WASHINGTON—As the Biden administration charts its course on China policy, a coming political appointment to a key Commerce Department post could offer clues to how the White House will address security risks posed by Chinese tech companies.

At issue is who should lead the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security, an agency that reaches back to the Cold War and is now at the forefront of dealing with heightened U.S.-China tensions over advanced technology.

The 450-person bureau oversees the nation’s export-control rules, giving it a big role in deciding which technologies are exported to China, which are blocked, and which Chinese companies wind up on a Commerce Department blacklist.

Two of the leading candidates for the post of undersecretary for industry and security represent a clear contrast in direction, according to trade groups and policy analysts following the situation.

One is Kevin Wolf, 54 years old, an export-control lawyer and former Obama administration official who is highly regarded for his encyclopedic knowledge of export regulations, but who has come under criticism while in private practice for assisting American companies seeking exemptions to the U.S. blacklist on technology exports.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

You May Also Like

Mark Zuckerberg will face grilling over Facebook data harvesting as users take him to court

MARK Zuckerberg has been called to appear for a deposition in a…

Fake Caviar Invented in the 1930s Could Be the Solution to Plastic Pollution

Imitation caviar invented in the 1930s could provide the solution to plastic…

De-extinction of the woolly mammoth by 2028? Colossal Biosciences plans to combine DNA from ancient species with living Asian elephants to birth a calf that could live on tribal land

The last woolly mammoths died out about 4,000 years ago, but if…

Xbox fans are furious as console receives an eye-watering 50% price increase

XBOX surprised fans earlier this year by announcing a dramatic price increase…