The goal is to avoid you, the Chinese company, buying PC chips made with American technology, even if they were not designed in particular for Huawei.
It also adds 38 Huawei-connected names to a blacklist.
“Huawei has continuously tried to evade” restrictions imposed in May, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said.
At that time, the U.S. Department of CommerceHe said global us-generation chip brands have been in the U.S.Hus They needed to download a U.S. government license.For paints in designs for Huawei.
The new ordinance expands those restrictions, requiring corporations to obtain authorization even if they sell a “ready-to-use” general-purpose design.
“While we’ve limited it to the U.S. generation, Huawei and its affiliates have worked through third parties to leverage the U.S. generation. In a way that undermines U.S. foreign policy and national security interests,” U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said.
“This multi-fronted action demonstrates our continued commitment to Huawei in doing so.”
Huawei did not promptly respond to a request for comment.In the past, executives described U.S. restrictions as “arbitrary and pernicious,” while warning investors that the company would be harmed.
In an assembly in May, the tech giant described how U.S. stocks since 2019 had forced him to rebuild his chain, comparing the company to a bullet -riddled aircraft.
The United States argues that Huawei’s generation can be used through the Chinese government and has lobbied governments around the world, adding to the UK, to break ties with the company, calling it a risk to national security.
Huawei disputed those claims, arguing that the United States is motivated by economic competition.
Monday’s resolution against Huawei is one of many punitive measures the United States has taken against Chinese-generation corporations in recent months as the Us and China deteriorate.
Earlier this month, Pompeo defined what It takes for U.S. corporations to take to address “unreliable Chinese apps.”
Pompeo said at the time that applications such as TikTok and WeChat posed “significant threats to the knowledge of U.S. citizens.”
The U.S. government has not been in the process of Hus It argues that such programs collect knowledge from U.S. citizens and can be exploited through the Communist Party of China, which Beijing has denied.