The Pak Banker

UK faces choice on Huawei with global implicatio­ns

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Britain faces a crucial choice on Tuesday over whether to allow China's Huawei Technologi­es to build its next- generation wireless networks.

The decision has implicatio­ns for the country's diplomatic relations with the United States, which is pushing allies to shun the Chinese company over cybersecur­ity concerns.

And Britain's choice will feed into a wider battle between the US and China over technologi­cal supremacy that has seen the world's two biggest economies trade war.

Britain's National Security Council is poised to decide whether to allow Huawei to build parts of its new high speed cellular network known as 5G, an infrastruc­ture program the country sees as critical to its economic future. But Huawei has come under scrutiny because of worries that communist leaders in Beijing could, under China's 2017 national intelligen­ce law, compel the company to carry out cyberespio­nage.

Days away from

European Union and

engage

in

a damaging leaving the desperatel­y needing to secure its future outside of the trading bloc, Britain is now caught in the middle of a geopolitic­al battle between the US and China - both important trading partners. Prime Minister Boris Johnson's government finds itself in the awkward position of risking the fury of its closest ally at just the moment it really needs President Donald Trump's administra­tion to quickly strike a trade deal. Britain is also loathe to insult Beijing.

The UK made a point of courting Chinese investment with the State Visit of Xi Jinping in 2015, a gilded affair meant to underline the dawn of a new era.

Dont be fooled by the name. The fifth generation of cellular networks is not merely an upgrade from existing 4G wireless network technology. It's billed as a radical transforma­tion delivering ultrafast download speeds combined with vastly reduced signal lag - the slight delay that occurs between, say, tapping out a command on your phone and getting a response.

The other difference is that it will be built into thousands of new devices, like thermostat­s and sensors in medical devices. The aim is for 5G to be instrument­al for self- driving cars or for telemedici­ne, allowing doctors to control robots in remote surgery on patients thousands of miles away. Underpinni­ng all this new connectivi­ty will be a lot more software that can lead to more vulnerabil­ities.

Cell networks have traditiona­lly consisted of two parts. There's the radio access network made up of antennas and base stations on rooftops and masts. There's also the core, the brain keeping track of smartphone­s connecting to the network so account holders can be billed along with managing data traffic flowing across the entire network.

With 5G, US officials worry that the core will run extensivel­y on software. Millions of lines of computer code would present a huge attack surface and it could be nearly impossible to spot an accidental vulnerabil­ity or a malicious backdoor that can be used for siphoning informatio­n or crippling vital connected infrastruc­ture like a power grid. These fears aren't entirely unfounded. Huawei equipment has for years been inspected at a lab overseen by British officials, who said in their latest annual report that the company's software was buggy.

 ?? -APP ?? Federal Secretary Ministry of Informatio­n Technology and Telecommun­ication, Shoaib Ahmad Siddiqui addressing opening ceremony of "Internatio­nal Workshop on ICTs for Developmen­t: Mainstream­ing the Marginaliz­ed".
-APP Federal Secretary Ministry of Informatio­n Technology and Telecommun­ication, Shoaib Ahmad Siddiqui addressing opening ceremony of "Internatio­nal Workshop on ICTs for Developmen­t: Mainstream­ing the Marginaliz­ed".

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