(WSJ) Trump administration officials on Thursday sought to revoke federal licenses used by China Telecom Corp. to do business in the U.S. as part of a broader campaign to curb global Chinese technology interests on national security grounds.
A collection of federal agencies led by the U.S. Department of
Justice and including the departments of Defense and Homeland Security
asked the Federal Communications Commission to permanently revoke
licenses the Chinese internet service provider’s U.S. subsidiary has
used since 2007 to act as a “common carrier” connecting domestic and
overseas networks.
The FCC has final authority over the decision but often defers to
national security officials at other agencies. The proposal, if adopted,
would effectively bar China Telecom from serving U.S. clients and could
hinder its ability to send data across American networks.
The agencies’ decision cited an “evolving national security
environment since 2007 and increased knowledge of the PRC’s role in
malicious cyber activity targeting the United States,” referring to the
People’s Republic of China.
China Telecom is one of China’s three major phone and internet
providers and has operations around the world. The firm’s state
ownership, combined with new Chinese laws, raise concerns that China
Telecom would be forced to comply with any Chinese government request,
including those for communications intercepts, the agencies said in the
filing.
Similarly, the U.S. government wouldn’t be able to trust China
Telecom “to identify, disrupt, or provide assistance for investigations
into unlawful activity sponsored by the Chinese government,” the filing
added.
The U.S. agencies also claimed China Telecom made inaccurate
statements to officials about where it stores U.S. records, that its lax
network security threatened American interests, and that the company
disrupted and misrouted internet traffic. The filing details 10 such
reported incidents from 2010-2019 that interrupted
Facebook’s
U.S. traffic, Google’s global traffic and the U.S. Energy Department’s traffic.
China Telecom called the move unprecedented and denied the allegations.
“The company has always been extremely cooperative and transparent
with regulators,” China Telecom said in a statement. “In many instances,
we have gone beyond what has been requested to demonstrate how our
business operates and serves our customers following the highest
international standards. We look forward to sharing additional details
to support our position and addressing any concerns.”
FCC spokeswoman Tina Pelkey said the commission had been looking into
the issue, adding, “We welcome the input of the executive branch
agencies and will review it carefully.”
China Telecom advertises services for U.S. clients operating in
industries including finance, logistics, energy and health care. The
company also resells mobile services directly to retail customers,
targeting Chinese Americans, Chinese tourists, Chinese university
students and Chinese businesses across the U.S., the filing said.
Trump administration officials in recent months have mounted an
increasingly public effort—exemplified by their campaign against Huawei
Technologies Co.—to diminish China’s influence over the global
technology and telecommunications sectors. The push has at times forced
U.S. companies to rethink their investments in network infrastructure to skirt investments in China now considered off-limits to authorities in Washington.
The FCC last year denied a separate application by the American arm of
China Mobile Ltd.,
another member of China’s big three, to secure its common carrier
licenses. Thursday’s proposal would go further than that by clawing back
licenses China Telecom already uses to shuttle data across the U.S.
China Unicom, the third major carrier, also holds FCC licenses.
The FCC on Wednesday granted Google permission to turn on a high-speed internet link to Taiwan but not to the Chinese territory of Hong Kong, citing national-security concerns.
Source: Wall Street Journal By Drew FitzGerald and Kate O’Keeffe

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