Trump admits Elon Musk ‘susceptible’ on China
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Tesla and Space X boss Elon Musk has major business interests in China but also has huge US defence contracts.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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WASHINGTON - President Donald Trump said on March 21 that Mr Elon Musk should not be allowed to see top-secret US plans for any war with China, in a rare admission that his billionaire ally’s business links raised potential conflicts of interest.
Mr Trump strongly denied media reports that the world’s richest man, who is now leading the cost-cutting Department of Government Efficiency (Doge), would receive a classified Pentagon briefing on its war strategy.
Tesla and Space X boss Musk has major business interests in China but also huge US defence contracts, and his status as an unelected adviser to Mr Trump has raised concerns about his influence.
“I don’t want to show it to anybody. You’re talking about a potential war with China,” Mr Trump told reporters in the Oval Office.
“Certainly you wouldn’t show it to a businessman who is helping us so much... Elon has businesses in China and he would be susceptible perhaps to that.”
Mr Trump, who was unveiling a contract for Boeing
Mr Musk was at the Pentagon
“They really are the enemy of the people,” Mr Trump said of the Times, which reported Mr Musk was to receive a briefing in a secure room dubbed “The Tank” on maritime tactics and targeting plans.
The paper said the briefing was called off after it was publicised.
‘Amazing visit’
The United States increasingly sees China as its biggest rival and tensions have soared since Trump’s inauguration as the world’s two largest economies hit each other with tariffs.
Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth hailed the “amazing visit” by Mr Musk to the Pentagon.
“I look forward to continuing our work together,” Mr Hegseth said on X.
Mr Musk joined the chorus of criticism of the Times, labelling it “pure propaganda” on his social media platform X.
“I’ve been to the Pentagon many times over many years. Not my first time in the building,” he wrote.
Mr Musk has longstanding business ties to China, however.
His carmaker Tesla produces some of its electric vehicles at a huge so-called gigafactory in Shanghai and is trying to compete with fast-growing Chinese manufacturers.
The entrepreneur has become a cult figure in China and has fostered ties with its leadership. He has also suggested the self-ruled island of Taiwan should become part of China.
In the United States, Mr Trump has repeatedly insisted that Mr Musk has no conflicts of interest, even as Mr Musk leads a harsh overhaul of US government agencies that in some cases his companies have dealings with.
Mr Musk’s SpaceX has US government defence contracts worth billions of dollars, including for launching rockets and for the use of the Starlink satellite service.
Mr Trump has recently further blurred the line by promoting Tesla cars after attacks by vandals over Mr Musk’s links to the White House. He suggested on March 21 that such vandals could be deported to prisons in El Salvador.
Democrats have, meanwhile, blasted Mr Trump for handing administration policy to Mr Musk despite him undergoing no background checks and heading companies with government contracts. AFP

