Huawei accuses US of cyberattacks, coercing employees

Chinese telecom equipment maker Huawei accused U.S.
authorities on Wednesday of attempting to break into its information systems
and of trying to coerce its employees to gather information on the company.
Huawei, which faces mounting American pressure
including possible loss of access to U.S. technology over accusations the
company is a security risk, said in a statement that Washington has used
“unscrupulous means” in recent months to disrupt its business.
American officials have given no evidence to support
claims Huawei might aid Chinese spying, accusations the company denies. The
United States, Australia, Japan and some other governments have imposed
restrictions on use of Huawei technology.
Huawei Technologies Ltd. is the No. 2 global
smartphone brand and the biggest maker of network gear for phone companies.
Export controls announced by the Trump
administration in May would limit Huawei’s access to U.S. technology.
Implementation has been postponed to mid-November.
Washington is lobbying European governments to
exclude Huawei from next-generation telecom networks. Germany, France and
Ireland say they have no plans to ban any supplier.
Huawei, headquartered in the southern city of
Shenzhen, gave no evidence to support its accusations. A company spokesman said
he had no additional details.
The accusations were included in a statement about
an unrelated patent dispute in the United States.
The White House in Washington and the American
Embassy in Beijing didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
The statement said American authorities launched
cyberattacks “to infiltrate Huawei’s intranet and internal information systems”
but gave no indication what information they targeted or whether they
succeeded.
Huawei also said FBI agents pressured its employees
to collect information on the company.
The Reuters news agency cited a Huawei document it
said reported eight employees, all mid- to high-level executives, including
several U.S. citizens, were involved in the incidents. It said the latest
occurred Aug. 28 when an employee informed Huawei the FBI asked the person to
be an informant.
The company said U.S. authorities have disrupted
Huawei’s business by delaying shipments, denying visas and unspecified intimidation.
China’s government has accused Washington of
improperly using national security arguments to hurt Chinese commercial
competitors.
“This kind of behavior is neither glorious nor
moral,” a foreign ministry spokesman, Geng Shuang, said Wednesday. He called on
Washington to “stop deliberately smearing” Chinese companies and to “provide a
level playing field” for them.