Security Concerns Prompts Israel to Review China’s
Huawei 5G network
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Then said Hezekiah
to Isaiah, “The word of the Lord that you have spoken is good.” For he thought,
“There will be peace and security in my days.” Isaiah 39:8 (The Israel
Bible™)
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with
Chinese Prime Minister Li Keqiang. (Haim Zach/GPO)
Israel’s Communications Ministry is in consultation with
the defense establishment prior to its expected launch of a tender for the
country’s 5th generation (5G) cellular phone network, following
worldwide concern over the activities of Chinese companies.
Amid bans and allegations of espionage against Chinese
telecoms giant Huawei, and wider concern over how Chinese companies could be
used by Beijing, Israel will soon have to decide on whether it will allow the
company to compete in the 5G tender.
The Communications Ministry said it is in touch “with
security elements as part of the administrative [preparation] work, [and] as
part of the process of formulating a 5G tender. Security elements are
activating their various authority in line with the law, and in line with
security considerations.”
Huawei has been slapped with bans from carrying out
5G-related infrastructure work in the United States, Australia and New Zealand. Japan has also banned the company
from supplying network equipment. Debates about potential bans are raging in
Britain, Germany, Poland and other countries. Alarmed by prospects of
espionage, the United States is applying heavy pressure on its European allies
to avoid working with the company on 5G network construction.
Harel Menashri, head of cyber department at the Holon
Institute of Technology in Israel and a founder of the Shin Bet’s cyber
division, said that Israel should wait to see how the Five Eyes
alliance—comprised of the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia
and New Zealand—proceed before making its own decision on whether to permit
Huawei to take part in an Israeli 5G tender.
“The Ministry of Communications is under very strong
security regulation, and rightly so,” said Menashri.
“China
is a very important country,” he stated. “We should not stop doing business
with China, but we should take very seriously the question of what we can and
what we should not do. We must understand China’s activities.”
Israel will likely closely monitor how the Five Eyes
alliance will act regarding Huawei, he assessed. “The U.S. has also been very
active in other countries, like Poland and Hungary to get them to stop using
Chinese companies. America is heavily pressuring Germany to do the same,” said
Menashri.
According to a recent Wall Street Journal report,
the United States has told Germany that a failure to heed its warning could
result in damage to intelligence cooperation.
“If I was making decisions, I’d say, let’s first look at
what the others are doing,” added Menashri.
Western states have been gathering intelligence on the
Chinese company for years, based on the understanding that there is no
separation in China between the government, private sector companies and
civilian society.
“Even the biggest Chinese billionaire has a partner,
which is the government,” said Menashri.
In recent years, America has “taken off the gloves” when
it comes to blocking Chinese companies, he noted, starting with a 2012
executive order by President Barack Obama that stopped a Chinese firm from
building windfarms next to a naval base in Oregon.
Menashri called attention to the Chinese 2050 long-term
strategic plan drawn up by former president Hu Jintao, which called for Chinese
dominance in global communications.
This could be achieved by inserting Chinese-made
components in global communications intersections, giving Beijing major future
leverage.
In 2017, China passed a cybersecurity law that the
government said was designed to protect national security. But it also sparked
fears in the West about a government ability to insert “backdoors” in products
made by foreign companies that produce in China, according
to a paper by the Tel Aviv-based Institute for National Security
Studies.
“This demand gives the government a ‘backdoor’ through
which it can access the source code of Western companies and make use of it for
its own purposes, as well as allowing the code to be copied by Chinese
companies connected to the government,” said the paper, which was written by
researchers Israel Kanner and Doron Ella.
Last year, Bloomberg Businessweek cited
intelligence and business sources as saying that Chinese spies planted computer
chips inside equipment used by some 30 companies and U.S. government agencies,
which would reportedly give Beijing secret access to internal networks. In
February this year, China’s Lenovo computer company said that “it will no
longer pre-install software that cybersecurity experts said was malicious and
made devices vulnerable to hacking,” Reuters reported.
Within China itself, the government has built the “Great
Fire Wall” to control communications, which Menashri described as one of the
most advanced state control systems in the world, and one that Western
democracies could never legally build in their own countries.
In February, Huawei reportedly dismissed America’s
allegations, with a company spokesman saying it was “shocked and sometimes
feels amused” by suspicions against it.
Israel needs to be ‘very careful’
Ofer Israeli, a geostrategist and international
security-policy expert, said Israel needs to closely scrutinize the entry of
any international company into the country.
Israeli, who lectures at the Institute for Policy and
Strategy at the Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) in Herzliya, said foreign
companies “need to be examined not just economically, but also security-wise.
When we talk about an international company, which in this case is also
Chinese, this increases concern because we know that China takes advantage of
infrastructure in the world to promote interests and to influence internal
dialogue in states where they function.”
In addition, Israeli argued that the Trump administration
is in the midst of a major struggle with China over its rising economic
influence—a struggle that has seen maritime infrastructure projects and 5G
projects caught up in the fight.
Israel, he said, would be well-advised not to march into
the dispute by allowing Chinese companies to take part in 5G projects, as this
would “fairly quickly result in a vigorous American demand to do a U-turn.”
As a result, Israel needs to be “very careful, and
examine such things with caution,” said Israeli. “Security agencies must have a
very strong say.”
He also assessed that Israel will likely need to cancel
its tender with a Chinese state-owned company to manage Haifa’s newly built
civilian port, due to U.S. displeasure.
According to the contract, the Shanghai International
Port Group will begin to manage from 2021 for 25 years. “I still think that in
the end, Israel will have to withdraw from that because of American pressure,”
said Israeli. “Hence, we should be careful about entering into a process
[regarding the 5G tender] that, in American eyes, is much more problematic.”
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