Doing Things the Huawei - 5G and UK National Security Policy Making
The British Government has decided that the Chinese company ‘Huawei’
will be permitted to provide infrastructure for non-core parts of the next
generation of mobile phone networks, known as 5G. This decision, taken in the face
of strident opposition from the USA, and in contrary to the actions of some allied
nations has aroused a variety of responses from support to concern.
How significant is it though and what does this decision tell
us about the difficult of carrying out domestic politics in an international century
where local decisions can have the potential to impact on strategic relationships?
In simple terms 5G is the next generation of mobile phone
capability, delivering significantly enhanced power and capability to phone
networks and being the first to truly cope with the advances in how the
internet has reshaped our experience with telephones. From being a means to
annoy people by shouting loudly on the train, to now being an integral part of
every aspect of our daily lives, the 5G network promises to make radical
changes to how the UK embraces telecoms for the 21st Century.
The problem is that 5G is very much cutting-edge technology
and some providers are further ahead than others. There is only a relatively
small pool of companies at present able to provide the skills and technology
needed to install a 5G network, and of these, Huawei is deemed to be
significantly further ahead than anyone else.
Huawei is also not new to the UK network, having had a
physical presence in providing equipment to mobile phone companies for many
years. The challenge is that had the UK given into US demands to ban the company
from its network, it would have had an enormous cost as legacy equipment was ripped
out and delayed the roll out for the next generation of networks.
The UK is absolutely clear that Huawei is not a friendly
cuddly company that can be trusted in the same way as other providers. In an outstanding
blog, the director of the National Cyber Security Centre (essentially a very
public arm of GCHQ) sets out the risks and challenges and how they can be
mitigated.
For many years the equipment being installed in the UK by
Huawei has been subject to extensive scrutiny and independent testing to provide
assurance that it meets UK standards and could not be used to exploit or undermine
UK national security. By the fact that Huawei has continued to operate here, we
should assume that this scrutiny has not identified specific concerns that
could not be mitigated or called into question their presence in the UK market.
The decision then to admit Huawei into the UK 5g system
suggests that there is a reasonable degree of confidence by officials that any
risks can be monitored or otherwise appropriately treated. In a similar way,
the decision to limit the company (and other ones designated 'high risk') to just 35% of the UK ‘non core’ sector means
that the presence in the system will be limited to a very specific operating
area.
The question is whether this is enough for the US
Government, which had pushed extremely heavily to get the UK to not adopt the
company at all. How they choose to retaliate will be interesting as given how closely
entangled the intelligence and security apparatus of both states is, withholding
intelligence may quickly backfire.
The UK has been clear that Huawei will play no part at all
in any of the national security systems which will encompass a variety of
classified IT networks able to handle material at appropriate levels of
classification. It appears that the UK feels that by separating the two out and
making a distinction, this is sufficient to comfortably remove the risk of
compromise.
But, having set significant stock and invested capital in
trying to persuade the UK not to take this course of action, it does run the
risk of the US responding in a manner that doesn’t help UK interests. Coming at
a time when the UK is emerging from the EU and looking for trade deals, the
potential wider impact could be felt across a range of sectors for some time to
come.
This whole issue highlights the challenges of how domestic
political and commercial decisions can have strategic ramifications. For the UK
it also brings home the real challenges of trying to manage bilateral relationships
between the worlds two great superpowers.
In the case of the US, the UK has for the best part of a
century enjoyed an exceptionally close knit enduring relationship built around
alignment on defence, security and intelligence matters, and underpinned by
shared values and interests. The relationship is genuine, and despite its occasional
challenges, has endured to the present day in good health.
By contrast the relationship with China is more complex,
built less around bilateral defence and security interests and more a shared sense
of economic opportunity. To the Chinese the British ‘offer’ is as much about being
the world of good education and the middle class lifestyle depicted in films
and novels, as it is about trade opportunities. The defence and security
relationship to all intents does not exist, but the economic relationship is
growing and provides huge opportunity.
In the case of China a population that is growing in wealth
and disposable income is hungering for access to the sort of middle class opportunities
and lifestyles that are perceived to be enjoyed in the UK. There is a huge
opportunity for companies able to embrace it, and who are willing to run the
risks of IP theft, to sell into and engage with China.
In the world after Brexit the UK will need to carefully
consider how it positions itself and what matters more. In the short term there
is likely to be a shock to the bilateral relationship with the US as it
responds for what it will doubtless perceive to be a snub. But in the medium term
the continued strong alignment of values and interests means that shared
challenges will trump over the desire to give the Brits a good kicking.
But policy makers need to balance off the desire to keep a
strong security relationship intact with the wider challenge of keeping the UK
economy credible and growing. The opportunities in China are vast, as is the impact
back in the UK. Had Huawei been banned completely from UK shores then the
potential fall out would have been significant – many UK universities rely
heavily on the funding from Chinese students, who now make up a significant proportion
of the overseas student body.
It is almost inevitable that the UK would have felt the full
force of Chinese anger had they supported the US position. Is the potential
loss of jobs in domestic political constituencies, or the long term damage to
building a more effective Anglo-Sino relationship a price worth paying to
remain in Washington’s good books? Keeping
the US on side may matter in Whitehall, but it won’t put food on the tables of
families who have lost jobs as a result of Chinese reaction.
The UK response to this policy challenge has perhaps been a rather
elegant policy compromise that should, in the fullness of time, keep both sides
reasonably happy. The decision to restrict Huawei to ‘non core’ parts of the network
will reduce the relative risk, while capping their presence in the system at
just 35% is a very astute move.
The offer from the UK is that at least 65% of the UK 5G
requirement is essentially up for grabs to other companies, who will be keen to
invest in and show how their technology is on a par with, and betters the Huawei
offer. The incentive here is that while Huawei may lead the technology race
now, other companies have good motivation to raise their game, invest and offer
products of equivalent capability.
The new UK position of saying that a high-risk vendor can
only have a position in 35% of the market while no such constraints apply to
other lower risks vendors is significant. It encourages companies to invest,
and it encourages mobile phone companies keen to avoid being constrained by
this cap to push for investment.
It is likely that as technology increases, and companies
emerge with offers that could permit them to be in way more than 35% of the network,
then Huawei may find itself left behind as an organisation. The markets will
want efficiencies and not be constrained by a higher risk piece of equipment.
At the same time the UK is opening the door to the US and
other companies to come up with equally good solutions – they know the opening
offer from the Chinese and they now have to catch up and beat it. 5G has been
compared to the industrial revolution in the sense that the first nation to get
it will reap the rewards. There is a gap of several years till the equipment
enters service, and companies have a very strong incentive to provide a better
offer than Huawei in order to capture a much bigger market share than would otherwise
be the case.
The UK may well reap the rewards from embracing Huawei now
in a limited way, but the company may suffer as constrained by a market cap and
with other companies hungry for success, it could fall by the wayside as other
companies expand – again much like the industrial revolution helped kickstart
Britain, only to see others reap the benefits and leap ahead.
Retaining access to Huawei equipment also effectively traps
the Chinese too – having made much of the fact that they are risk free and have
no idea why the US are so opposed, the Chinese now have to behave and not do
anything which gets picked up. If the UK, through its independent scrutiny were
to identify Chinese malpractice, the wider damage to Huaweis reputation and
ability to get into other nations would probably be irrevocably damaged. It
also provides the UK with a strong lever to influence Chinese behaviour – the threat
to remove them from the network would be a very powerful counter to Chinese
threats.
While people raise concerns about the risks of ‘bad behaviour’
using this equipment, the permanent risk that the Chinese will have to consider
is ‘what happens if they get caught?’ In those circumstances the expulsion from
the UK network would destroy their position in the market and make it harder to
ever get back in. They are very much trapped in a gilded cage that forces them
to behave, while at the same time the UK will continue to have the ability to
check and assure itself that the equipment meets the baseline standards required.
This also gives the UK an ability to act as a source of
information and influence on other nations. The presence of checks means that
this information can be shared with allies who do not possess Huawei networks,
flagging up any potential risks or challenges. It also allows the UK to share
its experiences as a trusted partner with third party countries, both opening
doors and offering a chance to share experience candidly.
What this decision does do though is highlight just how
difficult and finely balanced national security policy making is in the 21st
Century. The range of views which need to be sought and considered are vast and
there are many different equities in play.
The UK should be pleased then that this case has perhaps
affirmed the value of changes to the national security apparatus over recent
years that have made this sort of credible cross Whitehall decision possible.
The emergence of the National Security Council and the concept of fusion
doctrine which brings together many departments to work truly jointly has been
essential to this.
Similarly the move to ensure that wider departments beyond
the traditional security ones get a say too is key. Just look for instance at
the central role played by DCMS, a department which, to put it kindly, was just
a few years ago a complete backwater with little involvement in defence or
national security issues.
Today DCMS is very much at the heart of these debates
because the role of digital has become so central to national security. From
the provision of mobile phone networks to the battle of fake news and online
security – DCMS has become arguably one of the lead and most powerful Whitehall
departments as a result of this shift.
While the forthcoming SDSR is going to excite attention
around force levels and troop deployments, where the really interesting battles
will be fought is in fact around the role that digital and other issues will
play in national security policy making and alliance postures.
The concept of what is national security is changing, and
changing quickly. Arguably the decision to admit a Chinese phone company into
the next generation of UK networks will have a bigger impact on the evolution
of our relationships with the US and other 5 Eye members than any decision on
what aircraft carrier or missile to buy and deploy.
The nature of the security debate is changing, and this will
pose a challenge to Defence in showing its continued relevance at a time when
the national security policy debate drivers are perhaps moving elsewhere. In
future its reasonable to think that digital policy, trade policy and wider issues
like the impact on jobs and long term industrial capacity will be as central to
the security policy debate as the number of ships to send on a naval
deployment.
This is a fascinating debate to observe precisely because it
captures the essence of the changing nature of security. How the UK balances
off the drivers of defence and security alignment with the US, trying to
protect freedom of navigation in the South China Sea with that of protecting
jobs and growing the economy for the 21st century will be fascinating
to observe. It remains to be seen though how the debate ends, perhaps, like the
alleged (and possibly misquoted) Chinese view about the French Revolution, it
is too early to say…
This is pretty ... optimistic. My question would be if a really critical problem is discovered AFTER the Chinese are allowed a foothold, perhaps most of the 35% limit, whether the Brits have the gumption or even ability to force them back out with them holding so much of the pie, and at what extra cost.
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