• The US Department of Defence official, Katie Arrington insisted that it had good reason to remove Huawei products from government use.
• Huawei USA Chief Security Officer Andy Purdy however said the government was following a policy of “rip and replace.”
• The panel on stage were discussing supply chain security.
Things were tense at the RSA Conference in San Francisco on Wednesday, when a Huawei executive and US Department of Defense official got into a heated argument on stage. Katie Arrington, an official in charge of acquisition at the Defense Department, insisted that lawmakers and President Donald Trump had good reason to remove Huawei products from government use. Huawei USA Chief Security Officer Andy Purdy said the decision was the wrong approach.
Purdy said the government was tearing useful technology from the hands of government workers serving US citizens by following a policy of “rip and replace.” He also said that the government can observe the manufacturing process more closely to build trust.
Arrington countered that removing Huawei technology from government use was the only option, “because the risk is so high.” The US can’t consider conveying control of sensitive information to another country, Arrington said, “end of story, period.”
The panel on stage was discussing supply chain security, or the process of making sure security flaws don’t get introduces into tech during the manufacturing process. There are countless ways bugs can wind up in your tech since phones, computers and other devices are made in overseas factories, overseen by complex contractors. The question of whether the bugs were put there on purpose, and by whom, can lead to an international relations crisis.