U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will voice concerns about the
growing presence of China’s Huawei Technologies in central Europe when
he visits Hungary, Slovakia and Poland next week, a senior U.S. official
said on Friday as Washington tries to bolster ties with a region it
acknowledges it has neglected.
Pompeo’s visit will be the first by a U.S. secretary of State to
Slovakia in two decades, while the last top American diplomat to travel
to Hungary was Hillary Clinton in 2011.
In Hungary and Slovakia, Pompeo will also discuss ways to bolster
security relationships with both countries, including clinching deals on
defense cooperation, a senior administration official said in a
briefing to reporters about the trip.
Pompeo will travel to Warsaw from Feb. 12 to 14 for official talks and
to attend a U.S. conference on the Middle East as it tries to build a
coalition against Iran and develop a peace plan between the Israelis and
Palestinians.
“In Hungary, the Secretary will give particular focus to the role of
China in central Europe, and express our concerns about the growing
presence of Huawei in Hungary,” said the official, speaking on condition
of anonymity.
He will “urge regional leaders to heed the warnings of countries from
Asia-Pacific who have found themselves in difficult straits as a result
of working too closely with the Chinese,” the official said.
Huawei Technologies plans to create a European logistics center in
Hungary and boost production capacity there this year. It has also
offered to build a cyber security center in Poland, where last month a
Chinese employee of Huawei and a former Polish security official were
arrested on spying charges.
The U.S. is trying to persuade countries to avoid Huawei, which is under
scrutiny from Western intelligence agencies for its perceived ties to
China’s government and the possibility its equipment could be used for
espionage.
Huawei has repeatedly denied engaging in intelligence work for any government.
The United States was particularly worried about Huawei’s influence in
small eastern and central European countries where it was easy for China
to penetrate state systems, the U.S. official said.
He said China “sees relatively small countries with a recent history of
communism, with significant pathways of corruption, that lend themselves
more readily to state penetration in key sectors, and then they have a
springboard to operate within EU fora.”
China and Russia’s growing influence in central Europe occurred in part
because of a lack of robust U.S. engagement in the past decade, the
official said.
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