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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (148005)4/26/2019 3:23:19 PM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu  Respond to of 218184
 
Elroy, from a consumer point of view I wish you would be right, as it will more uses of products made of aluminum.



To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (148005)4/26/2019 5:21:30 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218184
 
wonderful news flow, that deep-state stymied in Czech republic ...

reuters.com

Czech president to meet Huawei boss in China on mission to boost ties

PRAGUE, April 23 (Reuters) - Czech President Milos Zeman will meet Huawei Chief Executive Ren Zhengfei when he visits China this week in a sign of support for the technology firm, which faces U.S. allegations that Beijing could use its technology for spying.

The meeting with Ren comes just days before a conference in Prague where the United States will push allies to adopt shared security and policy measures that will make it more difficult for Huawei to dominate 5G telecoms networks.

Huawei denies that its products are used for spying.

Czech cyber watchdog NUKIB warned in December about potential dangers in using technology from Huawei and fellow Chinese firm ZTE, forcing critical infrastructure providers like mobile operators to undertake risk analyses.

But Zeman has repeatedly dismissed allegations against Huawei as he presses for closer political and economic ties with Beijing and played down the findings of risks from NUKIB and the Czech counter-intelligence agency BIS.

A spokesman for Zeman said on Tuesday the president would meet Chinese President Xi Jinping on his visit, along with the meeting with Huawei’s Zhengfei.

Zeman is due to be accompanied by a business delegation which includes Jiri Smejc, chief executive of Czech-based Home Credit which is a leading consumer finance lender in China, daily newspaper Hospodarske Noviny reported. (Reporting by Robert Muller; Editing by Alexander Smith)




To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (148005)4/26/2019 5:23:30 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218184
 
dated suspect reporting by lackeys of deep-state, shown up to be the cretins they must be by the gentle passage of a few weeks ...

thediplomat.com

Behind the Huawei Backlash in Poland and the Czech Republic

Both cases point to a deeper problem with China’s Central and Eastern Europe strategy.
Alicja Bachulska and Richard Q. Turcsányi
The bold Huawei-related steps of Poland and the Czech Republic have attracted international attention. Yet these are only the most recent indications of the two countries’ growing frustration with China. The common denominator for both is the perception that they have few economic results to show for six-plus years of attempts to develop “pragmatic cooperation” with Beijing under the umbrellas of the 16+1 platform and the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

In the context of worsening U.S.-China relations and the international outcry against Chinese Communist Party interference (so-called “Chinese influence”), the two countries – both members of the EU and NATO, and with traditionally pro-Atlantic strategic directions – are becoming more cautious about their dealings with China. This situation creates a challenge not only to their bilateral ties with Beijing but also to the very development of the 16+1 platform, which includes China and 16 countries of Central and Eastern Europe (CEE). The platform must either abandon the purely congratulatory tone of its lavish events and address problematic aspects of the China-CEE relations or risk losing relevance when it comes to strategic relations between the two sides.

Poland and China: Strategic Partners on Paper Only?

Enjoying this article? Click here to subscribe for full access. Just $5 a month.The recent arrest of a Polish citizen and a Chinese regional director of Huawei in Poland, both accused of spying for China, might have surprised some. Not so long ago, Poland was seen as the leader of the bloc supposedly being “ bought on the cheap” by Beijing. Yet, despite many efforts from Polish politicians across the ideological spectrum, Chinese investments have not materialized in the expected volumes. Sino-Polish trade relations are greatly asymmetric in China’s favor and actually tilted even further in this direction during recent years. After more than six years and a few Polish administrations trying in vain, Poland is now adjusting its China policy.

The espionage accusations were not the first indications of shifting attitudes toward China among Polish policymakers. First, during the 7th China-CEE summit in Sofia in July 2018, Poland was represented only by Jaroslaw Gowin (deputy prime minister and minister of science and higher education). Instead of joining his counterparts, Poland’s Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki participated in the 27th pilgrimage of Radio Maryja Family (a religious organization with a large following). The move seems to have constituted one of the first signals of Poland’s shift and it was presumably received as such in China.

Then in November 2018, Polish Minister of Defense Mariusz Blaszczak declared during an interview that China and Russia should be seen as “forming a coalition against the free world.” It seems quite telling that this remark was made right after his visit to Washington, where Blaszczak discussed the possibility of building a permanent U.S. military base on the Polish territory (the so-called “Fort Trump”). Similar remarks were made by Morawiecki during an international conference in Hamburg a couple of days later.

In December 2018, the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs released a statement condemning China’s commercial cyberespionage. The declaration was issued just two weeks before the arrest of Huawei’s regional director (Wang Weijing) and a Polish citizen following spying charges, which finally made international headlines.

Last but not least, three large public tenders related to infrastructure projects (two highway projects and the construction of a garbage incinerator), all initially won by Chinese companies, were eventually blocked by the Polish regulatory authorities in late 2018. It is well worth remembering that the Chinese infrastructure experience in Poland includes the infamous case of COVEC, which is still very much remembered in the country as well as beyond.

Simultaneously, the political implications of Chinese international economic expansion have begun to be perceived in the West as a growing threat. EU-China relations have also responded to this shift in perception, especially since 2016, when the German robotic company Kuka was acquired by a Chinese investor. What followed was a realization in Europe that China may be getting too much access to some critical technologies, triggering a process leading to the EU-wide investment screening mechanism set to be adopted in coming months. In the process, western European anxiety about China-CEE relations and the 16+1 platform only increased.

The Polish policy change described above can be partially attributed to the growing disillusionment regarding the results (or the lack thereof) of Warsaw’s repeated efforts to strengthen its ties with Beijing. It also fits into the larger picture of Polish priorities when choosing its international partners. The United States remains Poland’s most important international partner and given the growing tensions between Washington and Beijing, Warsaw needs to consider its own position in this triangle. It should be understood that it was never on the table for Poland to develop relations with China at the expense of ties with the United States.

Czech Republic and China: Less Than Meets the Eye

At first sight, Sino-Czech relations since 2013 might look like a success story. The two countries signed a strategic partnership agreement during President Xi Jinping’s visit to Prague in 2016. Czech President Milos Zeman is a frequent guest in China, and he gets special treatment at events including the 2017 Belt and Road Forum, the 2018 Shanghai Import Expo, or the celebrations of the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II in Beijing. There have been a number of Chinese acquisitions in the Czech Republic, including a football club, a brewery, a media group, a travel agency, real estate, and a financial group, altogether allegedly worth around 1 billion euros. Even some Czech businesses have been relatively successful in China, such as the traditional Czech car maker (owned now by German VW) Skoda car and the financial company Home Credit.

However, when looking closer, the situation is more complex. As in Poland, there has been a similar realization that attempts to profit from improving relations with China were futile. The Chinese acquisition spree in the Czech Republic was conducted by a single entity – the CEFC – and as it turned out later, it was driven by debt-financing. In 2018, the company’s chairman, Ye Jianming, was arrested in China; another CEFC representative, Patrick Ho, was convicted on corruption charges in the United States; and the company’s assets in the Czech Republic were taken over by CITIC, the Chinese state-owned investment vehicle, which had to cover the existing debt of CEFC. CITIC’s entrance also finally resolved the discussion about whether state or private interests had been behind the unusual series of acquisitions, confirming to Czechs the bitter reality that it is now officially the Chinese state holding the portfolio.

The whole experience with CEFC is referred to in the Czech Republic as a “fiasco.” Similarly to the COVEC case in Poland, this experience will have important implications for the future as local businesses will be much more cautious when engaging with Chinese counterparts.

Even remaining instances of economic achievements are questionable. The successes of the Home Credit company in China, for instance, brings little to the Czech economy as the company is registered and pays taxes in the Netherlands, despite being owned by the richest Czech, Petr Kellner, via the financial group PPF. As Kellner’s company publicly takes credit for the Czech policy adjustments regarding China, many ask what the Czech Republic gets in return.

In the meantime, the Czech political situation changed during the previous year after the new government of Andrej Babiš was formed. Given the context discussed above, Babiš seems to have less interest in pushing for further development of relations with China. Moreover, since 2018, the new Czech Minister of Foreign Affairs Tomáš Petrícek has seemed to reaffirm support for human rights to return as the traditional topic of Czech diplomacy, after being deprioritized to some extent by the previous government from 2014 to 2017.

At the same time, the Czech security institutions accelerated their warnings of China. The Security Intelligence Service has been calling out Chinese intelligence activities in the country for years in its annual reports. Now, the newly formed National Cyber Security Center issued a warning in December 2018 against Huawei and ZTE products based on the legal and political conditions in China that require those firms to cooperate with intelligence services. The critical infrastructure of the Czech Republic is now obliged to address the issue. As a result, Huawei was already precluded from competing in a tender to build a tax portal.

To make things worse, the day before Christmas the Chinese ambassador met informally with Prime Minister Babiš. The Chinese Embassy webpage interpreted the meeting as if Babiš had backpaddled on the security warnings. This provoked strong reactions from the Czech government and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, with Babiš himself saying that the Embassy had “lied.”

Conclusion: Troubles Ahead for the 16+1 Platform

Poland and the Czech Republic are among the most important countries within the CEE, occupying the positions of the first and second largest Chinese trading partners in the region. The shifting of their positions is, therefore, an important change in the balance within the group of 16 CEE countries, leaving Hungary and Serbia as lonely enthusiasts when it comes to relations with China. The changes in Poland and the Czech Republic are influencing the whole standing of the CEE region vis-à-vis China.

The 16+1 platform was established in 2012 and since then the 17 prime ministers meet annually. There is also a wide network of various forums and events. One might expect that this mechanism will now be utilized to address some of the thorny issues, namely the perceived security and political implications. However, the existing evidence so far suggests not to expect much, since the platform has not even been able to enhance the economic performance, which can be regarded as a less sensitive issue. Moreover, although the established mechanism seems impressive and includes what appears to be “sectoral dialogues” in any thinkable field, in reality, the existing events do not offer much besides the exchange of customary diplomatic statements. These dialogues rarely include more high-level representatives of the CEE countries besides China and the host country.

In this way, the 16+1 platform might well have proved that China and CEE countries are fair-weather friends. At the same time, there is probably little interest on either side to formally downgrade the partnership. Hence we may be observing in the years to come a slow decrease in relevance of the 16+1 platform.

Richard Q. Turcsányi is an Assistant Professor at Mendel University in Brno; a Senior Researcher at Palacky University Olomouc, and Program Director at the Institute of Asian Studies in Bratislava. The text was produced as part of the ChinfluenCE project ( www.chinfluenCE.eu), run by Association for International Affairs (AMO).

Alicja Bachulska works as a Chinese politics analyst at the Asia Research Centre, War Studies University in Warsaw. She is also a Ph.D. candidate at the Graduate School for Social Research, Polish Academy of Sciences. She is a School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) and Fudan University alumna.




To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (148005)4/26/2019 5:27:30 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218184
 
pending happening of H-day

and deep-state rag shown to be morons when it comes to analysis

I mean, after all, if the UK can give away team USA atomic secrets to keep a balanced world, what's a phone system or two? that is what special relationships are for, for playing

but, given that some cannot fathom history and have no clue re math, there always be surprise as compensation

washingtonpost.com

Huawei reportedly gets the green light to participate in Britain’s 5G rollout, a would-be setback for the U.S.
Ellen Nakashima

Huawei needs to respond. Photographer: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg (Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg)Top British officials apparently have decided to let the Chinese technology giant Huawei help develop an ultra-fast 5G wireless network in the United Kingdom, according to reports, in spite of pressure by U.S. officials to freeze out the company on security grounds.

The leak of the apparent decision by Britain’s National Security Council — a panel led by Prime Minister Theresa May — risks inflaming tensions between the U.K. and the Trump administration as Huawei flexes its muscles as the world’s dominant supplier of telecom equipment. And it instantly created a political firestorm among members of Parliament determined to hunt down the source of the leak.

[ British spy agency delivers scathing assessment of security risks posed by Huawei]

Any decision to move forward with Huawei will not be official until it is announced by the secretary for digital culture and reported to Parliament. And one senior official said that deliberations are still ongoing. But any council conclusion to let Huawei participate, even in a limited way, in Britain’s 5G rollout would be a significant diplomatic defeat and raise the security risks for the United States, whose networks connect with Britain’s and which has argued that Huawei’s networking equipment cannot be trusted — and could be used for spying purposes or to disrupt networks.

Following the reports, White House national security council spokesman Garrett Marquis said on Twitter that the Trump administration is continuing to work “across government & with allies & partners to mitigate risk in the deployment of communications infrastructure.”

He added: “As the President has said, ‘5G networks must be secure. They must be strong. They have to be guarded from the enemy-we do have enemies out there…’”

[ U.S. officials plan for a future in which Huawei has a major share of 5G global networks]

Some analysts said that such a decision would set a precedent that other countries would be likely to follow.

Countries would be "less likely to do a complete ban,” said James Lewis, a cyber policy expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies who has followed the international 5G debate closely.

Lewis said it was still possible that the British decision, when it is announced, could reduce risk to a manageable level. “If the British implement their restrictions in a tough way, it’s not a big deal. If they implement them in a soft way, then Huawei will be all over the network,” he said.

For instance, Huawei will continue to be barred, as it is in the 4G networks, from the “core” of Britain’s 5G network, which contains routers and switches handling massive volumes of traffic, officials said. The limitations are also expected to include geographic restrictions near sensitive networks.

But a number of experts do not believe such restrictions will be sufficient.

Malcolm Turnbull, Australia’s former prime minister, said that even if Huawei is limited to the network “edge," or where radio antennae connect with user devices, the risk is still there.

“With 5G we have had to recognize that the core/edge distinction no longer exists,” Turnbull said in a speech in New York on Thursday. That is why Australia last year became the first nation to put in place new requirements on “high risk” vendors that effectively banned Huawei from the country’s 5G network. Such vendors, the government determined, could be subject to directions from foreign intelligence services to act contrary to national security.

“Our decision was not taken lightly” or based on “near term threats,” he said. Rather, it was “a long-term prudent hedge.”

Reports indicated that several members of the security council, including the home, foreign and defense secretaries, had expressed reservations about the plan. Britain’s GCHQ intelligence service last month delivered a scathing assessment of Huawei security risks in the 4G networks. But, according to British press reports, May gave the green light.

The apparent decision was first reported by The Daily Telegraph on Wednesday after May and other ministers on the council met to discuss Huawei’s possible role in the 5G network.

5G proponents say the wireless technology will lead to mobile download speeds up to 100 times faster than what is found on the 4G LTE in many smartphones today. And, they say, it will pave the way for future technologies such as self-driving cars and a world of networked, smart appliances. The United States is racing against other countries to get a critical mass of consumers connected to 5G, in hopes that U.S. businesses will be the ones to create the Uber and Spotify of the future.

Huawei celebrated the reports, tweeting: “5G means 5G: British PM Theresa May defies U.S. instructions to ban Huawei by granting the Chinese tech giant access to its 5G network. #HuaweiFacts.”

The leak came in a week in which Huawei’s dominance of the global 5G equipment market was made clear by the Chinese company’s first-ever quarterly earnings report, announcing revenues of $26.7 billion — a 39 percent increase over the same time last year — and promising “a year of large-scale deployment of 5G around the world.”

The company said Monday it has signed 40 deals with wireless carriers to provide 5G equipment so far and has shipped more than 70,000 5G base stations — the sophisticated radios that allow 5G cell sites to communicate with mobile devices. Huawei had previously issued financial updates only twice a year.

Huawei’s results far outstripped those of its closest competitors — Finland’s Nokia, which reported revenues of $5.7 billion for the quarter, and Sweden’s Ericsson, with $5.1 billion. On his company’s earnings call, Nokia chief executive Rajeev Suri acknowledged that the firm faced “a weak quarter.” Together, the three companies account for a majority of the global telecom equipment market. There are no U.S. manufacturers of 5G wireless gear.

In Europe, Huawei already has a substantial presence in the continent’s 4G networks. The firm has not built its gear to be “interoperable” or easily meshed with other companies’ equipment. If a telecom company wants to replace Huawei gear, it must rip it out and install new equipment — a double expense.

“This is a cost that either the telecom operators have to cover by themselves or the state [has to defray],” said Karol Okonski, Poland’s minister of digital affairs, in an interview Wednesday. In Poland, Huawei is present in the core and the radio networks. So are the two other major vendors, Finland’s Nokia and Sweden’s Ericsson.

Poland, he said, is still weighing its 5G policy and hopes to have guidelines prepared by the end of June.

“It’s highly unlikely that we would ban Huawei completely from the Polish market,” he said. “But at the same time it’s hard to say whether we will be able to make our telecommunications infrastructure secure without intervention. The best scenario would be to come up with security rules that would allow us not to ban anyone but still feel that in the end our networks will be secure.”

He added: “We might have to have some limited ban on some of the vendors, otherwise we’ll feel it impossible to secure our networks in a way that we and our allies expect.”

U.S. security officials have been quietly preparing for all contingencies, including the prospect of other countries allowing Huawei equipment in their systems.

Last month, Sue Gordon, the deputy to the Director of National Intelligence, told an audience at the University of Texas, Austin, “we are going to have to figure out a way in a 5G world that we’re able to manage the risks in a diverse network that includes technology that we can’t trust.”

Officials have not let up at all on their efforts to persuade partners that Huawei’s presence poses a risk. But, Gordon said, “you have to presume a dirty network."

Industry officials and analysts said it is difficult without seeing details of the British restrictions to assess their impact on cyber and national security.

Even though Huawei will be barred from the network core, the radio antennas will contain more sensitive information than before hosted in the cloud, experts said. “There is a lot more automated response, threat detection and mitigation happening in the edge, which also could introduce vulnerabilities,” said one 5G industry official whose firm had not authorized him to speak on the record.

“It’s true that if you want to do the worst things—like disrupt a network—you probably have to get to the routers,” the industry official said. “But that does not mean you cannot cause very serious problems through the radio networks. It’s just harder to do. But not impossible at all.”

Earlier this month, in remarks in Washington, NSA Director Paul Nakasone said the concern with Huawei is it being headquartered in a nation “that doesn’t have respect for the rule of law, that doesn’t have a series of norms, that has a very, very concerted effort to partner both their government and their private sector together to make sure that the government’s will is being done.”

He added: “It’s not the fact that we have a smoking gun that we can’t identify. We have a loaded gun when you think about an adversary that has the ability to control your infrastructure.”




To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (148005)4/26/2019 5:30:56 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218184
 
great teachings, I tell the jack and the coconut

make friends, and keep friends, without expectation of gain, but friendship

wired.com

Huawei Still Has Friends in Europe, Despite US Warnings



Simon Dawson/Bloomberg/Getty Images
US Secretary of state Mike Pompeo warned US allies in February against using technology built by Chinese telecom giant Huawei, going so far as to suggest the US might stop sharing intelligence with countries whose communications infrastructures rely on Huawei’s equipment.

Pompeo's remarks during a European speaking tour echoed years of concerns from the US government over the possibility that Huawei might use its products to help China spy on US citizens. Huawei has repeatedly denied that it has spied or would spy on US citizens on behalf of China, and it sued the US government over a law banning government agencies from doing business with companies that buy gear from Huawei and its fellow Chinese telecom giant ZTE.

But some big European countries aren’t toeing Uncle Sam’s line. On Wednesday, The Telegraph reported that the UK government will allow Huawei to build "non-core" parts of its 5G network.

“The UK initial decision is a mixed bag for both Huawei and the US,” says Paul Triolo, who focuses on technology for the political risk consulting firm Eurasia Group. Huawei didn’t get banned entirely, Triolo points out, but “for the US it shows that its security concerns are being listened to.”

The UK is intimately familiar with Huawei's equipment, because the company allows British officials to inspect its code. Last month, a UK governmental agency released a scathing report criticizing Huawei's basic security practices. However, it concluded that these issues were related to "basic engineering competence and cyber security hygiene," not deliberate attempts to build backdoors into its products.

Germany isn't ready to kick Huawei out of its networks yet either. Earlier this month Jochen Homann, the president of Germany's federal network agency, told the Financial Times that his agency "has not received any concrete indications against Huawei." Last month the agency announced a set of security requirements for telecommunications networks that apply to all companies, not just Huawei. "If Huawei meets all the requirements, it can take part in the 5G network roll-out," Homann told the Financial Times.

Last month the European Union asked member states to complete security risk assessments of their 5G network infrastructures by the end of June, but it did not propose a ban on Huawei or other Chinese vendors.

LEARN MOREThe WIRED Guide to 5G
Triolo says an EU meeting next week in Prague on 5G security will provide a better indication of the bloc’s view of Huawei. He says European government and telecom carriers are in a tough spot because their networks include a lot of Chinese gear.

"European governments are just reacting to the reality on the ground," says mobile industry analyst Chetan Sharma. He says Huawei is “well entrenched” in existing 4G wireless networks on the continent, and would be expensive to replace. “If you are going to have 4G gear from Huawei, it just makes sense to have their 5G gear as well, as there are financial incentives that can’t be overlooked. Neither the operators or the governments have the funding to replace Huawei in the networks." Sharma also points out that relationships between the US and the EU have deteriorated, and the US' warnings might not carry the same weight they once did.

Losing Germany and the UK would have been a major blow to Huawei, which is facing more scrutiny around the world. Last year Australia and Japan effectively banned Chinese vendors from building 5G networks, and Taiwan reinforced an existing ban on the companies' networking gear.

Despite these bans, Huawei has continued making deals. Huawei had signed 40 contracts to supply 5G gear by the end of March, the company's rotating chairman, Ken Hu, said at the company's global analyst summit earlier this month, according to Reuters. Of these contracts, 23 were in Europe, 10 were in the Middle East, six were in Asia-Pacific, and one was in Africa. In a sign of health, Huawei reported a 39 percent increase in first-quarter revenue on Monday.

Huawei has more to worry about than government bans. Earlier this year the US indicted Huawei and its executives, including CFO Meng Wanzhou, of crimes including bank fraud, wire fraud, money laundering, and obstruction of justice related to alleged violations of sanctions forbidding the sale of US-made equipment to Iran. Meng was arrested in Canada last year and is awaiting extradition to the US. If convicted, Huawei could face sanctions banning US companies from selling it software and components. Similar sanctions nearly forced ZTE out of business last year, but the company was saved when the Trump administration dropped the sanctions. Huawei might be better able to survive sanctions than ZTE was, but it would seriously curb the company's ambitions.



To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (148005)4/26/2019 5:37:04 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218184
 
suspect reporting warning deep-state that another domino may soon fall ...

reuters.com

Huawei hopes for Britain-like solution in New Zealand 5G bid

WELLINGTON (Reuters) - China’s Huawei Technologies said Britain’s decision to allow the firm a restricted role in building parts of its next-generation telecoms network was the kind of solution it was hoping for in New Zealand, where it has been blocked from 5G plans.

FILE PHOTO: Small toy figures are seen in front of a displayed Huawei and 5G network logo in this illustration picture, March 30, 2019. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic\

Britain will ban Huawei from all core parts of 5G network but give it some access to non-core parts, sources have told Reuters, as it seeks a middle way in a bitter U.S.-China dispute stemming from American allegations that Huawei’s equipment could be used by Beijing for espionage.

Washington has also urged its allies to ban Huawei from building 5G networks, even as the Chinese company, the world’s top producer of telecoms equipment, has repeatedly said the spying concerns are unfounded.

In New Zealand, a member of the Five Eyes intelligence sharing network that includes the United States, the Government Communications Security Bureau (GCSB) in November turned down an initial request from local telecommunication firm Spark to include Huawei equipment in its 5G network, but later gave the operator options to mitigate national security concerns.

“The proposed solution in the UK to restrict Huawei from bidding for the core is exactly the type of solution we have been looking at in New Zealand,” Andrew Bowater, deputy CEO of Huawei’s New Zealand arm, said in an emailed statement.

Spark said it has noted the developments in Britain and would raise it with the GCSB.

The reports “suggest the UK is following other European jurisdictions in taking a considered and balanced approach to managing supplier-related security risks in 5G”, Andrew Pirie, Spark’s corporate relations lead, said in an email.

“Our discussions with the GCSB are ongoing and we expect that the UK developments will be a further item of discussion between us,” Pirie added.

New Zealand’s minister for intelligence services, Andrew Little, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

British culture minister Jeremy Wright said on Thursday that he would report to parliament the conclusions of a government review of the 5G supply chain once they had been taken.

He added that the disclosure of confidential discussions on the role of Huawei was “unacceptable” and that he could not rule out a criminal investigation into the leak.

The decisions by Britain and Germany to use Huawei gear in non-core parts of 5G network makes it harder to prove Huawei should be kept out of New Zealand telecommunication networks, said Syed Faraz Hasan, an expert in communication engineering and networks at New Zealand’s Massey University

He pointed out Huawei gear was already part of the non-core 4G networks that 5G infrastructure would be built on.

“Unless there is a convincing argument against the Huawei devices ... it is difficult to keep them away,” Hasan said.

Reporting by Charlotte Greenfield; Editing by Himani Sarkar




To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (148005)4/27/2019 6:12:32 AM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu  Respond to of 218184
 
Interesting article related to scandium on Bloomberg

Metal More Common in Moon Rocks Could Transform Planes and Cars

bloomberg.com

There’s an unexpected benefit from the boom in battery metals mining -- it’s going to boost production of scandium, an obscure element whose long-held promise to transform manufacturing of planes and cars has been stalled by a lack of supply.

The silver-white metal, found in higher concentrations in moon rocks than on Earth, can be added to aluminum to make alloys that are lighter, stronger and more malleable. These can dramatically reduce the weight of parts for aircraft, cars or ships and help deliver savings on fuel costs.



To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (148005)4/27/2019 6:45:13 AM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218184
 
Rusal controlled by Deripaska, who owns several smelters in Russia will start refining scandium in his metallurgic facilities and by this giving a "leg up" to Russian aeronautics industry.

I only wonder where the US metallurgical industry stands on this subject, including the mining of Ti, Sc, La, Nd, Dy, Ir, Ta and Y etc., all defined as rare metals (will not list the whole list of metals on the Mendeleev chart) that substantially improve the performance of super alloys, including Fe or with Mg which is not less important than Ni or Al and other basic metals alloys