The Mercury News

May fires top defense official for alleged Huawei leak

- By Karla Adam and William Booth

LONDON >> Prime Minister Theresa May on Wednesday fired her defense secretary, Gavin Williamson, for allegedly leaking details about the Chinese telecom giant Huawei to the news media.

The abrupt sacking of Britain’s top defense official — over allegation­s by the prime minister herself that Williamson had breached the secrecy protocols of the National Security Council — was stunning. For a top government minister to be canned over such a leak is almost unpreceden­ted in Britain.

The British political press quickly focused on the “Game of Thrones” atmosphere in May’s fractious government, riven by open divisions in her cabinet over Brexit and stoked by May’s weak leadership.

Williamson, who denies he is a leaker, is one of the many aspirants to replace May, who is seen as especially vulnerable over her failure to deliver a European Union exit plan. Whether she resigns in the coming months, as she has indicated she would do, or is ousted more quickly, is a point of debate.

Williamson’s sacking follows an investigat­ion into informatio­n leaked to the British press about Chinese telecom Huawei’s role in building Britain’s coming 5G internet.

After an April 23 meeting of Britain’s National Security Council, attended by intelligen­ce chiefs and senior cabinet ministers, a story appeared on the front page of the Daily Telegraph that claimed that May had decided to permit Huawei to play a leading role in Britain’s future net. Huawei is one of the world’s largest communicat­ions conglomera­tes, manufactur­ing mobile phones, tablets and computers — and assembling the software, routers and networks to operate Wi-Fi and high-speed internet.

At the same time, U.S. officials have been pressing allies to bar Huawei from building their nation’s super-fast 5G networks, fearful that Chinese cyberspies could tap user data through backdoor access. Huawei has denied the accusation­s that it could be used to spy, but revelation­s about U.S. companies and their abilities to harvest user data have increased suspicions about what the Chinese could do if they were operating the switches.

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