The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) recently classified the Chinese tech giants, Huawei Technologies Co., as national security threats and carriers are barred from even using the Universal Service Fund (USF) to buy their equipment. And now the FCC has ordered certain US telecommunications companies to remove Huawei equipment from their network.
And it come as no surprise that the Federal Communications Commission has also started the process of revoking China Telecom’s authorization to operate in the US, with the “rip and replace” order as the latest US move against Huawei made on national security grounds. The order includes subsidies for smaller carriers for removing and replacing the equipment. However, the commission can’t actually implement the reimbursements without the approval of funding from congress.
FCC chairman Ajit Pai said Huawei has close ties to the Chinese military and intelligence communities as well as the Communist Party, and those ties are at “every level of the company—all the way up to its founder”.
“The concerns about Huawei aren’t just hypothetical: Independent entities have identified numerous security vulnerabilities in Huawei equipment and found it to be less secure than that of other companies—perhaps deliberately so.”
He said Huawei is also subject to “sweeping” laws compelling the company’s assistance and cooperation with Chinese intelligence services and forbidding the disclosure of that assistance.
The FCC will publish a list of communications equipment and services determined to be a risk to national security. It has estimated the programme will require at least $1.6bn (£1.2bn) to reimburse eligible providers, who take federal subsidies mostly to provide service in rural areas of the US.
Huawei has long denied US accusations that it is a government-run company and a threat to national security, that in a recent statement, the company expressed disappointment with the decision.
“This overreach puts US citizens at risk in the largely underserved rural areas – during a pandemic – when reliable communication is essential,” the company said.
On Thursday the FCC also rejected a petition from Huawei asking the agency to reconsider its decision designating the company as a national security threat to communications networks.
China Telecom ban
The FCC also began the process of revoking China Telecom’s authorization to “provide domestic interstate and international telecommunications services within the United States”.
The company’s US subsidiary was asked in April to “show cause why the Commission should not start a process for revoking and terminating” its authorization.
The FCC said that China Telecom had “failed to provide a satisfactory response to the concerns”.
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