Pompeo Warns Italy Over China’s Economic Influence

Pompeo Warns Italy Over China’s Economic Influence
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo meets with Italy's Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte in Rome, Italy, on Sept. 30, 2020. Guglielmo Mangiapane/Pool/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

ROME—U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo delivered a warning to Italy over its economic relations with China on Sept. 30, and described Chinese mobile telecoms technology as a threat to Italy’s national security and the privacy of its citizens.

“The foreign minister and I had a long conversation about the United States’ concerns at the Chinese Communist Party trying to leverage its economic presence in Italy to serve its own strategic purposes,” Pompeo told a joint news conference with Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio.

“The United States also urges the Italian government to consider carefully the risks to its national security and the privacy of its citizens presented by technology companies with ties to the Chinese Communist Party.”

Di Maio said the Italians were aware of U.S. concerns over Chinese 5G technology, and “fully realize the responsibility faced by every country when dealing with security.”

U.S. attention has focused particularly on Huawei, the world’s biggest telecoms equipment maker. Washington has told its European allies the Chinese firm poses a security threat, noting that Chinese companies and citizens must by law aid the state in intelligence gathering.

Huawei has denied it poses a risk. The head of its Italian unit said on Sept. 30 it was ready for any scrutiny to show that its technology was safe.

“We will open our insides, we are available to be vivisected to respond to all of this political pressure,” Luigi De Vecchis told a conference in Rome.

While some U.S. allies, such as Britain, have announced bans on Huawei equipment in future telecoms infrastructure, Italy has so far declined to do so. However, the company was recently excluded from one major tender and a senior government official has told Reuters the state was ready to impose tougher rules in deals involving the Chinese firm.

Italy raised hackles in Washington last year when it became the first major Western economy to join China’s international infrastructure project, the Belt and Road Initiative. However, the tie-up has yielded little economic gain thus far.

Di Maio said Italy was looking for the European Union to adopt a common position on 5G development.

Meanwhile, the Vatican said on Sept. 30 it had denied a request from Pompeo for an audience with Pope Francis, and accused the secretary of state of trying to drag the Catholic Church into the U.S. presidential election by denouncing its relations with China.

By Angelo Amante