Skip to main content

Trump will help China's ZTE 'get back into business'

A ZTE smart phone is pictured in this illustration taken April 17, 2018.
PHOTO: REUTERS

A ZTE smart phone is pictured in this illustration taken April 17, 2018. PHOTO: REUTERS
WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump pledged on Sunday to help ZTE “get back into the business, fast” after a US ban crippled the Chinese technology company, offering a job-saving concession to Beijing ahead of high-stakes trade talks this week.
“Too many jobs in China lost. Commerce Department has been instructed to get it done!” Trump wrote on Twitter in the first of two tweets about US trade relations with China. It said he and Chinese President Xi Jinping were working together on a solution for ZTE.
Shortly after Trump’s tweet, a Democratic lawmaker questioned the move to help the Chinese company, given numerous warnings about ZTE’s alleged threat to US national security.
ZTE suspended its main operations after the US Commerce Department banned American companies from selling to the firm for seven years as punishment for ZTE breaking an agreement reached after it was caught illegally shipping US goods to Iran.
The Commerce Department, ZTE and the Chinese embassy in Washington could not immediately be reached for comment.
White House spokeswoman Lindsay Walters confirmed that US officials were in contact with Beijing about ZTE. She said Trump’s tweet underscored the importance of “free, fair, balanced and mutually beneficial” relations between the United States and China on issues involving the economy, trade, and investment.
Trump expects Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross “to exercise his independent judgment, consistent with applicable laws and regulations, to resolve the regulatory action involving ZTE based on its facts,” Walters said.
US officials are preparing for talks in Washington with China’s top trade official Liu He to resolve an escalating trade dispute.
Trump’s proposed reversal will likely ease relations between the world’s two biggest economies. Washington and Beijing have proposed tens of billions of dollars in tariffs in recent weeks, fanning worries of a full-blown trade war that could hurt global supply chains and dent business investment plans.
In trade talks in Beijing this month, China asked the United States to ease crushing sanctions on ZTE, one of the world’s largest telecommunications equipment makers, according to people with knowledge of the matter.
In a second tweet on Sunday, Trump said past US trade talks with China posed a hurdle that he predicted the two countries would overcome.

“China and the United States are working well together on trade, but past negotiations have been so one-sided in favor of China, for so many years, that it is hard for them to make a deal that benefits both countries,” Trump wrote on Twitter.
“But be cool, it will all work out!” he added.
SHOCKING BLOW
It was not clear China would accept Trump’s assertion that Beijing needs to work toward a mutually beneficial outcome.
“The US should be aware that it must become more cooperative and constructive in the trade talks with China,” the China Daily, China’s official English-language newspaper, said in a Monday editorial.
“It should bear in mind that the outcomes of dialogue should be mutually beneficial and China will not accept its interests being damaged,” the newspaper said, adding that Washington must “cast away its unilateral mentality”.
The editorial did not mention ZTE.
Trump’s comments on ZTE could have a significant impact on shares of American optical components makers such as Acacia and Oclaro, which fell when US companies were banned from exporting goods to ZTE.
ZTE paid over $2.3 billion to 211 US exporters in 2017, a senior ZTE official said on Friday.
The US government launched an investigation into ZTE after Reuters reported in 2012 the company had signed contracts to ship hardware and software worth millions of dollars to Iran from some of the best-known US technology companies.
ZTE pleaded guilty last year to conspiring to violate US sanctions by illegally shipping US goods and technology to Iran and entered into an agreement with the US government. The ban is the result of ZTE’s failure to comply with that agreement, the Commerce Department said.
It came two months after two Republican senators introduced legislation to block the US government from buying or leasing telecommunications equipment from ZTE or Huawei, citing concern the companies would use their access to spy on US officials.
Without specifying companies or countries, Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai recently said: “hidden ‘backdoors’ to our networks in routers, switches, and other network equipment can allow hostile foreign powers to inject viruses and other malware, steal Americans’ private data, spy on US businesses, and more.”
ZTE relies on US companies such as Qualcomm, Intel and Alphabet’s Google. American companies are estimated to provide 25 percent to 30 percent of components in ZTE’s equipment, which includes smartphones and gear to build telecommunications networks.
Claire Reade, a Washington-based trade lawyer and former assistant US Trade Representative for China affairs, said the ZTE ban was a shocking blow to China’s leadership and may have caused more alarm in Beijing than Trump’s threats to impose tariffs on $50 billion in Chinese goods.
“Imagine how the United States would feel if China had the power to crush one of our major corporations and make it go out of business,” Reade said. “China may now have strengthened its desire to get out from an under a scenario where the United States can do that again.”
Even though ZTE was probably “foolish” in not understanding the consequences of violating a Commerce Department monitoring agreement, she said the episode made it less likely that China would make concessions on the US demands that it stop subsidizing efforts to develop its own advanced technology, she said.
Other experts said Trump’s policy reversal was unprecedented.
“This is a fascinating development in a highly unusual case that has gone from sanctions and export control case to a geopolitical one,” said Washington lawyer Douglas Jacobson, who represents some of ZTE’s suppliers.
Trump’s announcement drew sharp criticism from a Democratic lawmaker, who said the move was jeopardizing US national security.
“Our intelligence agencies have warned that ZTE technology and phones pose a major cybersecurity threat,” Representative Adam Schiff said on Twitter. “You should care more about our national security than Chinese jobs.”

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Develop your own game by learning these free courses

We recently recommended courses you should learn before you will launch your first startup in order to avoid some common mistakes. In Quick Tips today, we’ll recommend you some free courses that will help you make your first game and begin your career as a developer. Before we highlight the details of the courses you ought to take, here are some introductory courses which will prepare you to learn these courses more effectively; Java Programming Basics  – Prepare yourself for programming on Android and the Web Introduction to JavaScript  – Create animations and understand variables and strings. When you have gone through those courses above then proceed to ones given below to develop your first game: 1. Create a 2048 game in just 1 day For those who have zero experience in programming and don’t want to take the above courses, then enroll in this course from Udacity. You will learn the basics of HTML and CSS as well as their interaction with JavaScript. ...

The upgraded Google News app is now available on iOS and Android

One of the more intriguing announcements at Google IO 2018 was of  a new Google News app  to take the place of the Google Play NewsStand, which was initially launched in 2013.  After describing the new Google News app  in a dedicated page for the app on its website, Google has now officially released the app on the  App Store  and  Google Play . Google Play NewsStand was used as a resource to get news around the world. The news would be of every category, even the news which doesn’t interest the user. Whereas with this new Google news app, the artificial intelligence of Google shows you the news you want to see, which you usually search for on Google. According to Google , the Google News app now  “uses a new set of AI techniques to take a constant flow of information as it hits the web, analyze it in real time and organize it into storylines.”  Artificial intelligence(AI) gives the app an ability to process and sort the news from...

Huawei Mate 10 Pro: A Premium Flagship With Some Odd Omissions

When Huawei had launched, they were known as a brand that mostly dealt with budget smartphones and even their flagships were not up to the standards that people expected at that time. However, times have now changed and leading the innovation front nowadays is Huawei. A few of their flagships in the recent year or so have been nothing short of impressive but this year’s Mate 10 line up has changed the brand image forever and consumers now know that Huawei is a serious market player and should not be taken lightly. We’ve already reviewed the  Mate 10 Lite and there was a lot to like about that phone. Today we have with us the most expensive one of the bunch, the Mate 10 Pro. For a more in-depth review and understanding of various Mate 10 Pro features, do watch the video review linked below. Design Like most of the flagships in the industry, Huawei also makes use of some premium material on the Mate 10 Pro. You have curved Gorilla Glass on the front and back and where th...