Tuesday, March 4, 2008
A chilling comment to the WSJ on Huawei/Bain/3COM Deal
Posted by
dcm
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13:29
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Labels: china, communist, huawei technologies, John McCain, Mitt Romney, thaddeus mccotter, wsj
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Rep. McCotter: America's Protected from Stealth Assault on National Security
WASHINGTON D.C. – Congressman Thaddeus McCotter (R-MI), who was the first member of the U.S. Congress to oppose the proposed merger of communist China’s Huawei Technologies Co., Massachusetts based Bain Capital and 3Com - an American company which provides the Pentagon with security technologies - today responded to the failure to reach an agreement: “While some called such national security concerns over the deal everything but right, the truth remains: the collapse of the Huawei deal is a victory for America's cyber-security and national security. "But we must not be lulled to sleep by this lone victory in protecting America's cyber-security and national security. We must remain even more vigilant to ensure American national security is not for sale; and to stop communist Chinese stealth assaults on our national security.” McCotter was the first member of Congress to bring this issue to public attention and oppose it. In early October 2007 Congressman McCotter circulated a letter signed by his colleagues and subsequently sent to CFIUS. McCotter also continued to oppose the deal, despite communist Chinese inspired personal attacks in the media. Ironically, just last week the Financial Times quoted the chief marketing officer at Huawei Technologies, Xu Zhijun, who said McCotter's opposition to the deal on national security grounds were “bullshit”. The quote came out on the same day as several Chinese nationals were being held for spying charges for possibly selling military secrets to the communist Chinese government. Nevertheless, the three companies withdrew their applications to the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CIFIUS), because Bain and Huawei, who were trying to buyout 3Com, could not calm national-security concerns with the U.S. government panel. Specifically in question was 3Com's TippingPoint unit, which sells security software used by U.S. government agencies. McCotter, the Republican House Policy Committee Chair who has been the leading opponent of unconditional engagement with communist China, added: "They are testing us every day to no good end. So we must be unwavering in our support of liberty and national security against communist China's perpetual pressure. And let them make no mistake: as it did against the Soviet Union, liberty will prevail."
Posted by
dcm
at
10:33
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Labels: 3COM, china, communist, mccotter, military secrets
"I worked at Huawei R&D centers in Shenzhen headquarters and Shanghai before coming to the U.S. for my graduate degrees. We (Huawei) did develop cellular and data intercept equipments primarily for PLA and the National Security Bureau (NSB) of China, the notorious secret police involved in Yahoo’s snitcher scandal.
When working in the Lab, I constantly saw some teams studied a variety of components from SAIC/Cisco/Alliant Techsystems/Raytheon/Honeywell (if you don’t know what products those company make, simply google th’m). Didn’t how where the hell they got those things from, but I didn’t care since I wasn’t in those teams.
Look here is my point: I love China for she is my motherland; but the last thing I’d like to see is a communism dictatorship. So I personally believe there is a good reason to block the Bain Capital/3Com deal.
Btw, Bain Capital is a traitor, at least somebody at the firm. Or should I believe somebody at Bain Capital have been “penetrated” by NSB?