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Merkel Says Unaware of Threats by Regime to Retaliate if Huawei Excluded from 5G Rollout

IG Michael Horowitz: ‘Text Messages’ Contained Evidence of ‘Political Bias’ at FBI

Department of Justice Inspector General Michael Horowitz on Wednesday left the door open to the possibility that political bias played a role when FBI officials launched a probe—codenamed Crossfire Hurricane—into a Trump campaign aide in 2016. Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), the head of the Senate Homeland Security Committee, questioned Horowitz about his probe into the FBI’s FISA application to surveil former Trump campaign aide Carter Page for as long as a year. Johnson noted that Horowitz’s report found that Bill Priestap, the former FBI assistant director of counterintelligence, didn’t show any political bias when he opened the investigation. He said Horowitz, however, found evidence of political bias during his yearslong investigation. “We found through the text messages evidence of people’s political bias, correct,” the inspector general told the panel. Earlier…

Merkel Says Unaware of Threats by Regime to Retaliate if Huawei Excluded from 5G Rollout

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Dec. 18 she has not been informed of any threats by Chinese authorities to retaliate if Germany were to block Huawei from its 5G rollout.

China’s ambassador to Germany Wu Ken said last week that “there will be consequences,” if Huawei was excluded from the German market.

Wu went on to point out the millions of cars that German manufacturers sell in China, adding, “Can we also say that these German cars are no longer safe because we’re in a position to manufacture our own cars? No, that would be pure protectionism.”

The ambassador’s remarks were interpreted by commentators as amounting to a threat by the regime to cut off German automakers from the Chinese market should Huawei be blocked from supplying 5G in Germany.

“Nothing has been expressed to me about pressure by the Chinese authorities,” Merkel told Germany’s lower house of parliament on Dec. 18, Reuters reported.

China is the biggest market for German automakers Volkswagen AG, BMW AG, and Daimler AG, the maker of Mercedes-Benz. Each of these companies operate in China under joint-ventures with a local firm, and have invested billions of dollars in establishing manufacturing and distribution facilities in the country.

This is not the first time the regime has threatened retaliation if Huawei is barred from doing business in a country. Last week, Danish local media reported that the Chinese ambassador to Denmark threatened the leader of Danish autonomous region Faroe Islands that it would cancel a trade deal with the region if Huawei was not awarded a 5G contract.

Huawei in Germany

The United States, which earlier this year blacklisted Huawei from doing business with American companies over national security concerns, has sought to convince its allies to bar the Chinese tech giant from building their next generation wireless network.

Merkel’s conservatives and their coalition partners the Social Democrat have delayed a decision until next year on security rules for Germany’s 5G network, which could result in Huawei being excluded from the rollout, Reuters reported on Dec. 17.

While Merkel has been against singling out an individual company for exclusion from the network, and instead prefers adopting a set of stringent security criteria that potential 5G suppliers would have to adhere to, others within her coalition have voiced concern about the company.

Last week lawmakers from Merkel’s coalition introduced a bill that would impose a ban on “untrustworthy” 5G providors. While the proposed legislation does not name Huawei, the Financial Times reported that it targets suppliers where there is a “risk of state influence without constitutional control, manipulation or espionage”—wording directed at the Chinese company.

The draft will now be reviewed by Merkel’s Chancellery and the Economy Ministry.

The tech company, the world’s largest maker of telecom gear, has attracted heightened scrutiny over the past year for its links with Chinese military and intelligence agencies, treatment of its employees, alleged theft of competitors’ trade secrets, and alleged breach of U.S. sanctions against Iran.

One of the initiators of the bill, Norbert Röttgen, lawmaker from Merker’s Christian Democratic Union and head of German parliament’s foreign affairs committee, told the Financial Times that Merkel’s proposal to impose 5G security rules was not sufficient.

“You don’t just need technical certainty — you need the suppliers to be politically trustworthy too,” Röttgen said on Dec. 13. “Companies that are at the mercy of state influence just aren’t trustworthy.”

Last week, German telecom provider Telefonica Deutschland picked Nokia of Finland and Huawei to build its 5G network. Earlier this month, market leader Deutsche Telekom put all deals to buy 5G network equipment on hold pending a government decision.

Reuters contributed to this report. 

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Trump Order Gives Federal Employees a Day Off for Christmas Eve

President Donald Trump issued an executive order this week giving federal employees a day off on Christmas Eve, or Dec. 24. “All executive departments and agencies of the Federal Government shall be closed and their employees excused from duty on Tuesday, December 24, 2019, the day before Christmas Day,” Trump wrote. “The heads of executive departments and agencies may determine that certain offices and installations of their organizations, or parts thereof, must remain open and that certain employees must report for duty on December 24, 2019, for reasons of national security, defense, or other public need.” Christmas Eve is not a federal holiday so without the order, federal employees would have been expected to report for work. American presidents sometimes give federal employees half a day or a day off…