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    Home » Sections » Washington turns its gaze to WeChat in China apps purge

    Washington turns its gaze to WeChat in China apps purge

    By Agency Staff6 August 2020
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    The Trump administration said on Wednesday it was stepping up efforts to purge “untrusted” Chinese apps from US digital networks and called the Chinese-owned short-video app TikTok and messenger app WeChat “significant threats”.

    US secretary of state Mike Pompeo said expanded US efforts on a programme it calls “Clean Network” would focus on five areas and include steps to prevent various Chinese apps, as well as Chinese telecommunications companies, from accessing sensitive information on American citizens and businesses.

    Pompeo’s announcement comes after US President Donald Trump threatened to ban TikTok. The hugely popular video-sharing app has come under fire from US lawmakers and the administration over national security concerns, amid intensified tensions between Washington and Beijing.

    With parent companies based in China, apps like TikTok, WeChat and others are significant threats to personal data of American citizens…

    “With parent companies based in China, apps like TikTok, WeChat and others are significant threats to personal data of American citizens, not to mention tools for CCP (Chinese Communist Party) content censorship,” Pompeo said.

    In an interview with state news agency Xinhua on Wednesday, Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi said the US “has no right” to set up the “Clean Network” and calls the actions by Washington as “a textbook case of bullying”.

    “Anyone can see through clearly that the intention of the US is to protect it’s monopoly position in technology and to rob other countries of their proper right to development,” said Wang.

    TikTok currently faces a deadline of 15 September to either sell its US operations to Microsoft or face an outright ban.

    Lowest ebb

    In the run-up to Trump’s November re-election bid, US-China ties are at the lowest ebb in decades. Relations are strained over the global coronavirus pandemic, China’s military buildup in the South China Sea, its increasing control over Hong Kong and treatment of Uighur Muslims, as well as Beijing’s massive trade surpluses and technological rivalry.

    Pompeo said the US was working to prevent Chinese telecoms firm Huawei Technologies from pre-installing or making available for download the most popular US apps on its phones.

    “We don’t want companies to be complicit in Huawei’s human rights abuses, or the CCP’s surveillance apparatus,” Pompeo said, without mentioning any specific US companies.

    US secretary of state Mike Pompeo. Pablo Martinez Monsivais/Reuters

    Pompeo said the state department would work with other government agencies to protect the data of US citizens and American intellectual property, including Covid-19 vaccine research, by preventing access from cloud-based systems run by companies such as Alibaba, Baidu, China Mobile, China Telecom and Tencent.

    Pompeo said he was joining attorney-general William Barr, secretary of defence Mark Esper, and acting homeland security secretary Chad Wolf in urging the US telecoms regulator, the Federal Communications Commission, to terminate authorisations for China Telecom and three other companies to provide services to and from the US.

    He said the state department was also working to ensure China could not compromise information carried by undersea cables that connect the US to the global Internet.

    The US has long been lobbying European and other allies to persuade them to cut out Huawei from their telecoms networks

    The US has long been lobbying European and other allies to persuade them to cut out Huawei from their telecoms networks. Huawei denies it spies for China and says the US wants to frustrate its growth because no US company offers the same technology at a competitive price.

    Pompeo’s comments on Wednesday reflected a wider and more accelerated push by Washington to limit the access of Chinese technology companies to the US market and consumers and, as one US official put it, to push back against a “massive campaign to steal and weaponise our data against us”.

    ‘Clean countries’

    A state department statement said momentum for the Clean Network programme was growing and more than 30 countries and territories were now “clean countries” and many of the world’s biggest telecoms companies “clean telcos”.

    It called on US allies “to join the growing tide to secure our data from the CCP’s surveillance state and other malign entities”.

    Huawei and Tencent declined to comment. Alibaba, Apple, China Telecom, China Mobile and Baidu did not immediately respond to requests for comment.  — Reported by Humeyra Pamuk, David Brunnstrom and Matt Spetalnick, with additional reporting by Yew Lun Tian, Yingzhi Yang, Josh Horwitz, Pei Li and David Kirton, (c) 2020 Reuters



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