![]() Equipment can mean anything from coaxial cable to cell site routers to ethernet access nodes, often located on and among a network’s towers, and sometimes even within customer homes. companies to ditch Huawei and ZTE.Ī cell phone manufactured by ZTE is seen on a store shelf in 2018 in Miami, Fla.Ĭongress is now on the hook to come up with the additional funds to extract and replace those parts, which comprise the guts and sometimes the brains of these networks. The Federal Communications Commission revealed last week that it’ll cost $3.08 billion more than the $1.9 billion originally allocated to pay U.S. The logistical strains also threaten American businesses as President Joe Biden and Democrats defend their broader agenda, especially in rural America, ahead of the November midterms. The funding shortage is complicating the launch of subsidies and stoking worries that this long-awaited task of ripping out this gear could face delay into 2023 or beyond, undercutting the urgency around a long-held national security fear that the Chinese government could access the equipment to listen in on calls or even interfere with critical infrastructure or military operations. That includes rural wireless networks and providers of broadband internet and TV, a handful of universities and school districts and even city governments. carriers that embedded parts from these Chinese telecom giants into their operations. Caught in the middle of this U.S.-China wrangling are nearly 200 U.S. ![]()
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