Global Times

US’ attack on Huawei set to prolong economic recession

- By Wen Sheng The author is an editor with the Global Times. bizopinion@globaltime­s.com.cn Page Editor: wangyi@globaltime­s.com.cn

As the clock ticks quickly toward November 3, the Trump administra­tion, mired in the results of its messy response to COVID-19, is reigniting a tussle with China in a desperate attempt to deflect its derelictio­n of duty. It has banned Huawei from purchasing semiconduc­tor chips that are made using any US technology, such as technologi­es by TSMC and Samsung.

By relentless­ly assaulting Huawei and following his new election playbook of smearing China, Trump hopes to sit for another four years in the White House.

Huawei is the world leader in 4G and 5G and one of China’s most promising technology companies. It should not be crushed by the political palm of the US government.

Beijing has openly said that it will use all necessary means to safeguard the hightech Chinese firm’s rights and interests. Reliable sources told the Global Times that authoritie­s are set to make strong counteratt­acks against some top US companies.

Simply put, the White House wants to win a couple of political points by choosing to escalate a technology war with China. China should not let Washington get its way. By striking back hard at major American chip, electronic device and aircraft makers, China can bring economic pain to the US by exacerbati­ng and prolonging its current recession.

Much of what the Trump administra­tion has been doing to ratchet up an economic showdown with China will prove self-defeating for the US economy. Trump’s re-election prospects are becoming increasing­ly bleaker due to his disastrous bungling of the US COVID-19 response and his senseless trade war. The coupling of the two sins is highly likely to upend his pursuit of a second term.

Huawei’s achievemen­ts in 4G and 5G are attributed to the enterprise’s steadfast and painstakin­g efforts in telecommun­ications and informatio­n technology research and developmen­t. It did not steal anything from the US. Due to a myriad of 2G and 3G standards embraced by Qualcomm and the now defunct Motorola and Lucent, US firms began to lose ground to European and Chinese ventures in developing faster mobile broadband technology, represente­d by 4G and 5G.

Cutting off Huawei’s semiconduc­tor supplies just because there isn’t a single US company that can now compete with it is a sinister move. That is what most angers the

Chinese public, which has lately called for a boycott of American products and services.

On May 22, the US government, again, placed 33 Chinese firms, institutio­ns and enterprise­s on an economic blacklist, alleging they have nurtured tie-ups with China’s military. But, obviously, the move represents the US firebrand politician­s’ pattern of thinking – that they must pummel all Chinese technology upstarts because they will endanger America’s tech supremacy.

The White House’s move to impose a sweeping ban on Huawei’s supplies threatens to delay the rollout of ultrafast 5G wireless networks globally, as the company is now the world’s largest telecoms equipment manufactur­er.

It is no wonder that Huawei has condemned the US government for being “arbitrary and pernicious.” In the long run, the Trump administra­tion’s attack on Huawei will destroy the trust and cooperatio­n within the global semiconduc­tor sector.

It remains to be seen how the saga will unfold, but the tech conflict’s adverse economic impacts will worsen the pain currently felt by the US. The country’s deteriorat­ing COVID-19 crisis is being worsened by Trump’s blind push to reopen the economy and will lead to a flare-up in infections and fatalities.

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 ?? Illustrati­on: Luo Xuan/GT ??
Illustrati­on: Luo Xuan/GT
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