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Cox Report
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==Major allegations== The Cox Report<ref name="house.gov"/> contained five major allegations about China and nuclear weapons. * China stole design information regarding the United States' seven most advanced thermonuclear weapons. * These stolen secrets enabled the [[People's Liberation Army|PLA]] to accelerate the design, development and testing of its own nuclear weapons. * China's next generation of nuclear weapons would contain elements of stolen U.S. design information and would be comparable in effectiveness to the weapons used by the United States. * Small warheads based on stolen U.S. information could be ready for deployment in 2002 also enabling China to integrate [[MIRV]] technology on its next generation of missiles. * These thefts were not isolated incidents, but rather the results of decades of intelligence operations against U.S. weapons laboratories conducted by the [[Ministry of State Security of the People's Republic of China|Ministry of State Security]]. In addition, the report described the illegal activity likely persisted despite new security measures implemented as a result of the scandal. While several groups, including the People's Republic of China, contend that the Report is overstated or inaccurate, its authors and supporters maintain that its gist is undeniable. The report's basic findings were as follows, quoted from the above document's opening summary: {{quote|The People's Republic of China (PRC) has stolen design information on the United States' most advanced thermonuclear weapons. The Select Committee judges that the PRC's next generation of thermonuclear weapons, currently under development, will exploit elements of stolen U.S. design information. PRC penetration of our national nuclear weapons laboratories spans at least the past several decades and almost certainly continues today. The PRC has stolen or otherwise illegally obtained U.S. missile and space technology that improves PRC military and intelligence capabilities.}}
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