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When Meta
agreed to acquire Manus, a Singapore-based artificial intelligence startup with Chinese roots for roughly $2 billion last December, many saw the transaction as just another routine deal in today’s global technology economy: capital crossing borders, startups relocating to friendlier jurisdictions, and major platform companies acquiring talent and intellectual property in the race to build the next generation of AI systems.
But for those who have been following U.S.-China strategic competition, particularly in the fiercely contested technology sector, the announcement should have raised yellow flags, if not red ones. What initially looked like a straightforward acquisition quickly became something far more consequential.
This week, Beijing ordered the deal reversed, and Meta has indicated that, for now at least, it will comply. Mark Zuckerberg may seek assistance from U.S. President Donald Trump during his anticipated visit to China, but for those who still view China as operating largely within a global economic system shaped by Western rules and institutions, episodes like this offer another bold reminder of how Beijing approaches technology, investment, and competition.














