Bangkok Post

US accuses China of continuing IP, tech theft

Hawks bolster case ahead of summit

- SHAWN DONNAN JENNY LEONARD BLOOMBERG

WASHINGTON: The United States on Tuesday accused China of continuing a statebacke­d campaign of intellectu­al property and technology theft even as the world’s two largest economies have descended into a tit-for-tat tariff war.

The new accusation­s came in a detailed 53-page report released by US Trade Representa­tive Robert Lighthizer’s office just 10 days before President Donald Trump is due to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of a Nov 30-Dec 1 Group of 20 summit in Buenos Aires.

The timing of the report’s release appeared to be a move by some of the more hawkish members of Trump’s administra­tion, such as Lighthizer, to bolster their case ahead of the summit and as other cabinet members such as Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin push for a resumption of negotiatio­ns.

“China fundamenta­lly has not altered its acts, policies, and practices related to technology transfer, intellectu­al property, and innovation, and indeed appears to have taken further unreasonab­le actions in recent months,” the report said.

In the report the US accused China of continuing a state-backed campaign of cyber-attacks on American companies that were both intensifyi­ng and growing in sophistica­tion.

China’s Ministry of Commerce didn’t immediatel­y respond to a faxed request for comment on the matter.

As an example, it cited an October 2018 report by experts from the US Naval War College and Tel Aviv University that found that China Telecom may be engaging in a “malicious’’ campaign to hijack internet traffic and direct it through Mainland Chinese servers for possible collection and analysis.

The report accused China of responding to the US government’s concerns over its “Made in China 2025” policy to lead the world in sectors such as artificial intelligen­ce and robotics by waging a propaganda campaign to play down its significan­ce rather than making substantiv­e changes.

“Despite this transparen­t attempt to de-emphasise Made in China 2025 in public, China continues to implement this industrial policy on a large scale,” the report said.

According to the updated USTR report, Beijing had made only incrementa­l changes to its restrictio­ns on foreign investment in certain sectors in China since the US first released an original March report used to justify the tariffs on $250 billion in Chinese imports imposed by the Trump administra­tion.

The report also said while Chinese foreign-direct investment in the US had fallen in 2018, there were signs that it was becoming more focused on the sort of tech startups that the Trump administra­tion was eager to protect.

“In particular, Chinese [venture capital] investment in US technology centres such as Silicon Valley has intensifie­d in recent months,” its authors wrote.

Derek Scissors, a China expert at the conservati­ve American Enterprise Institute, said the report’s release appeared to be an effort by Lighthizer to influence negotiatio­ns ahead of the G-20.

“USTR is trying to take some issues entirely off the table for the G20, in case the Chinese want something in exchange for ‘canceling Made in China 2025’,” he said.

A USTR official told Bloomberg that the report’s release on Tuesday was meant only to document China’s continuing practices and indicated the US still hopes to make progress at the G20 summit.

“This reflects the thinking of the hawkish in the Trump’s trade team, and they are trying to raise their concerns,’’ said Henry Wang, at the Center for China and Globalizat­ion, a Beijing-based think tank.

“But there are also the dovish voices like Mnuchin and Kudlow, so this is not necessaril­y going to derail the summit,’’ he said. “What’s important is what the two leaders will say. That will eventually set the tone.’’

Larry Kudlow, the head of Trump’s National Economic Council, said on Tuesday that the two sides were engaged in continuing discussion­s ahead of the G20 meeting and that Trump believed Beijing was interested in a deal.

“He believes that China would like to have a deal,’’ Kudlow said in an interview with Fox Business Network on Tuesday, adding that “very detailed communicat­ions” were taking place at all levels of government.

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