12 commenti

  1. Adequate and fearless response to the American threat, hats off

  2. Trick-Size-1522 on

    I don’t blame them. China leaves many backdoors in their technology and are still not allies militarily

  3. China is doing the same with Teslas, they have been doing this for years.

  4. PomegranateSoft1598 on

    Good. Ban as much Chinese tech as possible. I don’t even understand why we weren’t doing this before.

  5. randomstranger454 on

    Dashcams should be banned too. Some of them even have a cloud connection. Not to mention pretty much any IOT device. I know robot vacuums probably aren’t used in military bases but their ability to map a floorplan and send it back to the manufacturer is such a stupid thing to exist for privacy.

  6. SolemnaceProcurement on

    >Those restrictions “also apply to all vehicles equipped with image and sound recorders”, noted the ministry in its comments to Interia. “In accordance with applicable regulations, the commander of a military unit has the right to make an autonomous decision to grant or refuse consent in this respect.”

    So not just chinease. And frankly very reasonable pollicy?

  7. AardvarkOk4359 on

    The way things are going we may have to get rid of American tech too

  8. TheMadBaronRvUS on

    Meanwhile Mark Carney is allowing the import of 50,000 Chinese cars to stick it to Trump, and Canadians, gullible as ever, are lapping it up.

  9. alba_Phenom on

    Only makes sense but I’d ban Tesla too, all of this cars with modern built in surveillance equipment like dashcams, microphones, GPS and internet connections that dial back to base somewhere in a foreign country are suspect. It’s not like the Americans haven’t been caught spying on European countries many times in the past.

  10. dat_9600gt_user on

    Chinese cars have been banned from entering certain military bases in Poland over concerns that their sensors could be used for gathering data. One report has also suggested that a Tesla electric vehicle was turned away.

    The defence ministery has confirmed that it is working on even broader measures to prevent the entry of Chinese cars from all military sites. In response, China has called on Poland not to “abuse the concept of national security”.

    Last week, news website Interia first reported that military personnel driving Chinese vehicles were being barred from entering some facilities as a result of tightened security requirements regarding the protection of military sites and critical infrastructure.

    Modern cars are fitted with an array of sensors that gather data, and there are fears that Chinese manufacturers may share that data with the Chinese authorities.

    Subsequently, news service CyberDefence24 reported that it had been informed of a case in which the driver of a Tesla had been denied entry to the base of the 1st Warsaw Armoured Brigade. The driver was specifically informed that he was barred from entering because of the Tesla.

    Paulina Uznańska, deputy head of the China department at the Centre for Eastern Studies (OSW), told Interia that Tesla produces some of its vehicles in China and also operates a data centre there.

    The defence ministry later confirmed to Interia that the Military Counterintelligence Service (SKW) had in 2025 “issued guidelines on how to protect military facilities in connection with threats resulting from the use of various devices manufactured in China”.

    Last year, the 2022 Homeland Defence Act was toughened, with [new guidelines](https://notesfrompoland.com/2025/04/15/poland-issues-new-guidelines-for-photography-ban-under-national-security-law/) on its ban on producing or transmitting images or video of locations of particular importance for national security or defence.

    Those restrictions “also apply to all vehicles equipped with image and sound recorders”, noted the ministry in its comments to Interia. “In accordance with applicable regulations, the commander of a military unit has the right to make an autonomous decision to grant or refuse consent in this respect.”

    In a further statement to the Polish Press Agency (PAP), the ministry also confirmed reports that it is working on a more comprehensive policy “to restrict the entry of Chinese-made vehicles into the protected military units and facilities”.

    Broadcaster Polskie Radio reported, citing sources, that the measures would see Chinese vehicles banned not only from military bases themselves, but even from, for example, car parks nearby.

    In response to those reports, the spokesman for China’s foreign ministry, Guo Jiakun, told PAP that Beijing had “taken note” of the issue and he warned that “the abuse of the concept of national security must be stopped”.

    Sales of Chinese cars in Poland rose rapidly in 2025. In December, 9,821 were registered in the country, over four times more than in the same period a year earlier, according to data cited by broadcaster RMF. Over 2025 as a whole, Chinese brands accounted for 14.5% of all newly registered passenger cars.

Leave A Reply