The Borneo Post

US lawmakers push back on Trump talk of helping China’s ZTE

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WASHINGTON: US lawmakers rejected any plan by President Donald Trump to ease restrictio­ns on China’s ZTE Corp, calling the telecommun­ications firm a security threat and vowing not to abandon legislatio­n clamping down on the company.

Trump on Monday had defended his decision to revisit penalties on ZTE for flouting US sanctions on trade with Iran, in part by saying it was reflective of the larger trade deal the United States is negotiatin­g with China.

“I hope the administra­tion does not move forward on this supposed deal I keep reading about,” Republican Senator Marco Rubio said. Bilateral talks between the world’s two biggest economies resume in Washington this week.

The Trump administra­tion is considerin­g an arrangemen­t under which the ban on ZTE would be eased in exchange for eliminatio­n of new Chinese tariffs on certain US farm products, including pork, fruits, nuts and ginseng, two people familiar with the proposal said. The potential arrangemen­t was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

“They are basically conducting an all- out assault to steal what we’ve already developed and use it as the baseline for their developmen­t so they can supplant us as the leader in the most important technologi­es of the 21st century,” Rubio said at a Foreign Relations Committee hearing on Asia policy.

Trump had taken to Twitter on Sunday with a pledge to help the company, which has suspended its main operations, because the penalties had cost too many jobs in China.

It was a departure for a president who often touts ‘America First” policies.

The Commerce Department in April found ZTE had violated a 2017 settlement created after the company violated sanctions on Iran and North Korea, and banned US companies from providing exports to ZTE for seven years.

US companies are estimated to provide 25 per cent to 30 per cent of components used in ZTE’s equipment, which includes smartphone­s and gear to build telecommun­ications networks.

The suggestion outraged members of Congress who have been pressing for more restrictio­ns on ZTE. Some U.S. lawmakers have alleged equipment made by ZTE and other Chinese companies could pose a cyber security threat.

“Who makes unilateral concession­s on the eve of talks after you’ve spent all this time trying to say, correctly in my view, that the Chinese have ripped off our technology?” Senator Ron Wyden, the senior Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, which oversees trade policy, told Reuters.

Wyden, who is also on the Intelligen­ce Committee, was one of 32 Senate Democrats who signed a letter on Tuesday accusing Trump of putting China’s interests ahead of US jobs and national security.

The company has denied wrongdoing.

Republican Representa­tive Mac Thornberry, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said at a Bloomberg event on Tuesday he did not expect lawmakers would seek to remove a ban on ZTE technology from a must-pass annual defense policy bill making its way through Congress. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A cell phone manufactur­ed by ZTE, China’s number-two smartphone maker, is seen on a store shelf in Miami, Florida. US lawmakers rejected any plan by President DonaldTrum­p to ease restrictio­ns on China’s ZTE Corp, calling the telecommun­ications firm a...
A cell phone manufactur­ed by ZTE, China’s number-two smartphone maker, is seen on a store shelf in Miami, Florida. US lawmakers rejected any plan by President DonaldTrum­p to ease restrictio­ns on China’s ZTE Corp, calling the telecommun­ications firm a...

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