Huawei chairman accuses American critics of hypocrisy over NSA hacks
Huawei's rotating chairman Guo Ping has gone on the offensive this week at Mobile World Congress, following continued pressure on US allies to drop the Chinese telecoms giant over national security fears. In a strident on-stage speech and a Financial Times editorial, Guo is escalating Huawei's side of the story by explicitly calling out the NSA, which Edward Snowden has shown to have hacked Huawei in the past, while presenting his company as a more secure option for the rest of the world. "If the NSA wants to modify routers or switches in order to eavesdrop, a Chinese company will be unlikely to co-operate," Guo says in the FT, citing a leaked NSA document that said the agency wanted "to make sure that we know how to exploit these products." Guo argues that his company "hampers US efforts to spy on whomever it wants," reiterating its position that "Huawei has not and will never plant backdoors." This war of words and boycotts will continue for a long time to come, but Guo makes an interesting point here by highlighting the fact the NSA hacked Huawei devices and email accounts of Huawai executives. I personally do not believe that devices made in China for other brands - Apple, Google, whatever - are any safer from tampering than devices from a Chinese brand. These all get made in the same factories, and I can hardly fault the Chinese government for doing what all our western governments have been doing for decades as well. It's not a pretty game, and in an ideal world none of it would be necessary, but we should not let blind nationalism get in the way of making sound decisions.