Ex-CIA director: It’s a tech war, not a trade war
And, in 5G, the US is losing by a mile
Xu Zhijun, Huawei's rotating CEO, introduces the company's 5G
Pre-commercial System
at the World Internet Conference in Wuzhen last
year. Photo: Xinhua
The recent arrest of a top Huawei executive and an escalating US campaign to get allies to stop using equipment from the firm – which is the world’s largest telecoms gear maker – has made the global race for tech supremacy a daily front-page news item.
This last-ditch effort by the United States to maintain dominance – or even relevance – in high-tech fields, especially in the areas of telecommunications standards and semiconductors, is what really lies behind US-China tensions, not a trade imbalance.
That is what Michael Morell, twice acting director of the CIA, wrote in a recent editorial for the Washington Post.
“The United States is in an escalating technological cold war with China. It’s not centered on tariffs and trade, which President Trump often cites; instead, it involves both China’s use of technology to steal information and the theft of technology itself,” said Morell.
And Huawei, which is by all accounts ahead of the game in the all-important area of 5G, is at the center of this competition. Morell explains the stakes:
First… there will be more mobile data, flowing faster than ever before, across 5G networks. Those who control those networks… will control access to that data – and they would be able to steal massive amounts of information over very short amounts of time.
Second… 5G networks could, therefore, enable not just espionage but sabotage, as well. The head of Australia’s military cyberdefense agency recently noted that 5G significantly raises the risk that critical infrastructure could be brought down in a cyberattack.Third, choices made among competing 5G standards will affect who has the best understanding of how the technology is implemented… whoever has the best understanding will have a significant head start economically, in cybersecurity and in signals intelligence — i.e., in promoting its economy, protecting its secrets and stealing those of its rivals.
With all this in mind, as a multitude of recent research and analysis shows, there is a reason for the US to be worried....MORE
Huawei has a big head start in rolling out 5G networks. In addition, even if Washington is able to convince a handful of allies to ban the use of Huawei equipment, as it seems to be having success at doing, that will only be to the detriment of those involved in the boycott....
There appears to be a coordinated messaging campaign going on:
BBC: "Alex Younger: MI6 chief questions China's role in UK tech sector"Is it just me or do spies seem chattier these days?
Yesterday:
"China is racing ahead in 5G. Here’s what that means"
Following up on Saturday's "China Targets Control Over Internet of Things for Spying, Business" (IoT), this is the first of a half dozen or so posts we have planned on what's up with IoT and 5G.
And Huawei.
From MIT's Technology Review, December 18:...