US govt staff told to treat Huawei as blacklisted

Business

WASHINGTON: A Senior US official this week told the Commerce Department’s enforcement staff that China’s Huawei should still be treated as blacklisted, days after US President Donald Trump sowed confusion with a vow to ease a ban on selling to the firm.
Saturday, Trump surprised markets by promising Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Japan that he would allow US companies to sell products to Huawei Technologies Co Ltd.
In May, the company was added to the so-called entity list, which bans American firms from selling to it without special permission, as punishment for actions against US national security interests.
Trump’s announcement – an olive branch to Beijing to revive stalled trade talks – was cheered by US chipmakers eager to maintain sales to Huawei, the world’s largest telecoms equipment maker and a key US customer.
But Trump’s comments also spawned confusion among industry players and government officials struggling to understand what Huawei policy he had unveiled.
In an email to enforcement staff seen by Reuters, John Sonderman, deputy director of the office of export enforcement, in the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS), sought to clarify how agents should approach licence requests by firms seeking approval to sell to Huawei.
All such applications should be considered on merit and flagged with language noting that: “This party is on the entity list.
“Evaluate the associated licence review policy under part 744.”
Sonderman said any further guidance from BIS should also be taken into account when evaluating Huawei-related licence applications.
The Commerce Department did not immediately respond to request for comment.
A person familiar with the matter said the letter was the only guidance that enforcement officials had received after Trump’s surprise announcement on Saturday.
A presumption of denial implies strict review and most licenses reviewed under it are not approved.
It is unclear when commerce will provide its enforcement staff with additional guidance, based on Trump’s promises and how that might alter the likelihood of obtaining licenses.
The internal memo, not previously reported, came as White House advisors also scrambled to shed light on Trump’s announcement.
White House trade adviser Peter Navarro noted that the government would allow “lower tech” chip sales to the company, which don’t impact national security. – Reuters