FCC revokes China Unicom's authorization to operate in US
The U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on Thursday
voted to revoke the authorization for China Unicom's U.S. unit to operate in
the United States, citing national security concerns.
The 4-0 vote to revoke the authority that had been granted
in 2002 is the latest move by the American regulator to bar Chinese
telecommunications carriers from the United States because of national security
concerns.
The order requires China Unicom Americas to end domestic
interstate and international telecommunications services in the United States
within 60 days of the order's publication.
The Chinese Embassy did not immediately respond to requests
for comments.
A lawyer for the company released a statement from China
Unicom that said the FCC decision was "without any justifiable grounds and
without affording the required due process. It added that China Unicom
"will proactively protect the rights and interests of the company and its
customers."
The FCC said China Unicom Americas is ultimately owned and
controlled by the Chinese government and provides mobile virtual network
operator services and international private leased circuit and Ethernet private
line services along with IP transit, cloud and resold services in the United
States.
FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel said since the approval
"the national security landscape has shifted and there has been mounting
evidence - and with it, a growing concern - that Chinese state-owned carriers
pose a real threat to the security of our telecommunications networks."
The FCC said China Unicom's "responses were incomplete,
misleading, or incorrect."
Rosenworcel noted that last year the FCC published the
first-ever list of communications equipment and services that pose an
unacceptable risk to national security. This month, she wrote to the Commerce
Department, the FBI, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, and
other agencies in order to update that list.
FCC Commissioner Geoffrey Starks said China Unicom "can
continue to offer data center services to American consumers" despite the
revocation.
He said the FCC and Congress should examine this issue and
determine whether the commission needed broader authority to address security
concerns posed by the centers.
The FCC began making efforts in March to revoke the
authorization for China Unicom, Pacific Networks and its wholly owned
subsidiary ComNet.
In October, the FCC revoked the U.S. authorization for China
Telecom (Americas), saying it "is subject to exploitation, influence and
control by the Chinese government." The Chinese failed to win an appeal of
the decision.
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