China may not need missiles to cripple the United States. It may only need your car, your television, your refrigerator, and the growing web of “smart” devices quietly embedded into everyday American life.
The Internet of Things (IoT) – the vast network of internet-connected vehicles, appliances, cameras, and infrastructure systems – has created a glaring new cybersecurity vulnerability for American companies and individuals. Increasingly, the technology behind it is designed, built, or controlled by entities operating under the authority of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
The IoT connects billions of devices that constantly collect, transmit, and receive data. Cars track movement and surroundings. Home appliances log usage patterns. Buses, traffic systems, medical equipment, and energy infrastructure rely on continuous connectivity to function.
What makes this dangerous is not innovation itself, but who controls the technology that makes it possible. A large and growing share of the world’s connected hardware – and the software updates that govern it – originates in China, where companies are legally required to cooperate CCP state intelligence services.
British cybersecurity expert Charles Parton of the Royal United Services Institute warned that this reality gives Beijing extraordinary leverage. In a wry remark during testimony before Congress last year, he asked, “Why would China fake a fight with America? Why not just turn you off?” Parton has urged lawmakers to pass a sweeping ban on all modules (the specific components that enable devices to be connected to the internet) worldwide that Chinese technologies and algorithms.
That warning captures the central danger of the IoT era: control. Internet-connected systems can be monitored, manipulated, slowed, or shut down remotely. At a national scale, such access could disrupt transportation, logistics, communications, emergency services, and energy distribution – effectively freezing the economy without firing a shot.
The data these devices collect is just as valuable. Smart vehicles, appliances, and infrastructure sensors gather location data, audio, video, behavioral patterns, and environmental details around the clock. Aggregated and analyzed, this can reveal sensitive information about military installations, supply routes, vulnerabilities in critical infrastructure, and the daily routines of millions of Americans. In the wrong hands, such data becomes a weapon that is useful for espionage, blackmail, targeting, economic coercion, and cyberwarfare.
Chinese electric vehicles (EVs) illustrate how this threat is already materializing. John Moolenaar, the Chairman of the House Select Committee on China, recently described EVs as “digital eyes and ears on wheels,” emphasizing that Chinese EVs serve the CCP’s goals. Moolenaar further described the Chinese EV industry as a “political project.”
Although most Chinese EVs are still banned in the United States, for more than a year, security experts have issued urgent warnings that Chinese automotive software may be weaving invisible threads of spyware into electric vehicles, spinning a sprawling surveillance net. These EVs bristle with ever-watchful sensors, recording everything from a child chasing a ball to a soda can rattling down the street.
Each fragment of data is carefully collected, transmitted, and consumed by AI, opening the floodgates for outsiders to siphon vast seas of private information.
“EVs have become a vital tool for the CCP, providing them with fresh insights into Americans’ mindsets and daily habits,” Lt. Col. Quán Chāngpǔ, a defector from the early 1990s, told me.
“The party has been in war with the capitalist West, although they use the Leninist phrase ‘struggle’ which means the same,” another high-ranking official at the General Political Department of the Chinese military who defected to the West in the late 1990s said. “Until the CCP abandons Leninism, all Chinese technologies should be viewed weapons against the West.”
In building electric vehicles, the CCP uses its dominance to create dependency, sabotage platforms, and access secrets from embedded devices.
These dangers are not theoretical.
In November, a Norwegian public transport operator discovered a remote access point embedded in the software of its Chinese-made vehicles. The timeline of events initiated when the operator detected this digital entry; subsequently, it was found that the manufacturer could use it to remotely reprogram the buses without authorization. Investigators confirmed that the manufacturer could not only retrieve data but also halt or slow down the bus.
Learning from Norway’s experience, the Danish Agency for Civil Protection admitted that internet-connected features like GPS, cameras, and microphones could expose Chinese-made buses to vulnerabilities.
Remote control is not unique to buses. Modern EVs – including American models – allow owners to summon vehicles or move them via smartphone apps. Four years ago, a German hacker used a third-party app connected to Tesla’s API to meddle with locks, windows, sound systems, and siphon sensitive data.
The real danger was not the remote-control feature itself, which is typically public, but the fact that the Chinese EV manufacturer concealed it.
Security experts caution that hackers exploiting weaknesses in software and charging networks could freeze hundreds of thousands of cars left charging overnight, risking a paralysis that could sweep across the nation.
This mirrors Beijing’s earlier attempt to dominate global 5G and 6G networks – a strategy that met resistance only after years of complacency in the West.
Every “smart” device quietly entering American homes and cities coming out of a Chinese factory could be a threat. Without aggressive action, the conveniences of the IoT may become the infrastructure of foreign control – an invisible network capable of spying, manipulating, and disabling the country from within.
Ben Solis is the pen name of an international affairs journalist, historian, and researcher.