American tech bill locks Huawei on Washington’s trade blacklist
A bill aimed at bolstering America’s technological power to counter China, which was passed by the US Senate on Tuesday, has singled out Huawei Technologies Co as a threat and prohibits the Commerce Department from removing it from a trade blacklist.
The Chinese telecoms giant can only be removed from the
Entity List if the US finds that it no longer “poses an ongoing threat to the
critical infrastructure of the United States or its allies”, according to the
text of the United States Innovation and Competition Act. In addition, the US
will share intelligence with its allies, such as Canada and European countries,
about Huawei’s 5G capabilities as well as Beijing’s intentions, in an effort to
find alternatives to Huawei’s network technologies.
TikTok, the popular short-video sharing app operated by
Beijing-based ByteDance, is also named in the bill but the legislation only
stipulates that the app should be banned from all government devices.
The bill, which is expected to pass the House of
Representatives before US President Joe Biden signs it into law, dashes
previous hopes in China that a Biden presidency would ease certain technology
restrictions on the Shenzhen-based company.
“The US is in the beginning stages of a second ‘moon shot
moment’ in its modern history and China’s technology companies are the new
competition,” said Alex Capri, Singapore-based research fellow at the Hinrich
Foundation. “It has become impossible for US policymakers to separate companies
like Huawei from Chinese state-driven initiatives and objectives. It is a
paradigm shift … to a kind of selective mercantilism and techno-nationalism.
This is just the beginning.”
Earlier this week, Biden added two Huawei financing arms to
a list that prohibits Americans from investing in Chinese companies that the
administration says have ties to the Chinese military or sell surveillance
technology used against religious minorities and dissidents. Investors can no
longer buy new securities in these companies on American markets starting from
August 2, and existing US investors have been given a year to divest their
holdings.
JP Morgan said it will exclude Huawei’s dollar bonds from
some of its investment indices from the end of next month following the ban,
Reuters reported on Wednesday.
Elsewhere, Romanian lawmakers this week approved a bill that
could exclude Huawei from its 5G network, joining a list of countries that are
closing the door to Huawei equipment. However, Vodafone’s Italian unit said it
had secured conditional approval from Rome to use Huawei equipment in its 5G
network, Reuters reported this week.
Amid ongoing US pressure, Huawei is currently facing an
uphill struggle to convince partners and clients that its network gear is safe
and that it is purely a commercial entity, with no secret ties to Beijing’s
security and military apparatus. It has been sideswiped by harsh US sanctions –
imposed for national security reasons – that have cut off its access to
US-origin technology, particularly the supply of advanced chips to its handset
and network equipment businesses.
Huawei opened its new Global Cyber Security and Privacy
Protection Transparency Centre in Dongguan, Guangdong province on Wednesday,
part of its renewed push to win trust from the industry. Huawei launched a
similar centre in Brussels in 2019.
“[We want to] work together, share best practices, and build
our collective capabilities in governance, standards, technology and
verification,” said Ken Hu Houkun, Huawei’s deputy chairman, at the facility’s
launch. “We need to set shared goals, align responsibilities and work together
to build a trustworthy digital environment that meets the challenges of today
and tomorrow.”
Hu said on Wednesday that Huawei asks its partners to
“assume nothing, believe nobody, and check everything” in an apparent reference
to the raft of allegations made against the company by Washington in recent
years. Hu did not directly mention this week’s US bill passed by the Senate.
“The US has a course of action that’s looking to maximize
the strength of America and weaken that of anyone they see as a competitor,”
John Suffolk, Huawei’s global cybersecurity and privacy officer said via video
at the event. “We will continue to try as best as we can to drive our business
forwards to benefit our customers and their customers.”
However, Capri said “these efforts [by Huawei to demonstrate
its commitment to cybersecurity protection] will ultimately not pay off for
Huawei and other Chinese companies in the long-term, because economic
nationalism, not just national security, is at play.”
Huawei also released what it terms its security “baseline
framework” on Wednesday. Sean Yang, director of Huawei’s global cybersecurity
and privacy protection office, said the company wants to work with
stakeholders, including regulators and customers, to improve security.
Hinsa Siburian, head of the National Cyber and Crypto Agency
in Indonesia, as well as Mohammad Hamad Al-Kuwaiti, head of cybersecurity for
the United Arab Emirates, also attended Huawei’s launch ceremony in Dongguan.
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