Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)
Barr’s call for U.S. control of 5G draws rebuke
Pence says best way is private enterprise
NEW YORK — Trump administration officials, increasingly intent on preventing Chinese global technological domination, keep floating the idea that the U.S. government should take a more direct hand in running next-generation 5G wireless networks.
But the notion isn’t terribly popular — not even within the administration.
On Thursday, Attorney General William Barr said the U.S. government should consider taking a “controlling stake ” in the European companies Nokia and Ericsson to thwart the global ambitions of China-based Huawei, which holds a leading share of the market for 5G wireless equipment. The federal government could do so directly or via a consortium of U.S. companies and private investors, Barr said.
The backlash didn’t take long. In an interview on CNBC Friday, Vice President Mike Pence said “the best way forward” on 5G relies on private enterprise, not government takeovers. The Federal Communications Commission, which regulates the nation’s airwaves, already plans to auction off additional radio spectrum for 5G.
“That’s the plan the president has endorsed,” Pence said. Later on Friday, Trump economic adviser Larry Kudlow also argued against the idea, telling reporters at the White House that “the U.S. government is not in the business of buying companies, whether they’re domestic or foreign.”
Trump has not tweeted about the proposal.
Depending on how you count it, Barr’s speech is the second or third time people in Trump’s administration or 2020 campaign have suggested direct federal involvement in 5G networks, which boast faster speeds and promise a variety of new applications. Barr suggested in his speech that 5G speeds will turn wireless networks into “the central nervous system of the next generation of internet, called the ‘Industrial Internet,’” with potentially dramatic economic consequences.
In 2018, leaked National Security Council documents obtained by Axios proposed a U.S. government-built 5G network. That plan went nowhere.
Then in 2019, members of Trump’s re-election team offered up an idea, first reported by Politico, to create a new “wholesale” 5G network run under government contract that would provide bandwidth to network operators on an as-needed basis. Trump himself repudiated that notion after criticism from industry and other government officials, telling reporters that 5G remains “private-sector driven and private-sector led.”
Barr’s speech, however, appears to be the first time a member of the Trump administration has publicly endorsed direct U.S. government ownership of 5G suppliers. The specific steps he suggested carry echoes of “industrial policy,” which calls for a level of government involvement in the free market anathema to many economists and, at least previously, most Republican politicians.
The idea enjoyed brief U.S. popularity in the 1980s amid fears that Japan’s government-backed companies were destroying the U.S. technology industry. It then subsided as American tech companies surged ahead in the 1990s. Critics of free trade frequently note that China and Europe still run their own industrial policies.
Barr argued that Huawei — and, by extension, the Chinese government — stands to dominate the “industrial internet” and reap the economic rewards unless the U.S. and its allies take quick, dramatic and unprecedented action. Huawei is the world’s largest maker of telecom equipment.
“I would call that crazy,” Michael Thelander, CEO of telecom consultancy Signals Research Group, said of Barr’s idea of taking over European equipment companies. For the government to effectively take over a corporate entity “doesn’t sound like a very Republican position,” he said.
AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson criticized Barr’s idea of a government stake in private companies during a CNBC interview, and said that investing in software would help get around the need for Huawei.
The Trump administration has positioned the transition to 5G as a race, particularly with China. It has cast Huawei as a de facto arm of the Chinese government that could enable global espionage. Huawei has denied these allegations.
Despite its global footprint, Huawei has been largely absent from the U.S. since 2012, when a congressional panel warned phone carriers to avoid Huawei. The U.S. government has also taken steps to try to excise Huawei from small and rural wireless networks that still rely on its equipment, and has pressured allies to kick Huawei out of their telecom networks.
“There’s a certain amount of desperation here as the U.S. government tries to figure out what do on 5G,” said Washington lawyer David Hanke, a former GOP congressional aide. Hanke, however, said Barr’s suggestion might be “the least-worst option” for dealing with Huawei, since the alternative would be permanent Chinese domination of the global market for 5G technology.