US to pressure UK to stop using Huawei 5G equipment: Report

US officials will meet with their British counterparts before a key UK decision on using Huawei products, sources say.

Huawei signage are pictured at a mobile phone shop in Singapore, May 21, 2019
The US has been developing laws to prevent intelligence from being shared with its allies that use Huawei equipment [File: Edgar Su/Reuters]

The United States is making a final pitch to the United Kingdom in the run-up to a UK decision on whether to upgrade its telecoms network with Huawei equipment amid threats to cut intelligence-sharing ties, people with knowledge of the matter told the Reuters news agency.

The UK is expected to make a final call on how to deploy Huawei equipment in its future 5G networks later this month. It has been weighing US-led allegations that Huawei’s telecoms equipment could be used to spy, against the UK’s relationship with China and industry warnings that banning the firm outright would cost billions of dollars.

Huawei, the world’s biggest maker of mobile networking equipment, has repeatedly denied the allegations. It did not immediately respond to a request by Reuters for comment.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is expected to press UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab over Huawei at a meeting in Washington, DC, on Thursday, sources said.

In the face of the decision, Washington had also planned to send a delegation, including deputy national security adviser Matt Pottinger, to meet UK officials this week, sources said. But the trip was cancelled at the last minute, two of the people said, due to bad weather.

Last month, the US passed legislation that included a little-noticed provision bolstering threats to restrict intelligence-sharing with allies that use Huawei equipment.

Washington is seen to be “cocking the pistol”, said a person with knowledge of the British government’s position on Huawei. “What’s unclear is how, when or indeed if it will actually be fired.”

A UK government spokesman said: “The security and resilience of the UK’s telecoms networks is of paramount importance. The government continues to consider its position on high-risk vendors and a decision will be made in due course.”

The US State Department and National Security Council did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The UK is a key battleground in the geopolitical tug-of-war over Huawei. Officials decided in principle last year to block the company from critical parts of the 5G network but give it limited access to less sensitive parts. A final decision has yet to be made public.

A provision of the US 2020 defence spending law, signed by President Donald Trump in December, directs intelligence agencies to consider the use of telecoms and cybersecurity infrastructure “provided by adversaries of the US, particularly China and Russia”, when entering intelligence-sharing agreements with foreign countries.

The provision, added by Republican Senator Tom Cotton, was aimed in particular at members of the Five Eyes intelligence-sharing alliance – the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the UK – intended as “a first shot across the bow”, said a person familiar with the matter.

An aide to Cotton said the senator’s team is working on a new draft bill that could be released this month and would “significantly restrict” intelligence-sharing with countries that use Huawei equipment in their 5G networks, following through on earlier US threats to do so.

“I’m profoundly concerned about the possibility that close allies, including the UK, might permit the Chinese Communist Party effectively to build their highly sensitive 5G infrastructure,” Cotton told Reuters.

Source: Reuters