All in vain? The US wants to impose sanctions against Honor

After US sanctions, Huawei had to sell the Honor brand last year. Having gained independence,

Honor's business has improved: the company has resumed cooperation with Qualcomm and Intel, returned Google services to its devices, and continued to expand its geography. But it seems it’s too early to rejoice.

What's wrong?

On Friday, 14 Republican politicians senta letter to the US Department of Commerce demanding that Honor be blacklisted, prohibiting it from collaborating with American companies and using American technology.

Politicians say Honor could 'dodgefrom US export control policies aimed at keeping US technology and software out of the hands of the Chinese Communist Party,” and “concerns about technology exports to Honor when it was part of Huawei should apply to its current state-backed form of ownership.” Simply put, the threat to U.S. national security has not gone away.

True, members of the US House of Representatives canonly to advise, and not to make a decision. It is still unknown whether the Ministry of Commerce will listen to them, but they emphasized that they are closely monitoring the situation.

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