The Sunday Telegraph

Wake up, Britain – Huawei is a national threat

China has the incentive, and will soon have the means, to harvest UK data for its own illiberal ends

- ROBERT SPALDING Brigadier General (retd) Robert Spalding is the former senior director for strategy at the National Security Council at telegraph.co.uk/opinion READ MORE

Dear citizens of the UK. As a retired American general, I contend Huawei clearly poses a national security threat to the UK. I refer here not to the argument about data, which will follow, but instead to the fact that it threatens to create a rift in the UK-US alliance that has sustained in peace since the end of the Second World War.

I do not argue the fact that Huawei supports the human rights violations of the Chinese Communist Party in Xinjiang. Even though more than a million Uighurs suffer in concentrat­ion camps and are most likely subject to forced organ harvesting as has been reported by a UK tribunal, the recent votes on human rights at the UN show that we are in a world where business matters more than compassion.

I would also ask that the way people in the UK may feel about our president be set aside. We still have a democracy, and even if he wins in 2020, he will be subject to term limits in 2024.

But I must strongly emphasise a point in the US National Security Strategy (NSS) to explain the threat. On page 19 it states, “we will improve America’s digital infrastruc­ture by deploying a secure 5G internet capability nationwide.” The intent of this statement was to convey how important it is to secure a free nation’s data in the 21st century. The NSS goes on to say, “data, like energy, will shape US economic prosperity and our future strategic position in the world.” This also matters for the UK.

While oil similarly influenced geopolitic­s in the 20th century, it did so at the level of the nation. The NSS provides context when it states, “they [China and Russia] are determined to make economies less free and less fair, to grow their militaries, and to control informatio­n and data to repress their societies and expand their influence.” This is meant to convey that the power of large Silicon Valley tech companies to use technologi­cal advances like big data and artificial intelligen­ce has been adopted by authoritar­ian regimes to extend their power and influence beyond their borders and down to the level of the individual.

It appeared the EU understood the power of data in the hands of large tech companies when it passed Global Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). The problem with GDPR, as with our current internet, is enforcemen­t of privacy laws. Since the current internet permits the easy aggregatio­n of data, large tech companies have an easy time discoverin­g one’s patterns of behaviour. So, too, do authoritar­ian regimes. A secure 5G network, as detailed above, would deploy identityba­sed encryption to prevent individual data from being used without consent

To further illustrate how authoritar­ian nations use their companies to enable influence beyond their borders, “Engineerin­g Global Consent” – a research paper by Samantha Hoffman of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute – details the story of a Chinese big data and artificial intelligen­ce company. The company, GTCOM, collects

2-3 petabytes of data per year to provide language translatio­n services. The service uses machine learning to translate languages. The data, however, doesn’t stop there. It continues to flow towards the intelligen­ce and influence arms of the Chinese Communist Regime.

While this alone is not a smoking gun, when combined with the knowledge that Russia used big data, AI bots and social media networks to influence Americans during and after the 2016 elections, it presents a complete understand­ing of how totalitari­ans can extend their influence into democracie­s using globalisat­ion and the internet. If that is not enough, the recent NBA incident regarding Hong Kong should be. While Daryl Morey, general manager of the Houston Rockets basketball team, did not get fired for supporting Hong Kong, Roy Jones – a midlevel employee at the Marriott corporatio­n who innocently and without political intent liked a tweet – did, as detailed in my book Stealth War.

All this points to the fact that data security is a national security issue, and the Chinese Communist Party has the incentive to both harvest and harness data for its own illiberal ends. These ends include the suppressio­n of speech, which is counter to the interests of the British people. If the UK still believes that Huawei does not fit the definition of a national security risk, then at least I have fulfilled my duty as a friend to convey the threat.

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