No, made in USA. Reloads. Black Hills .223 52 gr boat tail hollow points, moly coated. The split case, as it turns out, is not uncommon, and no, no damage to the rifle. The splits come from the brass having been fired in a chamber with the wrong headroom height, resulting in a stress on the cartridge and showing up as a stretch mark before the cartridge fails. Usually happens in full auto weapons, and these were probably reloaded military brass. The split will always occur above the taper in the base of the brass, so there is always enough of the butt of the brass left for a pressure seal. It did get my attention, but some research on the powder burner forums from some of the military and ex-military types resulted in a pretty much "ho hum" reaction. I checked the rest of the rounds and found a few more unfired with similar stretch marks. If I could find em, I would buy factory new 52 gr. BTHP's, but they are hard to come by these days. I did get one group from this same box of ammo that was a ragged 1-hole group just over 1/2 inch at 100 yards -- then left the target in the place at the mountains, so I can't photo it and brag about it.