U.S. universities unplug from China's
Huawei under pressure from Trump
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[January 24, 2019]
By Heather Somerville and Jane Lanhee Lee
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Top U.S.
universities are ditching telecom equipment made by Huawei Technologies
and other Chinese companies to avoid losing federal funding under a new
national security law backed by the Trump administration.
U.S. officials allege Chinese telecom manufacturers are producing
equipment that allows their government to spy on users abroad, including
Western researchers working on leading-edge technologies. Beijing and
the Chinese companies have repeatedly denied such claims.
The University of California at Berkeley has removed a Huawei
video-conferencing system, a university official said, while the UC
campus in Irvine is working to replace five pieces of Chinese-made
audio-video equipment. Other schools, such as the University of
Wisconsin, are in the process of reviewing their suppliers.
UC San Diego, meanwhile, has gone a step further. The university in
August said that, for at least six months, it would not accept funding
from or enter into agreements with Huawei, ZTE Corporation <000063.SZ>
and other Chinese audio-video equipment providers, according to an
internal memo. The document, reviewed by Reuters, said the moratorium
would last through February 12, when the university would revisit its
options.
“Out of an abundance of caution UC San Diego enacted the six-month
moratorium to ensure we had adequate time to begin our assessment of the
equipment on campus and to prevent the campus from entering into any
agreements that could later be viewed as inconsistent with the NDAA,” UC
San Diego spokeswoman Michelle Franklin said in response to Reuters’
questions about the memo.
These actions, not previously reported, signal universities' efforts to
distance themselves from Chinese companies that for years have supplied
them with technical equipment and sponsored academic research, but which
are now in the crosshairs of the Trump administration.
The moves are a response to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA),
which President Donald Trump signed into law in August. A provision of
that legislation bans recipients of federal funding from using
telecommunications equipment, video recording services and networking
components made by Huawei or ZTE. Also on the blacklist are Chinese
audio-video equipment providers Hikvision, Hytera, Dahua Technology and
their affiliates.
U.S. authorities fear the equipment makers will leave a back door open
to Chinese military and government agents seeking information. U.S.
universities that fail to comply with the NDAA by August 2020 risk
losing federal research grants and other government funding.
That would be a blow to public institutions such as the sprawling
University of California system, whose state funding has been slashed
repeatedly over the last decade. In the 2016-2017 academic year, the UC
system received $9.8 billion in federal money. Nearly $3 billion of that
went to research, accounting for about half of all the university's
research expenditures that year, according to UC budget documents.
HUAWEI UNDER SIEGE
The new law is part of a broader Trump administration strategy to
counter what it sees as China's growing threat to U.S. economic
competitiveness and national security.
The president has slapped tariffs on a slew of Chinese goods and made it
tougher for foreign companies to purchase minority stakes in U.S. tech
companies, causing Chinese investment in Silicon Valley to plunge.
In addition, Trump last year signed legislation prohibiting the U.S.
government from buying certain telecom and surveillance equipment from
Huawei and ZTE. And he is considering a similar ban on Chinese equipment
purchases by U.S. companies.
At the center of the storm is Huawei, a global behemoth in smartphones
and telecom networking equipment. The company's chief financial officer
has been under house arrest in Canada since December for allegedly lying
about Huawei's ties to Iran. Another Huawei employee was arrested this
month in Poland on espionage allegations.
Huawei did not respond to a request for comment.
U.S. universities have already felt the sting of Trump's China policies.
The State Department shortened the length of visas for certain Chinese
graduate students. And the administration is considering new
restrictions on Chinese students entering the United States. Chinese
students are by far the largest group of international students in the
United States and provide a lucrative source of revenue for
universities.
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A student studies in the biomedical library at the University of
California San Diego (UCSD) in San Diego, California, February 28,
2013. Looming sequestration cuts are expected to adversely effect
scientific research in California. REUTER/Mike Blake/File Photo
Pressure to dump Huawei and other Chinese telecom suppliers is
adding to the strain.
In addition to the University of Wisconsin, a half dozen
institutions, including UC Los Angeles, UC Davis and the University
of Texas at Austin, told Reuters they were in the process of
reviewing their telecommunications equipment, or had already done so
and determined they were NDAA compliant.
At Stanford University, Steve Eisner, the director of export
compliance, told Reuters the school did a "scrub" of the campus, but
"luckily" did not find any equipment that needed to be removed.
But for Stanford and other academic institutions, Huawei is more
than an equipment vendor. Huawei participates in research programs,
often as a sponsor, at dozens of schools, including UC San Diego,
the University of Texas, the University of Maryland and the
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
In addition to an explicit equipment ban, the NDAA calls for
creating regulations that would limit research partnerships and
other agreements universities have with China. The law requires the
Secretary of Defense to work with universities on ways to guard
against intellectual property theft and create new regulations aimed
at protecting academics from exploitation by foreign countries.
Universities that fail to comply with those rules risk losing
Defense Department funding.
UC San Diego highlighted this section of the law in a campus
newsletter in September.
Fears of a more rigorous crackdown from Washington would seem to be
justified. In June, 26 members of Congress sent a letter to
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, sounding an alarm over Huawei's
research partnerships with more than 50 U.S. universities that "may
pose a significant threat to national security."
The lawmakers called on DeVos to require universities to turn over
information on those agreements.
Separately, a White House report from June points to a research
partnership on artificial intelligence between UC Berkeley and
Huawei as a potential opening for China to gather intelligence that
could serve Beijing's military and strategic ambitions. That
partnership started in 2016.
"COOLING" RELATIONS WITH HUAWEI
UC Berkeley spokesman Dan Mogulof said the university does not
participate in research involving trade secrets. He said the school
only enters research partnerships whose findings can be published
publicly. Such open-source research is not subject to federal
regulations.
Mogulof said UC Berkeley has no plans to change any of the research
partnerships it has with Huawei. The company is involved in at least
five UC Berkeley research initiatives, including autonomous driving,
augmented reality and wireless technology, in addition to artificial
intelligence.
Still, a person with knowledge of the matter said the university's
relationship with Huawei had "cooled," and that some Berkeley
researchers are choosing not to proceed with their research
agreements with the company to avoid scrutiny from university and
government officials.
The chill is spreading. The United Kingdom's Oxford University this
month cut ties with Huawei, announcing it would no longer accept
funding for research or philanthropic donations.
"The decision has been taken in the light of public concerns raised
in recent months surrounding UK partnerships with Huawei," a
university spokesman said in a statement.
(Reporting by Heather Somerville and Jane Lanhee Lee; Editing by
Greg Mitchell and Marla Dickerson)
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