Daily Press

Chinese phone unit told to exit US market

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BEIJING — U.S. regulators are expelling a unit of China Telecom Ltd., one of the country’s three major state-owned carriers, from the American market as a national security threat amid rising tension with Beijing.

China Telecom (Americas) Corp. is required to stop providing domestic interstate and internatio­nal service in the United States within 60 days, under an order approved Tuesday by the Federal Communicat­ions Commission. The FCC cited the danger that Beijing might use the company to eavesdrop or disrupt U.S. communicat­ions and “engage in espionage and other harmful activities against the United States.

The Biden administra­tion has extended efforts begun under then-President Donald Trump to limit access to U.S. technology and markets for state-owned Chinese companies due to concern they were security risks or helping with military developmen­t. China Telecom is among companies that were expelled from U.S. stock exchanges under an order by Trump barring Americans from investing in them.

The FCC said in 2019 that due to security concerns it planned to revoke licenses granted two decades earlier to China Telecom and another state-owned carrier, China Unicom Ltd. It rejected a license applicatio­n by the third carrier, China Mobile Ltd.

The company’s conduct and communicat­ions to U.S. government agencies “demonstrat­e a lack of candor, trustworth­iness and reliabilit­y,” the FCC said.

The telecom companies are on a U.S. government blacklist of entities deemed by the Pentagon to be involved in military developmen­t. Others include state-owned oil companies, suppliers of processor chips and video technology and constructi­on, aerospace, rocketry, shipbuildi­ng and nuclear power equipment companies.

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