SHENZHEN-BASED Huawei said it would back away from its acquisition of U.S. server technology company 3Leaf s assets, bowing to pressure from a U.S. Government panel that had suggested it should divest the assets.
The U.S. Government has been concerned about Huawei, China s largest telecommunications equipment maker, for years because of uncertainty over its relationship with the Chinese Government.
Huawei opponents say it retains links with China s security services, but the company has denied the links.
Huawei bought certain 3Leaf assets for US$2 million last May but did not file with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), which reviews deals for possible national security implications, until November.
According to Huawei, CFIUS suggested that the Shenzhen company voluntarily divest the assets.
As recently as Feb. 14, Huawei said it would wait for a decision from the White House rather than divest.
Now it has changed its course.
This was a difficult decision, however we have decided to accept the recommendation of CFIUS to withdraw our application to acquire specific assets of 3Leaf, Huawei said in a statement issued late Friday night in the United States.
Huawei will remain committed to long-term investment in the United States. The significant impact and attention that this transaction has caused were not what we intended. Rather, our intention was to go through all the procedures to reveal the truth about Huawei.
Huawei is the world s No. 3 mobile gear maker behind Ericsson and Nokia Siemens Networks, which is a joint venture of Nokia and Siemens.
Alleged links with China s security services, which Huawei has denied, have torpedoed its U.S. deals in the past.
The company gave up a bid for 3Com in 2008 due to security concerns. In 2010, a group of Republican lawmakers raised national security concerns about Huawei s bid to supply mobile telecommunications equipment to Sprint Nextel Corp.
(SD-Agencies)