The Trump administration is disappointed that Huawei has managed to find ways around the U.S. supply chain ban
Yesterday, Defense Secretary Mark Esper said, “We have to be conscious of sustaining those [tech] companies’ supply chains and those innovators. That’s the balance we have to strike.” Meanwhile, the Journal says that a split has formed inside the Trump administration with officials trying to figure out how they can best deal with the national security issues that Huawei reportedly creates while not harming U.S. companies. Some lawmakers wrote a letter to Secretary Esper questioning why the Department of Defense would quash the Commerce Department’s proposed change to the di minimis rule. U.S. Senators Ben Sasse (R., Neb.), Tom Cotton (R., Ark.) and Marco Rubio (R., Fla.) said in the letter, “Huawei is an arm of the Chinese Communist Party and should be treated as such.” The company has repeatedly denied this allegation.
Huawei is the worldwide leader in supplying networking equipment and the U.S. is said to be examining ways it can help stateside tech firms produce networking gear that can be used instead of Huawei’s parts. The Administration reportedly would like this done within 18 months. Last year, Trump officials supposedly met with Oracle and Cisco to see if they would be interested in competing with Huawei, but both firms said at the time that they didn’t have the time or money to get involved. Administration officials believe that Germany and the U.K. would ban Huawei parts from their 5G networks if there was an alternative, something that Britain’s prime minister noted earlier this month. Thanks to its connection with China’s state-run bank, Huawei offers its customers aggressive financing terms. The U.S. is also looking at ways to counter that advantage.
The report notes that there is frustration inside the Trump administration that Huawei’s businesses have not been hurt as badly as hoped. The company finished 2019 as the second-largest smartphone manufacturer in the world behind Samsung but ahead of Apple. It shipped approximately 240 million handsets last year, up 16.5% from the 206 million it delivered the year before.