Commerce tightening IT, telecom supply chain security
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The Department of Commerce has proposed a new rule to identify, evaluate and address business transactions involving the use of Chinese-made telecommunications gear in U.S. infrastructure
The Department of Commerce has proposed a new rule to identify, evaluate and address business transactions involving the use of Chinese-made telecommunications gear in U.S. infrastructure
Supporting the White House’s executive order to secure IT and communications supply chains, the rule would require the Commerce secretary to evaluate individual telecommunications equipment transactions, using a "case-by-case, fact-specific approach" to determine which transactions might be blocked or altered, the agency said. Those determinations would be based on assessments developed by the Department of Homeland Security and national intelligence agencies.
The Commerce Department said it will notify parties engaged in any transaction it may deem having a “risk of public harm” or a danger to national security. Those parties, it said, can submit their arguments for consideration, and the Commerce secretary will then issue an unclassified final determination on the deal.
The rule is the latest move in a bid to blunt the infiltration of telecommunications gear made by Huawei and ZTE, particularly emerging wireless 5G equipment into the U.S. critical infrastructure.
Federal regulators, intelligence and law enforcement officials have said that given Huawei and ZTE’s close relationship and legal obligations to the Chinese government, their gear poses a threat to telecommunications infrastructure, as well as to national security. They say the equipment may have backdoors that could allow the Chinese government to meddle with U.S. critical network infrastructure or open the door to massive, crippling data theft.
On Nov. 22, the Federal Communications Commission blocked use of the $8 billion Universal Service Fund, which is tapped primarily by small and rural telecommunications companies, to buy Huawei and ZTE equipment. It also proposed rules to require companies that have already installed the suspect equipment to remove it.
This article was first posted to FCW, a sibling site to GCN.