Key points from the House select committee's report on Chinese espionage aimed at U.S. nuclear secrets and satellite technology: --China has stolen information on the United States' most advanced thermonuclear weapons, including the W-88 warhead, one of the most modern and sophisticated, and the neutron bomb. In all, information was obtained about seven U.S. warheads. --U.S. nuclear secrets obtained by China over 20 years of espionage have given China nuclear weapons design information ``on par with'' what's available to the United States. --While most of the nuclear secrets, including information about the most sophisticated warheads, is believed to have been obtained in the 1980s, some technology thefts occurred into the late 1990s and thefts ``almost certainly continue to the present.'' --China's next generation of thermonuclear weapons, currently under development, will exploit elements of stolen U.S. design information. --The primary focus of China's long-term, ongoing intelligence collection effort has been on the Energy Department's national weapons laboratories of Los Alamos, Lawrence Livermore and Sandia. --Two U.S. satellite manufacturers, trying to correct satellite launch problems, provided China with ``design information and know-how'' that allowed them to improve the reliability of both its civilian and military rockets. --Tighter restrictions are needed on commercial export licenses to China, especially for the sale of high-power computers and in helping China's satellite launches. -=-=- 