Two days ago, I blogged on the recent revelation that U.S. intelligence
agencies have been intercepting American-made routers and servers and inserting
backdoors so that they can penetrate networks in markets in which the gear is
deployed (link
to my May 13 post).
Since then, the story has continued, including with ars technica
running photos yesterday of busy beaver agents “upgrading" Cisco routers at a “secret
location” (link). No shit.
In the post I made a couple of days ago, borrowing from
Glenn Greenwald’s Monday unveiling of the NSA’s export interception hijinks (link),
I tied the new revelation to the politico-protectionist market access barriers
that my employer Huawei Technologies has experienced in the U.S.
Following, is my nutshell synopsis of what’s been going on
and why the U.S. Government has been blockading Huawei at home, and attempting to
blackball the company abroad (Australia, South Korea, etc.):
Over the last few years, Huawei has grown to become either
the leading or number two telecommunications infrastructure provider globally,
with Huawei routers and servers and other gear becoming commonplace across the
planet.
This turn of events has made the NSA’s eavesdropping practices
ever-so-slightly more challenging. It is
far easier to re-route U.S. exports through “secret locations” for
beacon-implants than to similarly compromise Huawei gear shipping from
elsewhere to elsewhere.
Nevertheless, the NSA has attempted to maintain its overwhelming
surveillance footprint through its Shotgiant
program which, among other things, stole Huawei proprietary product info with the intent to compromise Huawei gear where deployed (link
to my March 25 post on the topic), but it would seem this is a far less
efficient model than surreptitious interception and “upgrade” of outbound U.S.
exports.
What do to, what to do?
Impede Huawei’s global business. Stymie and attempt to roll
back Huawei’s worldwide share so that the NSA's eavesdropping activities could be most easily and broadly managed.
How?
Demonize the company, starting with the U.S. market blockade, then extending to arm-twisting in foreign markets. The blockade was key. If Huawei had been allowed an even marginally-significant
footprint in the U.S., it would have both furthered the company’s global
success and market share, and undermined U.S. Government smear and blackball
campaigns in other markets.
I’m not sure this policy is working.
The U.S. strong-arm tactics had some success in Australia,
in terms of Huawei not being considered for the government-sponsored national
broadband network (NBN) project, but they haven't prevented Huawei from successfully
serving Australian commercial network operators. And, more recent U.S. Government attempts to
undermine competition and choice in South Korea seem to have fallen flat
altogether.
Worse yet, this week’s revelations from Greenwald may well
have yet further adverse impact on the overseas prospects for
networking gear from U.S. suppliers, yet further hampering the NSA’s ability to
conduct surveillance (not to mention wreaking some potentially not-insignificant commercial havoc for the victimized companies).
Look, I’m not saying that the U.S. government should not be
engaged in espionage and intelligence-gathering that is critical to maintaining our
national security (although I would observe that the domestic overreach that the
Snowden Revelations have detailed over the last 11 months is truly
reprehensible).
But the policy and practices have failed, both in terms of
the exposure of the NSA’s compromise of U.S. Internet and telecommunications
service providers and, as recently learned, ICT gear-makers as well, but also
in terms of demonizing a world-respected ICT leader like Huawei (and in so
doing also depriving American service providers and consumers of innovative and
competitive broadband equipment alternatives).
It’s time for a reset.
Across the board.
While we’ve not likely heard the last from Snowden, et al, the crisis of confidence in the ICT industry is reaching a fever pitch. At stake is a global
and interdependent economy that increasingly relies on digital and virtual
tools and processes.
It’s time for industry and governments to come together to
restore confidence in network and data integrity and security – in the Internet
itself – and to do so in a rational, pragmatic, and non-political fashion. See any
number of my posts over the last year for thoughts on how this might happen.
Well written
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