There's something fundamentally broken in the international system when sanctions are supposed to stop war-making machines, but the parts keep showing up anyway.
According to recent Wall Street Journal reporting, Chinese companies are continuing to supply key components to drone factories in Iran and Russia day after day, shipment after shipment while Washington rolls out new penalties and expresses grave concern. The question isn't whether these shipments exist. The question is why they can't be stopped.
The answer, like most things in global trade, is complicated, frustrating, and ultimately reveals how sophisticated supply chains have become at defeating the very tools designed to control them.
What's Actually Getting Through
The components reaching Iranian and Russian drone factories reads like a shopping list of modern technology's most versatile building blocks. We're not talking about specialized military hardware that requires exotic manufacturing processes. We're talking about the same components that power smartphones, laptops, electric vehicles, and countless civilian applications.


