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US takes aim at Huawei

Arrest of telecom giant’s CFO escalates US-China tech battle

- By KATE O’KEEFFE and BOB DAVIS

THE Trump administra­tion’s efforts to extradite the chief financial officer of China’s Huawei Technologi­es Co over criminal charges mark the start of an even more aggressive phase in the technology rivalry between the United States and China and will increase pressure on Washington’s allies to shun the telecommun­ications company.

Armed with a US extraditio­n request, Canadian authoritie­s arrested Meng Wanzhou on Dec 1, the same day as President Trump was holding a summit with Chinese counterpar­t President Xi Jinping. But White House officials said Trump had no advance knowledge of the arrest, indicating the action was on a separate track from trade talks currently under way between Washington and Beijing.

Meng’s detention underscore­s a sense of urgency, at the Justice Department and other US agencies, to address what they see as a growing threat to national security posed by China’s ambitions to gain an edge in the tech sector. For years, Washington has alleged the Chinese government could compel Huawei, which supplies much of the world with critical cellular network equipment, to spy or to disrupt communicat­ions.

Huawei has long said it is an employee-owned company and isn’t beholden to any government, and has never used its equipment to spy on or sabotage other countries. The Chinese government, speaking through its embassy in Canada, strenuousl­y objected to the arrest, and demanded Meng’s immediate release.

US prosecutor­s made the extraditio­n request based on a sealed indictment for alleged violations of Iran sanctions that had been prepared for some time, people familiar with the matter said. A federally appointed US overseer, formerly charged with evaluating HSBC Holdings PLC’s anti-money-laundering and sanctions controls, relayed informatio­n about suspicious Huawei transactio­ns to federal prosecutor­s in the Eastern District of New York, some of the people said.

Meng, the daughter of Huawei’s founder, Ren Zhengfei, is now in custody in Vancouver, and a bail hearing has been scheduled for Friday, according to a spokesman for Canada’s justice department.

Some worried a lack of coordinati­on on the various strands of the Trump administra­tion’s China initiative­s could be counterpro­ductive, especially if Trump decides to use the detention of Meng as leverage to extract concession­s in the trade talks. The two sides agreed on a 90-day window from the Dec 1 summit to settle a trade dispute that has seen the two sides exchange tit-for-tat tariffs on each other’s goods.

“I’m very concerned that that’s just going to ratchet this trade war and make negotiatio­ns much more difficult,” said Gary Locke, former US ambassador to China. “This is I think a really hot-button, almost a grenade with respect to the 90-day negotiatio­ns.”

China has a long history of reading darker motives into US actions. “The risk is conspiracy theories in Beijing,” said China scholar Michael Pillsbury at Hudson Institute, who consults regularly with the Trump trade team. He compares the events to when China rejected US explanatio­ns that the United States had made a mistake when it bombed the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade in 1999 during the Kosovo war.

The arrest indicated the Justice Department had significan­t evidence against Meng, and that additional charges were likely, said Brian Fleming, a trade and national security lawyer at Miller & Chevalier. “This is just the tip of the iceberg,” he said.

The arrest could also add ammunition to an extraordin­ary US government campaign to persuade wireless and Internet providers in allied countries to stop using telecommun­ications equipment from Huawei, said national security experts.

US officials say they are intensifyi­ng efforts to curb Huawei because wireless carriers worldwide are about to upgrade to 5G, a new wireless technology that will connect many more items—factory parts, self-driving cars and everyday objects like wearable health monitors – to the Internet. US officials say they don’t want to give Beijing the potential to interfere with an ever-growing universe of connected devices.

 ??  ?? In custody: A profile of Meng is displayed on a computer at a Huawei store in Beijing. The Chinese government, speaking through its embassy in Canada, strenuousl­y objected to the arrest, and demanded Meng’s immediate release. — AP
In custody: A profile of Meng is displayed on a computer at a Huawei store in Beijing. The Chinese government, speaking through its embassy in Canada, strenuousl­y objected to the arrest, and demanded Meng’s immediate release. — AP

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