enabled Iranian military strikes against American forces in the Middle East, a move that adds a layer of tension just days before President Donald Trump is set to visit Beijing for a summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced that Meentropy Technology (Hangzhou) Co., known as MizarVision, The Earth Eye, and Chang Guang Satellite Technology Co. had been designated for their roles in aiding Tehran’s military operations. Meentropy Technology published open-source imagery detailing U.S. military activity during Operation Epic Fury, while The Earth Eye provided satellite data directly to Iran, according to the State Department. Chang Guang, which had previously been sanctioned by Washington, was accused of collecting intelligence on U.S. and allied military positions at Tehran’s request.bostonglobe
“We will use our unilateral sanctions to pursue any party that violates UN Security Council resolutions on Iran,” Rubio said. The sanctions also targeted Iran’s overseas arms procurement networks and international companies alleged to have supplied raw materials for Tehran’s missile and drone programs.middleeasteye
The Treasury Department separately sanctioned five additional firms and one individual, including Yushita Shanghai International Trade Company, accused of helping Iran secure weapons and materials used in its Shahed-series drones and ballistic missile program. Entities based in Belarus and the United Arab Emirates were also named.yahoo
The sanctions arrive less than a week before Trump is scheduled to travel to Beijing on May 14–15 for the first U.S. presidential visit to China in nearly a decade. The summit, originally planned for late March, was postponed after the U.S. became more deeply involved in the Middle East conflict alongside Israel. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has indicated that Iran will feature prominently on the summit agenda, alongside trade, tariffs, rare earths, and fentanyl.weforum
The Financial Times reported in April that Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps secretly purchased a spy satellite, the TEE-01B, built and launched by Earth Eye, in late 2024 and used it to monitor major U.S. military installations across Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Bahrain, and Iraq before and after drone and missile strikes.timesofisrael
Analysts at the Brookings Institution and the Center for Strategic and International Studies have framed the upcoming summit as an effort to avoid a breakdown in relations rather than achieve breakthroughs. Beijing is expected to press for tariff reductions and stability commitments on Taiwan, while Washington seeks Chinese cooperation in pressuring Tehran toward a ceasefire.csis