Secretary of State Mike Pompeo issued the
warning after meeting Foreign Minister Heiko Maas of Germany,
which has so far stood with Britain and France in declining
calls to ban the state-owned manufacturer from the 5G networks
now being built.
In the latest sign of escalating trans-Atlantic tensions over
trade and security, Pompeo, on the first leg of a five-day
European tour, said that while countries would take a "sovereign
decision" on which equipment to use, that decision would have
consequences.
"(There is) a risk we will have to change our behaviour in light
of the fact that we can't permit data on private citizens or
data on national security to go across networks that we don't
have confidence (in)," he told a news conference.
Pompeo later met Chancellor Angela Merkel for brief talks before
flying on to Switzerland, describing Germany as "a great,
important partner and ally of the United States."
Merkel had herself just flown back from the United States the
night before after delivering a speech to graduating Harvard
students in which she exhorted them to "tear down walls of
ignorance" and to stand for truth over lies - words widely
interpreted as veiled criticism of U.S. President Donald Trump.
"The U.S. is and remains our most important partner outside
Europe," Merkel told reporters ahead of the meeting. "We have
many issues to discuss, since the world is not at rest," she
added, mentioning the challenge of preventing Iran acquiring
nuclear weapons and hindering Iran's "aggressive actions".
Pompeo urged close ally Britain this month not to use Huawei's
technology to build new 5G networks because of concerns it could
be a vehicle for Chinese spying.
The United States is at odds with its German allies on a host of
issues, from trade to military spending and nuclear
non-proliferation.
Pompeo's visit had been scheduled earlier this month, but was
called off at the last minute as tensions rose over Iran, on
whose nuclear program Berlin and Washington differ.
A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman, responding to similar
comments on Huawei made by U.S. Vice President Mike Pence in
Canada on Thursday, said the United States had yet to prove that
Huawei's products presented a security risk.
"We hope that the United States can stop these mistaken actions
which are not at all commensurate with their status and position
as a big country," said spokesman Geng Shuang.
Pompeo also urged Germany to follow Britain in proscribing
Lebanon's Iran-backed Hezbollah group and boost military
spending.
(Writing by Thomas Escritt, additional reporting by Ben
Blanchard in Beijing and Joseph Nasr in Berlin, Editing by
William Maclean)
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