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Trump move to ease Huawei sanctions sparks anger, confusion
By Rob Lever
Washington (AFP) July 1, 2019

'Good chance' for more US exports to Huawei: Trump aide
Washington (AFP) July 1, 2019 - As the United States and China pursue trade talks, there is a "good chance" that more US firms will be granted licenses to sell products to controversial Chinese telecoms giant Huawei, White House economic advisor Larry Kudlow said Sunday.

Kudlow's comments came after President Donald Trump and China's Xi Jinping agreed on Saturday to a truce in their trade war, and Washington pledged to hold off on new tariffs while they negotiate.

While Trump had signaled the softer position on Huawei, a sticking point in trade talks, by saying US companies could sell equipment "where there's no great national security problem," Kudlow added a bit of detail.

The senior Trump aide told "Fox News Sunday" that "there's a good chance the Commerce Department, Secretary (Wilbur) Ross, will open the door on that and grant new licenses."

Trump told Fox News Channel's "Tucker Carlson Tonight" that after meeting with Xi, he believes the two sides are closer to a trade deal.

"We had a very good meeting. He wants to make a deal. I want to make a deal. Very big deal, probably, I guess, you'd say the largest deal ever made of any kind, not only trade," the president said, according to a transcript released by the channel.

The US has said it fears that systems built by Huawei -- the world leader in telecom network equipment and number two smartphone supplier -- could be used by China's government for espionage via built-in secret security "backdoors."

Huawei has vigorously denied that, saying the US has never provided proof to substantiate it.

Many US lawmakers, including Senate Republicans like Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio, are concerned about any lifting of the effective ban against Huawei accessing crucial American technology or operating in the US market.

"If President Trump has agreed to reverse recent sanctions against Huawei, he has made a catastrophic mistake," Rubio tweeted Saturday.

Kudlow emphasized that Huawei will remain on the so-called US Entity List -- foreign companies and individuals that are subject to specific export and technology transfer licensing requirements.

"This is not a general amnesty," Kudlow said.

"The Commerce Department will grant some temporary additional licenses where there is a general availability" of the products to be sold, he added.

In a later interview on CBS talk show "Face the Nation," Kudlow said: "We understand the huge risks regarding Huawei."

On the general issue of US-China trade talks, Kudlow declined to offer any deadline for the resolution of the dispute between the world's top two economies, though he admitted the talks could "go on for quite some time."

"There are no promises, there's no deal made, no timetable," he said. "Just resuming the talks... is a very big deal."

The US trade war truce with China which could ease sanctions on Huawei has prompted a backlash from lawmakers over national security concerns amid confusion over how the deal may impact the Chinese tech giant.

In the weekend agreement with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping to resume negotiations and hold off on new tariffs, US President Donald Trump suggested a potentially softer position on Huawei, a sticking point in the trade war.

White House economic advisor Larry Kudlow said Sunday there's "a good chance" the deal will open the door to "new licenses" allowing more exports to the Chinese firm suspected of working with Beijing's intelligence services to facilitate spying -- a charge that the world's number two smartphone supplier denies.

Last month the US government added Huawei to an "entity list" of companies barred from receiving US-made components without permission from Washington.

Some lawmakers accused Trump of selling out on national security.

"If President Trump has in fact bargained away the recent restrictions on #Huawei, then we will have to get those restrictions put back in place through legislation," Republican Senator Marco Rubio tweeted.

Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer echoed those remarks, tweeting that "Huawei is one of (the) few potent levers we have to make China play fair on trade."

Kudlow maintained that Huawei will remain on the Entity List.

Trump told reporters after the Osaka G20 meeting that US companies "can sell their equipment to Huawei" if there's no great security problem attached.

"Huawei is a complicated situation" that would be discussed as part of a broader trade agreement, he said, adding: "We have a national security problem, which to me is paramount."

- Undercutting security claims -

Republican Representative Jim Banks called the deal "extremely troubling" and said it would make it harder to negotiate with China.

"Why not keep #Huawei on our blacklist until China demonstrates a change in behavior?" Banks tweeted.

Michael McFaul, a Stanford professor and former ambassador to Russia, said Trump's decision undercuts his argument about national security.

"When you tell the world one day Huawei is a security threat and then reverse that argument the next day, you undermine the veracity of the initial security claim," McFaul wrote on Twitter.

It remained unclear, however, what the deal would mean for Huawei, which under US restrictions could be denied key software including much of the Google Android system and important hardware to allow it to keep making smartphones and other equipment.

Asked about the agreement, a Huawei spokesman said only: "We acknowledge President Trump's comments related to Huawei over the weekend and have nothing further to add at this time."

- No long-term solution -

The deal "is unlikely to give Huawei the products it really needs and even if it did, it is quite possible that fatal damage has already been done to Huawei's smartphone business," technology analyst Richard Windsor said on his Radio Free Mobile blog.

James Lewis of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the truce in the trade war may not last long.

"Trump has a chokehold on Huawei -- he and the Chinese know it -- and he probably want to use it for leverage in the talks," Lewis said.

Samm Sacks, a fellow at the New America foundation China Digital Economy project, said the United States faces a difficult task in trying to resolve the trade dispute while maintaining a hard line on Huawei's national security risks.

"Trump has given a green light to national security hardliners whose end objective has not been to find a deal in the trade war, but to create a world free of Chinese telecom equipment," Sacks said.

One possible compromise would be to ease restrictions on Huawei's consumer business including smartphones and tablets while keeping sanctions on telecom infrastructure, which is seen as having a higher potential security risk, she said.

But Sacks noted the deal is unlikely to resolve the simmering tensions between the two economic powers over technology leadership.

"Over the longer-term, Beijing is not going to abandon its technological ambitions in artificial intelligence, internet of things, and 5G next generation networks in ways that will continue to create tension with the United States," she said.

rl/it/ch

GOOGLE


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