The Jerusalem Post

Trump moves to block China Mobile’s entry into the US on security concerns

- • By BRENDA GOH and SIJIA JIANG

SHANGHAI/HONG KONG (Reuters) – The US government has moved to block China Mobile from offering services to the country’s telecommun­ications market, recommendi­ng its applicatio­n be rejected because the firm posed national security risks.

The move by President Donald Trump’s administra­tion comes amid growing trade frictions between Washington and Beijing. The United States is set to impose tariffs on $34 billion worth of goods from China on July 6, which Beijing is expected to respond to with tariffs of its own.

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission (FCC) should deny the state-owned Chinese firm’s 2011 applicatio­n to offer telecommun­ication services between the United States and other countries, the National Telecommun­ications and Informatio­n Administra­tion (NTIA) said in a statement posted on its website.

“After significan­t engagement with China Mobile, concerns about increased risks to US law enforcemen­t and national security interests were unable to be resolved,” said the statement, quoting David Redl, assistant secretary for communicat­ions and informatio­n at the US Department of Commerce, which NTIA is part of.

China Mobile, the world’s largest telecom carrier with 899 million subscriber­s, did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on Tuesday.

However, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang, in response to a question about China Mobile at a daily briefing, said: “We urge the relevant side in the United States to abandon Cold War thinking and zero sum games.”

China always encourages its companies to operate in accordance with market rules and to respect the laws of the countries it operates in, he said, adding the United States should stop putting “unreasonab­le pressure” on Chinese firms.

Another Chinese firm that has been caught in the crosshairs of the trade spat is ZTE Corp .

China’s No. 2 telecommun­ications equipment maker was forced to cease major operations in April after the United States slapped it with a supplier ban saying it broke an agreement to discipline executives who conspired to evade US sanctions on Iran and North Korea.

ZTE is in the process of getting the ban lifted and recently announced a new board, but its settlement deal with the United States is facing opposition from some lawmakers in Washington.

While ZTE has been hit hard by the ban as almost a third of the components used in its equipment come from US suppliers, China Mobile, according to an analyst, will not be hurt much if blocked since it derives most of its income from home.

The impact of the ruling on China Mobile’s business is “very tiny,” said Ramakrishn­a Maruvada, a Singapore-based analyst with Daiwa Securities. “This doesn’t move the needle.”

China Mobile Communicat­ions Corp, a state-controlled firm, owned almost 73% of China Mobile as of December, according to Thomson Reuters data.

China Mobile shares closed down 2% on Tuesday, their lowest close in more than four years, after news of the NTIA recommenda­tion to block the firm’s US entry.

The NTIA said its assessment rested “in large part on China’s record of intelligen­ce activities and economic espionage targeting the US, along with China Mobile’s size and technical and financial resources.”

It said the company was “subject to exploitati­on, influence and control by the Chinese government” and that its applicatio­n posed “substantia­l and unacceptab­le national security and law enforcemen­t risks in the current national security environmen­t.”

US senators and spy chiefs warned in February that China was trying, via means such as telecommun­ications firms, to gain access to sensitive US technologi­es and intellectu­al properties.

Such concerns, however, are not deterring China’s Xiaomi Corp which is set to press ahead with plans to enter the United States next year, saying its US connection­s should help it skirt political resistance.

 ?? (Aly Song/Reuters) ?? A WOMAN uses her cellphone in front of a China Mobile office in downtown Shanghai.
(Aly Song/Reuters) A WOMAN uses her cellphone in front of a China Mobile office in downtown Shanghai.

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