China's Huawei, ZTE Should Be Kept from U.S. : Draft Congress Report

China's Huawei, ZTE Should Be Kept from U.S. : Draft Congress Report

(Reuters) – China’s top telecoms gear makers should be shut out of the U.S. market as potential Chinese state influence on them poses a security threat, the U.S. House of Representatives’ Intelligence Committee said in a draft of a report to be released on Monday.

U.S. intelligence must stay focused on efforts by Huawei Technologies Co Ltd and ZTE Corp to expand in the United States, and tell the private sector as much as possible about the purported espionage threat, the panel leaders said, based on their 11-month investigation of the two firms.

Employee-owned and unlisted Huawei is the world’s second-biggest maker of routers, switches and telecoms equipment by revenue after Sweden’s Ericsson. ZTE ranks fifth. In the global mobile phone sector, ZTE is fourth and Huawei sixth.

Huawei generated around 4 percent of its group sales from the United States, while ZTE’s U.S. revenues made up 2-3 percent of its overall figure. The bulk of both companies’ U.S. sales comes from selling handsets through U.S. carriers such as Verizon, Sprint and T-Mobile USA.

“The impact will be quite limited if the report is referring just to telecoms equipment, but it’s another story if handsets are included as well,” said Huang Leping, an analyst at Nomura Securities. “Huawei and ZTE handsets have been consistently gaining market share in the United States.”

In the U.S. handsets market where Apple Inc and Samsung Electronics dominate, ZTE ranks sixth and Huawei eighth, according to industry figures.

“POLITICAL DISTRACTION”

The broadside – just a month before U.S. presidential elections where the impact of China’s growth on U.S. jobs has been a campaign issue – comes as Huawei mulls a possible initial public offering, sources said, as part of its efforts to allay suspicions that have all but blocked its U.S. ambitions, including business tie-ups.

Huawei has been looking at the listing issue for years, but there has been little progress due to its complicated share structure and whether a listing would actually help, given that U.S. lawmakers remain suspicious of ZTE even though it’s a listed company, analysts said.

Huawei spokesman William Plummer rejected the committee’s allegations in a statement emailed to Reuters.

“Baseless suggestions otherwise or purporting that Huawei is somehow uniquely vulnerable to cyber mischief ignore technical and commercial realities, recklessly threaten American jobs and innovation, do nothing to protect national security, and should be exposed as dangerous political distractions from legitimate public-private initiatives to address what are global and industry-wide cyber challenges,” he said.

For its part, ZTE released a copy of the letter on Monday it sent to the committee after a hearing in September, stating it “profoundly disagrees” with the claim that it is directed or controlled by the Chinese government. “ZTE should not be a focus of this investigation to the exclusion of the much larger Western vendors,” it said.

At a briefing in Beijing, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said Chinese telecoms firms operate according to market principles. “We hope the U.S. Congress will set aside prejudices and respect the facts, and also do more that is beneficial to Sino-American economic and trade ties, rather than the contrary,” he said.

ZTE’s Hong Kong-listed shares closed down 6 percent on Monday in their biggest one-day drop in more than a month. The benchmark index fell 0.9 percent.

Separately, U.S. network equipment maker Cisco Systems Inc said it ended a longstanding sales partnership with ZTE after an internal investigation into allegations the Chinese firm sold Cisco networking gear to Iran.

“CREDIBLE ALLEGATIONS”

The U.S. panel’s draft report faulted both Huawei and ZTE for failing to satisfy its requests for documents, including detailed information about formal relationships or regulatory interaction with Chinese authorities.

U.S. companies thinking about buying from Huawei should “find another vendor if you care about your intellectual property; if you care about your consumers’ privacy and you care about the national security of the United States of America,” panel chairman Mike Rogers said in comments broadcast late on Sunday on the CBS News program “60 Minutes.”

Rogers and the committee’s top Democrat, C.A. Ruppersberger, have scheduled a 10 a.m. Eastern time (1400 GMT) news conference to release the final, unclassified version of their report.

The panel said it received credible allegations from unnamed industry experts and current and former Huawei employees suggesting Huawei, in particular, may be guilty of bribery and corruption, discriminatory behavior and copyright infringement.

The committee plans to refer such allegations to the Justice Department and Department of Homeland Security, according to the draft made available to Reuters. “U.S. network providers and system developers are strongly encouraged to seek other vendors for their projects,” it said.

The document cited what it called long-term security risks supposedly linked with the companies’ equipment and services. Based on classified and unclassified information, Huawei and ZTE, which are both based in Shenzhen, China, “cannot be trusted to be free of foreign state influence and thus pose a security threat to the United States and to our systems,” it said. Huawei and ZTE are rapidly becoming “dominant global players” in the telecommunications market, which is intertwined with computerized controls for electric power grids; banking and finance systems; gas, oil and water systems and rail and shipping, it noted.

ZTE’s U.S. telecoms infrastructure equipment sales last year were less than $30 million. In contrast, two of the larger Western vendors alone had combined U.S. sales that topped $14 billion, ZTE told the committee in its September 25 letter, an apparent reference to Finland-based Nokia Siemens Networks and Paris-based Alcatel Lucent.

“It seems self-evident that the universe of companies examined by the Committee is so small as to omit most of the equipment actually employed in the U.S. telecom infrastructure system,” the letter said.

“MEANS, OPPORTUNITY, MOTIVE”

Huawei and ZTE may not be the only companies that present a risk to U.S. infrastructure, the committee’s draft report said, but they are the two largest Chinese-founded, Chinese-owned companies seeking to market critical network equipment to the United States. Beijing has the “means, opportunity and motive” to use them to its own ends, it added.

Top executives of both told a committee hearing on September 13 that their companies would never bow to a hypothetical Chinese government effort to exploit their products for espionage, equating any such move with corporate suicide. “Huawei has not and will not jeopardize our global commercial success nor the integrity of our customers’ networks for any third party, government or otherwise,” senior vice president Charles Ding testified at the time.

U.S. intelligence officials have publicly denounced China as the world’s most active perpetrator of economic espionage against the United States.

Huawei has marketed its network equipment in the United States since last year, and has sold to a range of small- to medium-sized carriers nationwide, particularly in rural areas.

Founded by CEO Ren Zhengfei 25 years ago after he was laid off by the Chinese army, Huawei has marketed mobile phones through a broader range of U.S. carriers for the last four years. U.S. sales totaled $1.3 billion last year, out of overall sales of $32 billion, executives said.

(Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard and Steve Stecklow; Editing by Bernard Orr, Ken Wills and Ian Geoghegan)

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