U.S. lawmakers warn Canada to keep Huawei out of its 5G plans
In a letter
addressed to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Senators Mark Warner and
Marco Rubio make a very public case that Canada should leave Chinese tech and
telecom giant Huawei out of its plans to build a next-generation mobile
network.
“While
Canada has strong telecommunication security safeguards in place, we have
serious concerns that such safeguards are inadequate given what the United
States and other allies know about Huawei,” the letter states. The senators
warn Canada to “reconsider Huawei’s inclusion in any aspect of Canada’s 5G
development, introduction, and maintenance.”
The outcry
comes after the head of the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security dismissed
security concerns regarding Huawei in comments last month. The Canadian Centre
for Cyber Security is Canada’s designated federal agency tasked with
cybersecurity.
Next
generation 5G networks already pose a number of unique security challenges.
Lawmakers caution that by allowing companies linked to the Chinese government
to build 5G infrastructure, the U.S. and its close allies (Canada, Australia,
New Zealand and the U.K.) would be inviting the fox to guard the henhouse.
As part of
the Defense Authorization Act, passed in August, the U.S. government signed off
on a law that forbids domestic agencies from using services or hardware made by
Huawei and ZTE. A week later, Australia moved to block Huawei and ZTE from its
own 5G buildout.
Due to the
open nature of intelligence sharing between the U.S. and its closest allies,
the Canadian government would be able to obtain knowledge of any specific
threats that substantiate the U.S. posture toward the Chinese company. “We urge
your government to seek additional information from the U.S. intelligence
community,” the letter implores.
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