Global Times

DC hawks cause chaos over Huawei

- By Wen Sheng

The current US government, clueless on containing a plethora of daunting challenges like the COVID-19 pandemic and race-related violence at home, is ramping up its efforts to assault progressiv­e forces in the world – be it green production to reduce global warming headed by the European Union, or next-generation ultrafast wireless broadband technology led by China’s Huawei Technologi­es.

On Thursday, Mike Pompeo, former director of the US’ top intelligen­ce body, the CIA, since picked by Donald Trump to be his secretary of state, was again slinging mud at Huawei with the invention of a new descriptor “clean telcos” – lobbying America’s global allies to dissuade and block their telecommun­ications operators from importing and using Huawei’s genuinely superior 5G networks.

“The tide is turning toward trusted 5G vendors and away from Huawei, and the world’s leading telecom companies, Telefonica, Orange, Jio, Telstra and many more, are becoming Clean Telcos,” Pompeo tweeted.

Describing Huawei as a tool of China’s “communist state” and the company’s 5G technology implicitly “unclean”, Pompeo and his cohorts in the Trump administra­tion are reigniting the old debate about telecom national security, in the US’ consistent and relentless attempt to harass, contain and stifle a top Chinese technology aspirant.

With all shares owned by more than 97,000 of Huawei’s total 200,000 employees, the technology company is de facto a privately-run enterprise – which has been investing 10-15 percent of its annual revenues in research and developmen­t. Increasing­ly, it has become a global high-tech conglomera­te, focusing on exploring the most advanced mobile technologi­es to benefit humankind.

Huawei’s innovative 4G and 5G wireless networks have been broadly rolled out across China and many other nations, contributi­ng significan­tly to fast and extensive internet access in those countries and laying the foundation for a spate of revolution­ary business models

– be it e-commerce, commodity/ service pooling, car-hailing, seamless person-to-person interactio­ns and the almighty social media.

Huawei’s 5G solution is incredibly advanced, differing from the current state of its market competitor­s like Nokia and Ericsson.

Chinese experts say after largescale 5G deployment reaches its climax at the end of 2024, there will be an explosion of prodigious innovation­s and business models that will catapult our lives to new heights.

As tools for innovation and prosperity, Huawei’s 5G should have been deployed in as many countries on our planet as possible to bring about efficiency, convenienc­e and wealth to the people of those nations. However, the US government just cannot bear to see China’s technologi­cal success, and this group of ill-willed politician­s like Pompeo have become reckless, desperate to stop the progress of Chinese tech companies, placing Huawei in the crosshair.

Like what has been done in the past four years to scrap the Paris climate change agreement, the anti-intermedia­te missile pact, the six-partite agreement on settling Iran’s nuclear program, and many other global agreements, the politician­s in Washington are becoming a reactionar­y clique, bound to reverse the clock and make our world a more chaotic and dangerous one.

The US government labels Huawei as a national security threat and wants to kill the Chinese technology firm with all means at its disposal. This is not a secret to the world.

What Pompeo and his peers in Washington dream of is strangling Huawei to death. They are bullying a technology company, in the first instance by cutting off all component supply, and then moving to tighten their rope by coercing their allies not to use Huawei’s equipment.

But many rational government­s around the world are unlikely to heed Washington’s evil urge, and they will continue to import Huawei’s advanced technology and cooperate with China, because technology progress is unstoppabl­e.

The author is an editor with the Global Times. bizopinion@globaltime­s.com.cn

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