Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. confirms move to allow American sales to Huawei

- JIM TANKERSLEY AND ANA SWANSON

WASHINGTON — The federal government is following through with plans to allow U.S. companies to continue doing business with Huawei, the Chinese telecom equipment giant, just weeks after placing the company on a Commerce Department blacklist.

On Tuesday, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said the administra­tion will issue licenses for U.S. companies that want to do business with Huawei “where there is no threat to national security.” And another top official suggested the move would allow chipmakers to continue selling certain technology to Huawei.

The comments confirm President Donald Trump’s surprise announceme­nt last month, after a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping, that the United States would relax restrictio­ns on Huawei as part of an effort to restart stalled trade talks with China. Weeks earlier, the Commerce Department said it had placed the company and its dozens of affiliates on a list of firms deemed a risk to national security, effectivel­y barring it from buying American parts and technologi­es without seeking U.S. government approval.

Larry Kudlow, director of the White House National Economic Council, said Tuesday at a CNBC event that the United States has “opened the door — relaxed a bit, the licensing requiremen­ts from the Commerce Department” for companies that sell to Huawei.

“We are opening that up for a limited time period,” Kudlow said.

That could offer a reprieve to American companies like

Qualcomm, Intel, Broadcom and Google, which sell microchips to Huawei and other specialize­d parts that go into its smartphone­s and telecom equipment.

U.S. technology companies have been lobbying the administra­tion, saying that the ban will cut them off from a major source of revenue, while doing little to hold back Huawei’s technologi­cal advancemen­t, since Huawei will merely purchase some less-advanced components from competitor­s in Japan, South Korea or elsewhere instead.

Kudlow also said negotiatio­ns with China, which fell apart in May and seemed on the brink of collapse, are set to resume.

“The most important thing, the headline, is that talks and negotiatio­ns will resume, after a couple months of hiatus,” he said.

On Tuesday, Robert Lighthizer, the U.S. trade representa­tive, and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin spoke with Chinese Vice Premier Liu He and Commerce Minister Zhong Shan to continue negotiatio­ns aimed at resolving the outstandin­g trade disputes between the United States and China, according to a senior administra­tion official. Both sides will continue these talks as appropriat­e, the official said.

Whether those talks can result in a trade deal is not yet clear. Deep difference­s remain, including whether China will agree to codify changes to its trade practices in Chinese law, as the administra­tion has demanded. And the United States has not yet committed to lifting any of the tariffs it has placed on $250 billion worth of goods.

And while Washington is relaxing its restrictio­ns on Huawei, a broader effort to crack down on China’s ability to buy U.S. technology is continuing.

Ross, speaking at an export control conference in Washington, said the administra­tion would continue efforts to protect America’s developmen­t of advanced technologi­es, including potentiall­y curbing the ability of other countries to buy sensitive technology.

He said the administra­tion was updating its exportcont­rol policies to reflect a “fusion” between China’s military and its civilian businesses, which Ross called a threat to America. And he warned companies not to sacrifice intellectu­al property and other trade secrets in order to gain access to growing markets like China.

“The future prosperity of the United States depends on our strategic advantage in advanced technologi­es,” Ross said. “It is wrong to trade sensitive IP or source codes for access to a foreign market,” he said, “no matter how lucrative that market might be.”

Ross stopped short of announcing long-expected additions to the list of products subject to U.S. export controls, but said the Commerce Department would continue to review which technologi­es might need protection.

“If new export controls seem necessary, the department seeks public input and strives for multilater­al agreements, so that important controls are universall­y adopted,” he said.

Ross said that the department would soon announce members of an “emerging technology technical advisory committee to help review those technologi­es,” whose members would be announced shortly, and who would help “modernize” the department’s export-control list.

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