South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

U.S. issues warning over Huawei

The message: China’s top technology company is a national security threat too

- By David Tweed and Gao Yuan

None of the scores of pages of U.S. indictment­s handed down Monday against Huawei Technologi­es Co. explicitly mentioned anything about 5G networks or China’s spy agency.

But they sent a clear message to world leaders weighing whether to use Huawei equipment for next-generation wireless networks connecting everything from phones to cars to supertanke­rs: China’s largest technology company is a threat to national security.

“They aren’t just going after the notion that there is hard evidence of previous spying,” said Graham Webster, a fellow at Washington, D.C.-based research group New America who studies China’s digital economy. “They are trying to undermine trust in Huawei overall, saying that this company cannot be trusted in your infrastruc­ture.”

The case is a further sign that wider strategic tensions between the world’s two largest economies will persist even if they reach a deal to end a monthslong trade war that is starting to hit global growth and company earnings.

The indictment­s intensify the spotlight on Huawei, which has come to symbolize China’s economic rise and challenge to the U.S.’ status as the world’s top superpower. In particular, the decision to prosecute Meng Wanzhou — daughter of billionair­e Huawei founder and CEO Ren Zhengfei — has riled Beijing and increased concerns around the globe of a new Cold War.

For Huawei, the indictment­s couldn’t come at a worse time. Since Meng, also Huawei’s chief financial officer, was arrested in Canada on Dec. 1 after a U.S. request, the company has struggled to convince the world its equipment won’t be used for espionage. In January, Poland arrested one of its employees for spying, prompting Huawei to disavow any responsibi­lity for his actions.

Ren used a rare media appearance at its Shenzhen headquarte­rs to insist the company doesn’t help Beijing spy.

“I love my country, I support the Communist Party, but I will not do anything to harm the world,” he said.

The indictment­s are a direct attack on Huawei’s credibilit­y.

In one, the U.S. alleges that Ren and Meng misreprese­nted Huawei’s business with Iran to the American government and four financial institutio­ns since 2007, in violation of American sanctions. The indictment also accused the company of destroying evidence once it became aware of the U.S. investigat­ion.

The other set of charges cite emails between Huawei USA and China to show how engineers conspired to steal trade secrets from TMobile USA Inc. The documents cite emails from employees in China who repeatedly pressed their colleagues to collect key informatio­n on “Tappy,” a robot used to test mobile phones that Huawei wanted for its own use.

When T-Mobile complained about the attempted theft, Huawei allegedly covered up the matter with a faulty internal investigat­ion and blamed rogue employees for any wrongdoing. Huawei had set up an internal committee that handed out monthly bonuses to employees who stole the most valuable IP from competitor­s, the suit alleges. Twice a year, special bonuses were paid to employees from three regions who had collected especially important confidenti­al informatio­n.

“Employees were directed to post confidenti­al informatio­n obtained from other companies on an internal Huawei website, or, in the case of especially sensitive informatio­n, to send an encrypted email to a special email inbox,” the indictment says.

Taken together, the charges bolster the Trump administra­tion’s case that Huawei is operating at the behest of the Chinese government. While there’s no explicit evidence that the company’s products are compromise­d, it’s very difficult to know for sure — a risk the U.S. argues is too big for critical infrastruc­ture like 5G.

Australia and New Zealand have joined the U.S. in keeping Huawei out of its

5G networks. Canada, the U.K., Germany and France have yet to decide.

It’s not an easy choice. On the commercial side, Huawei presents a cheaper option than its competitor­s: The company said it has already won more than 30

5G contracts globally, including 18 from European countries. Australia’s TPG Telecom Ltd. on Tuesday pulled the plug on plans to build the country’s fourth mobile network, saying it no longer made financial sense after the government banned Huawei.

“Because the global market is now deeply consolidat­ed and Huawei enjoys a lead in technology and solutions, I don’t think the recent news about the company will impact Huawei’s 5G deployment — both in China and abroad,” said Bing Duan, an analyst with Nomura Asset Management.

Even more than current technology, control over 5G networks could allow an enemy to wreak mass industrial sabotage and social collapse, according to U.S. officials.

This week the European Union’s digital chief Andrus Ansip urged companies to reconsider partnershi­ps with Chinese companies due to an intelligen­ce law that mandates any organizati­on and citizen to assist Beijing’s spy agencies with probes.

China’s government sees the charges as part of a bigger U.S. plan to hold back the world’s second-biggest economy.

On Tuesday, the foreign ministry in Beijing urged the U.S. to revoke Meng’s arrest warrant and stop its “unreasonab­le crackdown” on Chinese companies.

“For some time now, the United States has used its national power to smear and attack specific Chinese enterprise­s in an attempt to stifle their legitimate operations,” foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said in a statement.

China has threatened counter

measures against government­s that ban Huawei, and detained two Canadians on espionage charges — a move that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government saw as retaliatio­n for Meng’s arrest. Those actions have only helped confirm the links between Huawei and the government, according to a European diplomat in Beijing who asked not to be identified.

 ?? FRED DUFOUR/GETTY-AFP ?? Huawei is being kept out of 5G networks by the United States, Australia and New Zealand.
FRED DUFOUR/GETTY-AFP Huawei is being kept out of 5G networks by the United States, Australia and New Zealand.
 ?? DARRYL DYCK/AP ?? Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou was arrested in December.
DARRYL DYCK/AP Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou was arrested in December.
 ?? GETTY-AFP ?? Ren Zhengfei is Huawei’s reclusive founder and CEO and Meng’s father.
GETTY-AFP Ren Zhengfei is Huawei’s reclusive founder and CEO and Meng’s father.

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