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Report: US, ZTE Sign Deal to Get Chinese Firm Operating Again


FILE - Men pass by a building of Chinese tech giant ZTE, in Beijing, China, May 8, 2018.
FILE - Men pass by a building of Chinese tech giant ZTE, in Beijing, China, May 8, 2018.

Chinese telecommunications firm ZTE has signed a deal with the United States that lets the crippled company get back in business, Reuters reports.

ZTE was almost totally shut down after the Trump administration cut off exports of U.S. made parts to the company. It was, in the words of one expert, “caught red-handed” putting the U.S. technology into products and selling them to countries under U.S. trade embargoes, including Iran and North Korea.

ZTE depends on U.S. parts for wireless stations, optical fiber networks and smartphones.

According to Reuters, the deal to get ZTE operating again included a $1 billion fine, regular inspections of its plants and the replacement of its team of executives.

Neither ZTE nor the U.S. Commerce Department has confirmed that any definitive deal was signed.

But the reports already have U.S. lawmakers angry that the Trump administration is willing to let ZTE resume using U.S.-made components.

FILE - Senate Intelligence Committee Vice Chairman Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., speaks with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, Sept. 27, 2017.
FILE - Senate Intelligence Committee Vice Chairman Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., speaks with reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, Sept. 27, 2017.

“If these reports are accurate, this is a huge mistake,” Virginia Democrat Mark Warner of the Senate Intelligence Committee said. “ZTE poses a threat to our national security. That's not just my opinion — it's the unanimous conclusion of our intelligence community.”

Democratic Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York called President Donald Trump someone who “roared like a lion and is governing like a lamb” when it comes to China and letting ZTE “off the hook.”

Republican Senator Marco Rubio of Florida has also called ZTE a security risk and said a bill to block the U.S. from doing business with it would have huge support in Congress.

Trump said last month he was looking for a way to let ZTE “get back into business fast.”

“Too many jobs in China lost,” Trump tweeted as he ordered the Commerce Department “to get it done!”

Trump has often complained about China stealing U.S. jobs and having a huge trade deficit with the U.S. His tweets in support of China and ZTE perplexed Congress and many economic experts.

But the White House has said Trump’s tweets “underscore the importance of a free, fair, balanced and mutually beneficial economic trade and investment relationship between the United States and China.”

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