Senators ask Trump to halt Huawei licenses
A group of senators from both parties on Thursday urged the Trump administration to stop issuing licenses for U.S. companies to do business with Chinese telecom giant Huawei, warning that even limited business with Huawei could pose a national security risk.
In a letter to President Trump, the group of 15 senators wrote they are dismayed the Commerce Department has started issuing licenses to U.S. firms that conduct business with Huawei.
“Given the security risks posed by Huawei’s operations in the U.S., we request that you take immediate action to suspend the approval of such licenses and ensure Congress is appropriately informed about the license approval process and related national security implications going forward,” Sens. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) wrote in the bipartisan letter.
Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross this week said the Trump administration has started to issue licenses to some of the U.S. companies that requested special permission to conduct business with Huawei after the company was blacklisted in May.
The licenses started to emerge after the Commerce Department announced Monday that the temporary license permitting some companies to work with Huawei has been extended 90 days, in the third deadline extension since the company was blacklisted.
On Thursday, the senators wrote to Trump, “You have said yourself that you did not want the U.S. doing business with Huawei.”
They asked the Commerce Department to stop granting licenses to U.S. companies until it provides Congress with a “report outlining specific criteria for determining whether or not the approval of any license poses a national security threat.”