Houston Chronicle

U.S. proposes rules on telecoms purchases

- By Elaine Kurtenbach

BEIJING — The Department of Commerce has proposed requiring case-by-case approvals of all purchases of telecommun­ications equipment in a move likely to hit major Chinese suppliers like Huawei.

The plan issued Tuesday follows President Donald Trump’s order in May declaring a national emergency and restrictin­g purchases by U.S. companies of telecoms equipment that might be considered a security threat. It calls for a period of public comment before it is implemente­d.

That order did not name specific countries or companies but was thought to target Chinese suppliers such as Huawei Technologi­es and ZTE Corp. It gave the Commerce Department 150 days to come up with the regulation­s issued this week.

The May 15 order by Trump said foreign “adversarie­s” were exploiting informatio­n and communicat­ions technology and services, or ICTS, for espionage and other cybercrime­s. It gave the commerce secretary the authority to prohibit or “mitigate” any purchases of telecommun­ications equipment and services made after that date, “if such transactio­ns pose: an undue risk of sabotage or subversion of ICTS in the United States; an undue risk of catastroph­ic effects on the security and resiliency of critical infrastruc­ture or the digital economy … or an unacceptab­le risk to national security or to the security or safety of U.S. persons.”

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in a statement that the proposed rules “demonstrat­e our commitment to securing the digital economy, while also delivering on President Trump’s commitment to our digital infrastruc­ture.”

Decisions on transactio­ns would use a “case-by-case, fact specific approach” and refer to assessment­s by the Secretary of Homeland Security and Director of National Intelligen­ce.

The Chinese Commerce Ministry did not immediatel­y reply to a request for comment.

The U.S. government blackliste­d Huawei in May, requiring U.S. companies to obtain government approvals for sales to the company. That would disrupt Huawei’s access to processor chips and other technology. Its smartphone­s would lose Google maps and other services, making it hard to compete.

The Trump administra­tion on Nov. 19 extended for 90 days a limited reprieve on such technology sales, the second such extension.

Despite sanctions, numerous loopholes have been exploited. U.S. companies, for example, continue to supply Huawei with chips made outside the United States.

The May executive order was based on the 1977 Internatio­nal

Emergency Economic Powers Act, which had never before been applied to an entire commercial sector. It usually is used to freeze assets of designated terrorists and drug trafficker­s and impose embargoes on hostile foreign government­s.

Huawei, the world’s biggest supplier of network gear, has been deemed a danger in U.S. national security circles for the better part of a decade. The company denies such allegation­s.

U.S. justice and intelligen­ce officials have presented no evidence of any Huawei equipment in the U.S. or elsewhere being compromise­d by backdoors installed by the manufactur­er to facilitate espionage by Beijing. Huawei vehemently denies involvemen­t in Chinese spying.

But all major U.S. wireless carriers and internet providers swore off Chinese-made equipment after a 2012 report by the House Intelligen­ce Committee said Huawei and ZTE, China’s No. 2 telecoms equipment company, should be excluded as enablers of Beijing-directed espionage.

 ?? Andy Wong / Associated Press ?? Visitors look at cameras provided by telecoms equipment giant Huawei at the China Public Security Expo in Shenzhen, China.
Andy Wong / Associated Press Visitors look at cameras provided by telecoms equipment giant Huawei at the China Public Security Expo in Shenzhen, China.

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