Why doesn’t Britain have a Huawei of its own? The answer speaks volumes | Aditya Chakrabortty
Chances are that you have learned rather a lot about Huawei. That the Chinese giant is one of the world's most controversial companies. That security experts, those people we pay to be paranoid on our behalf, warn its telecoms kit could be used by Beijing to spy on us. That Theresa May was begged by cabinet colleagues to keep the firm well away from our 5G network - yet ignored them. And that one or more senior ministers were so eager to prove their concern for national security that they leaked details of their meeting, thus breaching national security.
So you can already guess what will happen when Donald Trump's secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, meets May and her foreign secretary, Jeremy Hunt, on Wednesday. Once the pleasantries about Harry and Meghan's baby are over, top of America's agenda will be to warn No 10 of the threat Huawei poses to British privacy - and to restate that Washington may retaliate by freezing London out of its intelligence network.
Related: The Huawei incident points to a deeper lesson for Great Britain | Larry Elliott
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