Wilbur Ross confirms U.S. firms can sell to Huawei

Access Archive

Dear Access member,

Two events in New York:ย 

โ€”Jeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief


1. Wilbur Ross confirms U.S. firms can sell to Huaweiย 

โ€œThe United States and China are set to relaunch trade talks this week after a two-month hiatus, but a year after their trade war began there is little sign their differences have narrowed,โ€ says Reuters. The view from Beijing is similarly gloomy, according to Bloomberg (porous paywall), which states that โ€œfew in Beijing see a clear pathway to a lasting deal. Pessimism dominated in conversations last week with about a dozen bureaucrats, government advisers and researchers in Chinaโ€™s capital.โ€

However, U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross today confirmed that โ€œthe U.S. would grant licenses to U.S. companies that want to sell technology to Huawei Technologies Co. as long as the sales wouldnโ€™t put national security at risk, expanding on a pledge made last month by President Trump to Chinese President Xi Jinping,โ€ according to the Wall Street Journal (paywall):ย 

Huawei will remain, however, on the Commerce Departmentโ€™s โ€œentity list,โ€ Mr. Ross said Tuesday, meaning that companies that want to sell U.S.-sourced technology to Huawei must first apply for a license. The department will continue to review such licenses with a โ€œpresumption of denial,โ€ he said.

Mr. Ross didnโ€™t issue any timeline for when such licenses might be granted. A Huawei spokesman didnโ€™t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Here are other reports from the front lines:

  • โ€œItโ€™s open season if youโ€™re a Chinese-American scientist. Theyโ€™ve got a target on their back.โ€ Thatโ€™s the view of Peter Zeidenberg, โ€œa former federal prosecutor who has represented several Chinese-American professors and researchers in these espionage-related cases,โ€ according to the Boston Globe. Zeidenberg added, โ€œThey are extremely alarmed and afraid.โ€ See also on The China Project: Sinophobia Tracker, The new Yellow Peril?

  • The Chinese ambassador to the U.S., Cuฤซ TiฤnkวŽi ๅด”ๅคฉๅ‡ฏ, has joined Twitter. His only tweet so far: โ€œI’m pleased to join Twitter and look forward to engaging with more American people. Feel free to follow me and @ChineseEmbinUS to stay looped in.โ€ Cui has not yet followed anyone, so it looks like his account will be a one-way channel of communication.ย 

  • โ€œChinese venture capital investment in U.S. biotech companies fell by more than half in the first half of the year as Washington tightened scrutiny of funding from overseas, raising fears that U.S. start-ups will struggle to raise funds and access the large Chinese market,โ€ reports the Financial Times (paywall).ย 

  • New duties on Chinese and Mexican steel are in the works, CNN reports:ย 

The U.S. Department of Commerce said Monday that exporters of fabricated structural steel in China benefited from subsidies ranging between about 30 and 177 percent, while those in Mexico received subsidies of up to 74 percent.

The department said it will instruct U.S. Customs and Border Protection to start collecting cash deposits from importers of the steel products from both countries. It noted that the decision is preliminary, and final determinations will be announced around November 19.

In 2018, the US imported $897.5 million worth of fabricated structured steel from China, and $622.4 million worth from Mexico, according to the Commerce Department.

  • Trumpโ€™s tariffs could cause a Bible shortage in the U.S., according to the Associated Press: โ€œThatโ€™s because millions of Bibles โ€” some estimates put it at 150 million or more โ€” are printed in China each yearโ€ฆ Critics of a proposed tariff say it would make the Bible more expensive for consumers and hurt the evangelism efforts of Christian organizations that give away Bibles as part of their ministry.โ€ย 

2. Dueling letters to Trump about Chinaย 

Last week, China scholars and former diplomats M. Taylor Fravel, J. Stapleton Roy, Michael D. Swaine, Susan A. Thornton, and Ezra Vogel published an open letter to Donald Trump and members of Congress titled China is not an enemy. The letter was also signed by dozens of other prominent businesspeople, scholars, and think tank/government types, some of whom are by no means panda huggers. This is how it begins:

We are deeply concerned about the growing deterioration in U.S. relations with China, which we believe does not serve American or global interests. Although we are very troubled by Beijingโ€™s recent behavior, which requires a strong response, we also believe that many U.S. actions are contributing directly to the downward spiral in relations.

Of course there was backlash. These days, you canโ€™t suggest any kind of softening to China in D.C. or on Twitter without being accused of being on the Chinese Communist Party payroll.ย 

Some of the criticism is more thoughtful: This Twitter thread by Tianjin resident American Matthew Stinson is fair. Although many of the signatories of the letter may disagree with some of his arguments, his thinking is highly representative of a significant proportion of the younger people in the China-watching community. Hereโ€™s an argument on a similar theme, written before the open letter was published, from millennial American essayist Tanner Greer.

The Neanderthals of Washington, D.C., are also fighting back. Thereโ€™s another open letter that is right now gathering signatures that advises Trump to โ€œstay the course.โ€ You can understand the type of thinking behind this letter from this excerpt:

An inspiration for this letter was the palpable surge of pride in America evident in your celebration of the 4th of July at the memorial to a president, Abraham Lincoln, who saved our country from a previous, existential peril.ย 

3. Auto sales up in June, but gloom is not gone

After a year of gloomy news for the auto industry in China, the Wall Street Journal reports (paywall) that โ€œretail sales of passenger cars in China rose 4.9 percent in June from a year ago โ€” the first increase since May last year, according to the China Passenger Car Association.โ€

  • However, the uptick in sales seems largely due to dealers offering discounts to clear inventory before July 1, when China began enforcing new emissions standards. (See also this Bloomberg article via SCMP for more.)ย 

  • Meanwhile, Hangzhou-based Geely, โ€œcontrolled by Volvo Cars owner Lว Shลซfรบ ๆŽไนฆ็ฆ, issued a profit warning that drove down its shares and those of other Chinese automakers as it sparked concern investors are underestimating the depths of the industryโ€™s slump,โ€ according to Bloomberg (porous paywall).ย 

4. The hopes of a bygone era for rule of lawย 

From the YouTube channel of activist website ChinaChange:

In 2008, encouraged by a sense that China was opening up to more democratic norms, a group of lawyers in Beijing sought to directly elect the Beijing Lawyers Association, which was controlled by the government and did not serve lawyers’ genuine interests. In this exclusive interview, eight lawyers tell the story of their endeavor, the government’s response, and how the lawyers and law firms that participated were punished for their roles in the effort.ย 

5. Xinjiang propaganda uptick

The Chinese government is stepping up its propaganda campaign to paint Xinjiang as a โ€œmodel of human rights protection.โ€ Interestingly, the effort seems to also have a domestic component.

  • โ€œWhen I visited the Xinjiang Vocational Skills Education and Training Center a few months ago, the modern facilities and professional teachers there gave me a very deep impression,โ€ said Vadim Pisarevich, Deputy Permanent Representative of Belarus to the United Nations Office at Geneva, according to this Xinhua article published in Chinese today. It is similar to an English language article on Xinhua that was published on June 26.

  • Nationalistic rag the Global Times has produced a special section of its English website called Exploring a real Xinjiang, which gives you the Party line on how wonderful life is for Uyghurs.ย ย 

  • “Are you forcibly separating parents from their children?” The BBC asked Liรบ XiวŽomรญng ๅˆ˜ๆ™“ๆ˜Ž, China’s ambassador to the U.K., this question. His response, on this one-minute video clip on Twitter: โ€œThere is no separationโ€ฆnot at all.โ€

—–

Our whole team really appreciates your support as Access members. Please chat with us on our Slack channel or contact me anytime at jeremy@thechinaproject.com.ย 

โ€”Jeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief


BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:

Cambodiaโ€™s Smart Axiata said it had begun 5G trials in partnership with Chinaโ€™s Huawei Technologies on Monday and could start rolling out the mobile network by this year.

โ€œIt will not be a nationwide coverage from day one, it will be hot spot first, it will be an urban areas first and then we will gradually expand,โ€ Smart Axiataโ€™s chief executive Thomas Hundt told reporters after the trial.ย 

  • Shorting ANTA
    China’s ANTA Sports rejects Muddy Waters allegation as ‘incorrect’ / Reuters
    โ€œANTA Sports Products Ltd. on Tuesday rejected an allegation by U.S. shortseller Muddy Waters that the Chinese sports brand had manipulated financial information.โ€

  • Cooking the books
    Watchdog probes auditor after massive fraud at Kangde Xin / Caixin Global
    โ€œThe auditor of scandal-ridden Kangde Xin Composite Material Group Co. Ltd. has been placed under investigation for failing to perform its duties, an official with Chinaโ€™s securities regulator said Monday, after an inquiry into the listed company uncovered a massive fraud.โ€

SCIENCE, HEALTH, AND THE ENVIRONMENT:ย 

Bart Sweerts of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich took solar radiation data from 119 stations across China between 1960 and 2015, combining it with data on emissions of sulphur dioxide and black carbon to pinpoint how much human-caused aerosols had dimmed the maximum output from solar panels. He and his colleagues found air pollution had decreased the potential solar generation by 13 percent over the period.ย 

A group of rural doctors in [Henan] attempted to resign en masse complaining that they were overworked and underpaidโ€ฆ However, it remained unclear whether the doctors had actually been able to resign.

POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:

SOCIETY AND CULTURE:

He was a Chinese man who came to Britain in 1933 and stayed for the next 18 years living in Londonโ€™s literary and artistic enclave of Hampstead and, for most of his sojourn, the university town of Oxford. During those nearly two decades, that spanned WW2, Chiang Yee (่’‹ๅฝ JiวŽng Yรญ) became the author of the Silent Traveller series of books, much loved for their Chinese perspective on Britainโ€™s landscapes and people.ย 

  • The uneven progress of the #MeToo movementย 
    Unfinished business: Campus sexual harassment in China / Sixth Tone
    As Chinese continue to speak out against sexual harassment and assault on Chinaโ€™s campuses, Sixth Tone provides an infographic of both resolved and unresolved cases of accusations made against faculty and staff over the years, illustrating that โ€œsome cases are closed within days. Others drag on for years,โ€ and punishments have varied between universities.ย 

  • Contraception and sexism
    Chinese women bear the major burden of contraception / Sixth Tone
    Another infographic by Sixth Tone shows the divergent rates of sterilization between males and females in China, and that โ€œeven though health professionals consider male sterilization as safer, or at least, just as risky, it is still not widely accepted in the country.โ€

  • Architecture
    14 stand-out China entries on the World Architecture Festival 2019 Awards shortlist / RADII China
    With renderings and photos.

  • Cinema
    ‘Made in China’ Review / Hollywood Reporter
    A review of Made in China, a Chinese-focused spin-off of a French comedy franchise called Serial (Bad) Weddings.

  • Work and screen time
    #10years challenge of how Chinese spend their time / Sixth Tone
    The National Bureau of Statistics published the results of a second โ€œtime use surveyโ€ recently. The first was conducted in 2008. The results: โ€œChinese people spend more time working and on the Internet compared with ten years ago.โ€


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Middle Earth #14: Art from the edges: LGBT and feminist contributions to contemporary Chinese culture

Voices from Chinaโ€™s large but marginalized LGBTQ and feminist communities are increasingly making themselves heard in contemporary culture. In particular, artists and activists from these groups are creating content around the idea of โ€œnontraditional love,โ€ which is resonating strongly even with mainstream Chinese audiences. So how have the stories of creators from historically silenced and censored groups found footholds in contemporary culture? In this episode, Aladin speaks with three representatives from LGBTQ and feminist organizations to find out.