Monday, November 25, 2024

The eavesdropping dragon: Why Huawei has no place In Canadians' communications

With Canada-China relations near an all-time low following the lawful arrest of Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou on a US extradition request, decision-makers in Ottawa are now confronted with an important decision.

Should Ottawa allow Huawei, the telecommunications giant at the centre of China’s global ambitions, to be involved in the construction of Canada’s next-generation 5G communications networks?

For MLI’s internal and external experts, the answer is clear: for reasons including national security, intellectual property right protection, international intelligence cooperation, foreign affairs strategy, and much, much more, Canada must block Huawei from involvement in 5G.

Click to view the full image.

There are plenty of reasons why intelligence professionals are alarmed by Huawei’s involvement in our 5G networks, particularly, the close relationship between Huawei and a Chinese government with a history of cyberespionage.

If Huawei were just a normal company, would China have engaged in hostage diplomacy against Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, engaged in a massive campaign of economic coercion, and levelled such open threats against our policy-makers on behalf of the company’s CFO?

If Huawei were just a normal company, would it have such an intimate relationship with Beijing, which could at any time compel the company to assist Chinese authorities in espionage activities?

And if Huawei were just a normal company, would it have such a suspicious history involving massive data theft, equipment not subject to sufficient control, and other serious and sustained cyber security concerns?

Simply put, Huawei is an abnormal company whose involvement in 5G would pose a serious threat to the information security of Canada and whose construction of 5G infrastructure would undermine Canada’s independent sovereign decision-making ability.

Watch: Why Canada should ban Huawei from 5G

Our allies have got the message. New Zealand, Australia and the United States have already announced they will ban Huawei from participating in their next-generation mobile data networks. Taiwan, Japan and countries in Europe are also getting increasingly cold feet. Canada should be next.

As part of our Dragon at the Door series, MLI’s experts have stood alone as the lead voices of this crucial national conversation. MLI contributors who have made this case include former National Security Advisor Richard Fadden, Senior Fellows like J. Berkshire Miller and Professor Charles Burton, and new authors like Ivy Li. A full list of our expansive, multi-year body of work can be found here.

MLI-DragonAtTheDoor-774×427-10-17
feature image china
20190201_Claws of Panda_774x429 v3
huawei 5g myths info fi
20220401_BRI Forecast (Nagy)_774x429
Jan2022_Energy security underpins fundamental change in the Indo-Pacific (Kucharski) FEATURE
MLI_Taiwan-is-an-ideal-partner-for-Canada-in-the-semiconductor-sector_SLIDER
20211118_Pacific-safety-Lerhe_774x429
2021927_Indo-Pacific-Collection_774x429
20190122_Eavesdropping Dragon_774x429 v4
previous arrow
next arrow

MLI’s Thought Leadership on Huawei

MLI’s Experts on Huawei

Experts Found: 4
Chinese state-owned enteprises, Economic and tax policy

Munk Senior Fellow (Chinese economy and investment)

Security Intelligence, National Defence, National security

MLI Advisory Council Member

National security, Border security, Terrorism, Contraband, International and global affairs, Demographic change, Intelligence, Defence

Munk Senior Fellow (Defence and security)

Defence, International Security, Foreign Policy, Indo-Pacific, Alliances

Senior Fellow and Director of Foreign Affairs, National Defence and National Security

Highlights