The Jerusalem Post

Gov’t heads at odds over inspecting Chinese ventures

Security cabinet scheduled to discuss issue on Wednesday

- • By HERB KEINON

Israel is still debating whether a new mechanism to vet foreign investment­s should be “strict” or “lenient,” a debate expected to be discussed at a security cabinet meeting on Wednesday, The Jerusalem Post has learned.

Deliberati­ons on creating a way to oversee infrastruc­ture investment – especially from China – have been ongoing for months, and have been held intermitte­ntly in the security cabinet for more than a year. This issue is one of the few points of friction between Jerusalem and Washington these days.

There are currently two schools of thought inside the Prime Minister’s Office. National Security Council head Meir Ben-Shabbat – who has been on the receiving end of conversati­ons with senior US officials warning of consequenc­es if Israel does not take steps to oversee Chinese investment – favors a strict mechanism to placate the US, according to government officials.

On the other hand, Avi Simhon, head of the prime minister’s National Economic Council, wants to see a more lenient mechanism in order not to scare off potential investors, not only from China but from other countries as well.

The issue of the infrastruc­ture investment also comes against the backdrop of the protracted US-China trade war. The US has informed Israel in clear terms that it views Chinese investment and management of infrastruc­ture projects in Israel, such as the Haifa and Ashdod ports, as a security concern for the US, since the Sixth Fleet docks there.

For instance, in June, a major spending bill in the Senate – the National Defense Authorizat­ion Act – included language warning Israel against Chinese investment­s in sensitive infrastruc­ture projects.

“The United States has an interest in the future forward presence of United States naval vessels at the Port of Haifa in Israel, but has serious security concerns with respect to the leasing arrangemen­ts of the Port of Haifa as of the date of the enactment of this Act; and should urge the Government of Israel to consider the security implicatio­ns of foreign investment in Israel,” the bill read.

The issue was raised by US President Donald Trump directly with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during their meeting in the White House in March, and has been the subject of a number of conversati­ons between Ben-Shabbat and his US counterpar­t, John Bolton.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo addressed Washington’s concerns in an interview

with Channel 13 during his visit to Israel in May.

Asked whether the US seeks an Israeli policy shift toward China, Pompeo said, “I want to make sure that every country is wide-eyed and awake with respect to the threats that are posed by China, and then make sure they understand as well America will have to make decisions too. If certain systems go in certain places, then America’s efforts to work alongside you will be more difficult, and in some cases, we won’t be able to do so.”

Pompeo added that “when China behaves using debt as a trap, when China bribes, when China engages in spying through its commercial state-owned enterprise­s, and presents risk through its technology systems – companies like Huawei, which present real risk to the people of Israel – when those things happen, we want to make sure that countries know about it, know the risks, and then countries will make their own sovereign decisions.”

US officials are also concerned that Chinese telecom companies are being used by China for intelligen­ce-gathering. Simhon, who has been working on this issue for some three years, told Knesset members last July that a plan to vet foreign investment was under discussion and had been raised in the security cabinet.

China has become a major investor in Israel over the last 10 years, both by buying huge companies such as Tnuva, and by building and managing major infrastruc­ture contracts. The Chinese have also increasing­ly become a major investor in Israeli hi-tech companies.

Among the infrastruc­ture projects that Chinese companies have been involved in are building the Carmel tunnels, the Acre-Karmiel railway project, port constructi­on in Haifa and Ashdod, and building the light rail Red Line in Tel Aviv. These firms are part of Chinese government companies that are also involved in railway constructi­on projects in Iran, another bone of contention with the Americans.

In January, Shin Bet head Nadav Argaman warned that massive Chinese investment in Israel could pose a danger to national security.

“Chinese influence in Israel is particular­ly dangerous in terms of strategic infrastruc­ture and investment­s in larger companies,” he said in a closed-door speech. •

 ?? (Yossi Zamir/Flash90) ?? HAIFA PORT, where the US Sixth Fleet is docking. The US views Chinese imports through the port as a security threat.
(Yossi Zamir/Flash90) HAIFA PORT, where the US Sixth Fleet is docking. The US views Chinese imports through the port as a security threat.

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