Biden nominee for key China export post expects Huawei to remain
blacklisted
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[September 22, 2021] By
Alexandra Alper and Karen Freifeld
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe
Biden's nominee to a post overseeing export policy on China said on
Tuesday he sees Chinese telecoms firm Huawei as a national security
threat and expects to keep the company on a trade blacklist unless
"things change."
If confirmed as Under Secretary of Commerce for Industry and Security,
former Pentagon official Alan Estevez also pledged to "look at" Honor
Device Co - a handset unit spun off of Huawei - to see whether the
telecommunications company was using the spinoff brand to minimize or
circumvent its own blacklist designation.
"I've seen previous maneuvers by the Chinese," Estevez testified at a
hearing of the Senate banking committee. "It's something I'll have to
look at when I get to the department, should I be confirmed. I do not
have the information in front of me that would give me the full picture
on that."
Huawei was placed on the trade blacklist by the Trump administration in
2019 over national security concerns, forcing suppliers to apply for a
special license to sell to it.
The company said last November its consumer business was under
tremendous pressure due to "a persistent unavailability of technical
elements needed" for its mobile phone business and decided to sell its
Honor assets.
The Washington Post reported that the administration was considering
whether to add Honor to the blacklist after lawmakers raised questions
about the firm in a letter to Commerce Department Secretary Gina
Raimondo last month.
Huawei declined to comment, referring Reuters to a prior statement that
noted it would not hold any shares or be involved in any business
management activities in the new company. Honor did not immediately
respond to a request for comment.
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A Huawei logo is seen at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in
Shanghai, China February 23, 2021. REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo
Thea Kendler, nominated to serve as assistant secretary nominee at Commerce for
export administration, told the committee she was "particularly proud" of her
work as a U.S. prosecutor charging Huawei with operating as a criminal
enterprise, stealing trade secrets and defrauding financial institutions.
'ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT'
At the same hearing, the U.S. Treasury's nominee for assistant secretary for
financial institutions - a top bank regulatory post - said he believed banks'
continued investments and financing for fossil fuel projects represent a threat
to financial stability.
"It seems like there's room for improvement" for banks to reduce their
investments in fossil fuels, which continue in the hundreds of billions of
dollars annually, said Graham Steele, a former Federal Reserve official who also
served on Banking committee Chair Senator Sherrod Brown's staff.
The Treasury, through the Financial Stability Oversight Council of regulators,
is examining ways to strengthen financial regulation to fight climate change,
including requiring companies and lenders to improve the disclosure of
climate-related financial risk to investors.
The Senate Banking committee will have to vote on the prospective officials
before their nominations can be taken up by the full Senate.
(Reporting by Alexandra Alper Karen Freifeld and David Lawder, Editing by Chris
Sanders, Sonya Hepinstall and Bill Berkrot)
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