Toronto Star

Debate on Huawei’s 5G involvment heats up

Company strikes back at U.S. with Snowden leak comments

- KELVIN CHAN

BARCELONA, SPAIN— The U.S. government’s fight to ban Chinese tech giant Huawei from next-generation internet networks appears to be flagging.

The two sides faced off Tuesday at the world’s biggest mobile technology trade fair, in Barcelona, Spain, where they sought to win over customers and government­s.

The U.S. argues Huawei is a security risk as it could let the Chinese government snoop on internet users worldwide. Huawei rejects the claim and says it is part of the United States’ broader efforts to stifle China’s economic and technologi­cal ascent.

On Tuesday, a top Huawei executive used a keynote speech at the show, called MWC Barcelona, to poke fun at U.S. intelligen­ce.

“Prism, Prism, on the wall, who is the most trustworth­y of them all?” said Guo Ping, Huawei’s rotating chair, in a

reference to a U.S. data gathering program.

“If you don’t understand that, you can go ask Edward Snowden,” he told the audience, referring to the former National Security Agency contractor who exposed the program in 2013.

Under the Prism program, the NSA, pursuant to secret court orders, collected intelligen­ce about foreign threats through U.S. internet companies. In raising the U.S. government’s history of snooping on citizens, Guo appeared to seek to portray the United States as hypocritic­al in accusing the Chinese of being a risk for users’ data privacy.

Huawei is the world’s biggest maker of networking equipment used by phone and internet companies, and its gear is considered by experts as affordable and high quality.

Banning the company from supplying the equipment could delay the rollout of 5G networks, which are meant to power the next generation of technologi­cal innovation, from selfdrivin­g cars to remote surgery.

Huawei made its presence felt at the four-day conference in Barcelona, where some100,000 visitors are expected.

The United States government also dispatched a delegation to lobby its case. U.S. officials have fanned out across the world to press the case with allies.

“The global nature of data flows and interconne­ctedness means that threats to U.S. networks have a direct bearing on the security of our allies, just as threats to our allies networks have a direct bearing on the security of the United States,” said Robert Strayer, the top U.S. diplomat for cybersecur­ity policy.

“To this end, the United States is asking other government­s and the private sector to consider the threat posed by Huawei and other Chinese informatio­n technology companies.”

Strayer did not detail specific security threats Huawei poses, despite being asked by reporters to do so in a news briefing on the show’s sidelines.

That effort took a symbolic hit after the United Arab Emirates, a key U.S. ally in the Middle East, said it would use Huawei in its networks. And European allies are balking at banning the company outright.

He denied Washington was retaliatin­g as part of a broader trade war between the U.S. and China, saying the motivation was based on security concerns partly related to Chinese laws requiring companies to comply with intelligen­ce requests.

 ?? DAVID RAMOS GETTY IMAGES ?? Barring Huawei from supplying equipment could delay the rollout of 5G networks meant to power tech innovation.
DAVID RAMOS GETTY IMAGES Barring Huawei from supplying equipment could delay the rollout of 5G networks meant to power tech innovation.

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