WASHINGTON—The United States should use tariffs to deter Chinese state-sponsored cyber attacks, a House lawmaker told The Epoch Times.
Timmons suggested that the Trump administration use tariffs as part of its cybersecurity strategy to hold foreign adversaries accountable and establish deterrents against potential malign cyber activities in the future.
Timmons told The Epoch Times that his suggestion is not hard to implement, as long as the U.S. government can identify the party responsible for a cyberattack.
“I mean, at the end of the day, if the federal government steps in, makes a business that has experienced a cyberattack or a breach whole, and then extracts the damages from the country of origin. That seems pretty simple to me,” Timmons said. “I think it’s a great tool in our toolbox that the president clearly is willing to use.
“He can use tariffs to secure our critical infrastructure and our businesses from future attacks by making them whole.”

Josh Steinman, chief executive officer of cybersecurity company Galvanick, was one of the witnesses at the hearing. He previously served as a senior director for cyber policy at the National Security Council during the previous Trump administration.
Steinman said it’s time for the United States to take a more aggressive posture. In this way, “we throw sand in their gears, we force them to spend time and effort to defend against our counterattacks, and those could be ones that are managed at the national level,” he said.
Steinman added that he believes the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and its military intelligence apparatus are already in a “wartime footing.”
Artificial Intelligence
Experts at the hearing noted the threat of Chinese hackers using artificial intelligence (AI) in their operations.“The United States must lead in building AI-powered cybersecurity systems that can anticipate, detect, and autonomously mitigate emerging threats to critical infrastructure,” Amoroso stated.
“It’s a big issue. It’s really important,” Steinman told The Epoch Times. He said it’s why “it would be smart for us to prevent Chinese AI companies from the United States.”
Amoroso suggested at the hearing that the United States “take legislative steps to encourage proactive defense strategies,” including programs to fund research and development for critical infrastructure protection, increase workforce on AI and cybersecurity, and to “modernize policy frameworks that still reflect a pre-AI threat model.”
“It’s entirely possible that the PRC could have a bunch of [quantum computers] in the basement,” Amoroso said.
In other words, foreign adversaries could be thinking that they would be able to access the encrypted data they steal now in the future, in a form of attack known as “harvest now, decrypt later,” according to the GAO.
Timmons told The Epoch Times such a strategy is “scary.”
“It’s definitely a major challenge [with] AI and quantum computing,” he said.
“We’re going to have to invest in our defenses and create a deterrent threat using offense.”
Rep. Michael Cloud (R-Texas), member of the Subcommittee on Military and Foreign Affairs, agreed that the United States needs to step up both its defense and offense regarding cybersecurity.

It’s “kind of why we were talking about skating to where the puck is going from our defense apparatus,” Cloud told The Epoch Times.
“Certainly, we need to let the CCP and any other bad actors know that their actions against us and our people will not go unaddressed,“ he said. ”But then we also need to shore [up] our infrastructure.”
Timmons said he hopes to have more conversations on this issue.
The United States needs to “make sure that we’re able to use every tool in our toolbox to hold both nation-state actors and non-state actors accountable,” he said at the hearing.