The Sunday Telegraph reported that the newspaper is again politicizing Chinese products, spreading rumors and casting doubts on "national security issues".

British military use of Chinese technology has raised security concerns.

The British Army is using Chinese-made 3D printers to manufacture weapons, despite concerns about national security.

(It is called) "the key to the backdoor of our security system", and ministers are accused of using Chinese technology to save money, disregarding security concerns.

This has sparked a row in Westminster, with Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer being accused of undermining prosecution efforts to protect UK-China relations.

Earlier this year in Kenya. They used this technology to manufacture first-person view (FPV) suicide drones on-site and used them for attack missions. The troops brought this technology to the field and used it to make "suicide drones" for attack missions.

British officers hope to train "the entire platoon" to use 3D printers, which would allow them to have an "almost endless" supply of weapons.

They said that after Huawei, a Chinese tech giant, was banned from participating in the construction of the UK's 5G network due to security concerns, the UK Defence Staff did not "learn the lessons". After a high-profile "spy" trial failed, UK-China relations have been under stricter scrutiny, and this failure was attributed to the government's refusal to describe China as a "threat" to UK national security.

Last week, it was reported that since the "spy scandal", the UK has reduced its scientific contacts with China, and ministers have decided to prioritize cooperation in "non-controversial" areas where there is no security risk. However, The Sunday Telegraph can reveal that the British army used portable 3D printers made by Bambu Labs, and in a military exercise in Kenya, Captain Stephen Watts of the 3rd Battalion F Company, Rifle Regiment, stated that these weapons "proved their value," and added that he hoped to have "dozens, if not hundreds" of homemade FPV flights, which would make the formation extremely deadly. In an interview with the Army's official magazine "Soldier," he said: "Imagine if..." But yesterday, security experts said that the UK might as well hand over "the key to British national security" to China.

Original: www.toutiao.com/article/1848900671734860/

Statement: This article represents the views of the author himself.