The space agency said the policy change is meant to ensure the security of its work.
NASA has barred Chinese nationals holding U.S. visas from its facilities and networks, the latest move by Washington to safeguard the space agency as its space race with Beijing intensifies.
Chinese nationals, who until now could work at NASA as contractors or contribute to its research, were informed on Sept. 5 that their access to the agencyโs systems and facilities had been revoked. Bloomberg first reported that many suddenly found themselves locked out of NASA data systems and excluded from both in-person and virtual meetings related to their work.
NASA press secretary Bethany Stevens confirmed the decision, stating that the agency had taken โinternal action pertaining to Chinese nationalsโincluding restricting physical and cybersecurity access to our facilities, materials, and network to ensure the security of our work.โ
The move comes amid heightened scrutiny of Chinese nationals working in sensitive U.S. technology sectors, as in recent years, a growing number of individuals have been accused of conducting espionage on behalf of the Chinese communist regime. In August, the Department of Warโthen called the Department of Defenseโordered Microsoft to stop using China-based engineers to support the military agencyโs cloud computing systems.
It remains unclear if a specific incident triggered NASAโs action. In response to a request for comment, the agencyโs press office referred The Epoch Times to a post on X featuring acting administrator Sean Duffyโs appearance on Fox Business.
In that interview, Duffy said the United States must lead what he described as a โsecond space race,โ warning that the Chinese regime is not advancing its lunar agenda โwith good intentions.โ
โItโs a military operation for the Chinese,โ he said. โWe canโt cede space.โ
Duffyโs remarks echo earlier warnings from U.S. defense officials, including Gen. B. Chance Saltzman, head of the U.S. Space Force, who cautioned earlier this year that the Chinese regimeโs space efforts were inseparable from its military objectives.
Since the Apollo 11 mission in 1969, the United States has remained the only country to land humans on the Moon. China, meanwhile, only launched its first crewed spaceflight in 2003 but has rapidly accelerated its space program, aiming to put taikonauts on the lunar surface by the end of the decade.
By Bill Pan