UK banned Huawei because US told us to, former minister
The UK government’s decision to ban Huawei 5G equipment and
services “had nothing to do with national security,” and was because of
American pressure, a former business and industry minister has said.
Speaking at an event on Monday, Vince Cable, who served as
Business and Industry minister for five years in the coalition government led
by David Cameron, said that the decision against the Chinese tech giant was
taken “because the Americans told us we should do it.”
In July 2020, Boris Johnson’s government announced that
Huawei products would be removed entirely from the UK’s 5G networks by the end
of 2027, citing new advice produced by the National Cyber Security Centre
(NCSC).
The move came just months after the United States imposed
sanctions against Huawei on the grounds that it was acting contrary to US
national security or foreign policy interests. The US barred Huawei from
acquiring crucial components such as microchips and forced it to create its own
operating system.
Cable, who has a reputation for being more sympathetic
towards China than most UK officials, added that during his tenure as minister,
the intelligence and security services gave repeated assurances that there was
no risk posed by using Huawei services.
“If Britain had kept with 5G, we would now be at the
forefront of countries using the most advanced technologies. And we’re not,”
said Cable.
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