Supply Chain Executive Order May Result in More Huawei Restrictions, Lawyers Say
The supply chain security executive order issued in May is directly related to Huawei, Akin Gump lawyers said, and will likely restrict Huawei from selling certain items if those items impact U.S. national security. The executive order (see 1905160072) requires the Commerce Department to issue regulations within 150 days (that is, by Oct. 14) and bars "transactions involving information and communications technology [ICT] or services" without a broad interagency review.
Sign up for a free preview to unlock the rest of this article
Timely, relevant coverage of court proceedings and agency rulings involving tariffs, classification, valuation, origin and antidumping and countervailing duties. Each day, Trade Law Daily subscribers receive a daily headline email, in-depth PDF edition and access to all relevant documents via our trade law source document library and website.
Although regulations have not yet been formally implemented, the order plans to use the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to restrict certain transactions that pose a risk to the U.S. “What we’re anticipating this is going to do is restrict what can be sent from Huawei,” Akin Gump lawyer Tristan Denour said during a July 18 webinar. “It’s going to prohibit certain transactions that the United States identifies as a national security threat in the information and communications space.” Denour said regulations are expected in “mid-October.”
Huawei and China are not mentioned in the executive order, lawyer Mac Fadlallah said on the webinar, but “it is just widely speculated that there is a very, very strong political connection between those two things. That the impetus behind the supply chain security executive order is China.” Although the order will likely impact Huawei, “there’s more that needs to be clarified once the regulations come out,” Fadlallah said.