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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

US to review new curbs on Huawei and China

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WASHINGTON: The Trump administration plans to meet this month to discuss further curbing technology exports to China and its flagship telecoms company Huawei, two sources said, in a bid to resolve differences within the government over the possible crackdown.


The gathering, currently scheduled for Febreuary 28, will bring together high level officials for talks after the US Commerce Department withdrew a rule aimed at further reducing foreign shipments to Huawei Technologies amid pushback from the Defence Department, one of the people said.


The meeting, which is expected to include cabinet-level officials including Commerce Department Secretary Wilbur Ross, Defense Secretary Mark Esper and State Department Secretary Mike Pompeo, is aimed at addressing how best to approach the blacklisted Chinese company and the broader war with China over technological dominance.


Some US policymakers favour close trade ties with Beijing while others see China and Huawei, the world’s largest telecoms equipment maker, as serious threats to national security.


“The administration has to decide how to match its rhetoric on China with policies to deny China key technology and industry,” said Tim Morrison, a former senior director at the White House’s National Security Council under President Donald Trump, who favours tougher rules.


“Too many tools have not been brought to the President because the entire administration isn’t yet in the fight. That must end,” he added.


US companies have argued the measures that have been floated would harm US business by driving customers to foreign competitors, while doing little to thwart Huawei.


The Commerce Department in May placed Huawei on a trade blacklist, citing national security concerns. That allowed the US government to restrict sales of American-made goods to the company and a small number of items made abroad that contain US technology.


Under current regulations, key foreign supply chains remain beyond the reach of US authorities, which fuelled frustration among China hawks and prompted a push to expand US authority to block more shipments to Huawei.


But a draft rule by the Commerce Department to expand its authority to block more shipments to Huawei - first reported by Reuters in November - was stymied by opposition from the Pentagon last month over concerns about harm to US interests. The Treasury Department also pushed back against the measure, sources said.


In an unusual move, Commerce withdrew the rule from the inter-agency review process, pending a meeting of principals to resolve differences.


The gathering comes amid a deepening tech war between the United States and China. The Trump administration is trying to keep sensitive technologies that could be used to harm American interests beyond the reach of Beijing, by cracking down on exports and limiting Chinese investment in key US sectors. — Reuters


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