Trump to Finally Crack Down on China's Hacks, Theft and Lies at US Expense
Trump to Finally Crack Down on China's Hacks, Theft and Lies at US Expense · The Fiscal Times

The Trump administration is breaking with America’s long history of appeasing China. Long coddled by establishment Foggy Bottom types and by U.S. corporations salivating over China’s burgeoning markets – not to mention an Obama White House desperate for a legacy climate deal -- Beijing has met little resistance as it has cyber attacked U.S. corporate and military secrets, broken trade agreements, ignored international law courts, lied about its intentions in the South China Sea, fudged its climate regulations, worked to undermine American alliances in Asia and harbored the villains running North Korea. No more.

There’s a new sheriff in town, and the opening salvo came last week when the Commerce Department announced it had imposed record-level civil and criminal penalties of $1.2 billion on Chinese telecommunications firm ZTE. The fines were levied in response to ZTE’s illegal exports of equipment to Iran and North Korea – exports that violated sanctions imposed against Tehran. If approved by the courts, it would be would be the largest fine and forfeiture ever levied by the U.S. government in an export control case.

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Commerce’s announcement about the fees further rattled the cage. Secretary Wilbur Ross said, “We are putting the world on notice: the games are over. Those who flout our economic sanctions and export control laws will not go unpunished – they will suffer the harshest of consequences.”

The five-year investigation into ZTE found that the company had aggressively conspired to conceal evidence of its misdeeds and lied to U.S. officials. After being served with a subpoena in 2012, its shipments to Iran declined but then picked up again when management decided in November 2013 to thwart the U.S. embargo even as the federal probe was ongoing. Ross said ZTE made “283 more shipments to North Korea after the investigation had begun.”

Why not? Chinese companies and the government had little reason to fear the Obama White House. Several months earlier, President Obama had met at Sunnylands with President Xi Jinping, purportedly to deliver a stern message about cyber hacking and other bad behavior. Just before the summit, The Washington Post had published an explosive report about China hacking more than two dozen major advanced U.S. weapons systems, a breach thought likely to significantly shrink America’s military advantage. Access to the technology could save the Chinese 25-years’ of research and tens of billions of dollars as they race to match U.S. capabilities, experts said.