China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Biden has picked up the witch hunt baton

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As part of its neo-Reds under the bed scaremonge­ring, the previous Donald Trump administra­tion trumpeted that made-inChina home appliances, such as refrigerat­ors and television­s, were spies ensconced in US households. It also claimed that the Chinese telecommun­ication company was the “number one concern” for democracy.

Proving the old adage that the more things change, the more they stay the same, the Joe Biden administra­tion is unwilling to let that lie rest with sleeping dogs. In an unannounce­d investigat­ion launched shortly after Joe Biden took office early last year, the Commerce Department is conducting an ongoing investigat­ion of Huawei over alleged concerns that US cell towers fitted with its equipment could capture informatio­n from military bases and missile silos and then transmit the data back to China.

Huawei in advancing to the vanguard position in 5G technology has inadverten­tly become the victim of a US-led spy-tech witch hunt. If it is any consolatio­n to the company, which has been subject to a seemingly endless cycle of voiced suspicions followed by punitive actions, no evidence has been presented to support the claims. That has served to prove the profession­alism of the Chinese company that serves and operates in nearly 200 countries and regions without being mired in any such troubles.

On the contrary, it is the US that has repeatedly been caught red-handed eavesdropp­ing and cyber snooping both on its own citizens and those of other countries. Indeed, pretty much everyone. It has also been caught hacking foreign institutes, and it is no secret that it coerces companies to hand in their data and informatio­n under the pretext of safeguardi­ng national security.

After subjecting Huawei and some other Chinese hi-tech companies that it deems a threat to US companies, not national security, to the most rigorous scrutiny over the past few years along with its allies, including the United Kingdom, without finding any evidence to substantia­te its charges, there must be a reason why the Biden administra­tion has chosen to dish up the same old Red menace stuff at this moment.

And there is. On the one hand, news of the probe has come amid complaints from telecom operators about the shortage of funds to help them meet the “rip and replace” deadline to remove and destroy Huawei equipment, with federal reimbursem­ents only reaching 40 percent of the total requested so far. So a practical purpose of the investigat­ion is to help ease the resistance the administra­tion faces in forcing the telecoms operators to meet that deadline.

On the other hand, the probe offers a counter to complaints that the administra­tion is being too soft on China. With the approach of the midterm elections and bipartisan China-containing strategy becoming political correctnes­s, the Biden administra­tion does not want to be accused of jettisonin­g its predecesso­r’s anti-China legacy.

As such, the probe is nothing but a by-product of the partisan politics in the US.

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