Huawei, AT&T, and the NSA
5:00 AM Reports suggest US agents warned AT&T against deploying Huawei equipment
October 8, 2010
5:00 AM -- The hurdles over which Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. must jump in its efforts to become a supplier to Tier 1 US carriers just got even higher.
According to The Washington Post, in late 2009 the US National Security Agency warned AT&T Inc. (NYSE: T) that if it wanted to retain high-value business with the US government it should procure next-generation voice equipment from companies other than the Chinese vendor. The carrier subsequently ordered systems from Alcatel-Lucent (NYSE: ALU) and Ericsson AB (Nasdaq: ERIC), the newspaper reports.
Earlier this year, eight US senators raised security concerns about the possible deployment of Huawei equipment by Sprint Corp. (NYSE: S) (See US Gets Worried About Huawei .)
Huawei, now one of the world's biggest suppliers of telecom equipment with annual revenues of nearly US$22 billion, is determined to break into the North American market, and has hired various big names to help its cause. (See Where's Matty? and Huawei's Latest US Offensive.)
— Ray Le Maistre, International Managing Editor, Light Reading
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