Germany Nears Decision To Ban Huawei 5G By 2026: Report

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Germany is reportedly on the verge of deciding to remove Chinese technology from its 5G core network by 2026, with three out of four relevant ministries backing the measure due to national security concerns.

The foreign and economy ministries support the interior ministry’s proposal to eliminate Huawei Technologies Co. and ZTE Corp. components. The digital ministry, however, has not yet approved the measure, citing opposition from the industry, reported Bloomberg.

Germany’s review of its 5G network components has been ongoing for over a year. The U.S. and European Union have heightened scrutiny over security threats from Chinese firms, with the U.S. recently imposing tariffs and revoking chip sale licenses to Huawei amid deteriorating relations with Beijing.

The proposed plan involves a two-step removal process. By January 1, 2026, German telecom providers would need to eliminate all critical Huawei and ZTE components from their core networks.

By 2029, these providers must also reduce their dependency on Chinese components in their access and transport networks.

Delays in reaching an agreement highlight friction within Germany’s ruling coalition, which also contends with issues like next year’s federal budget.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democratic Party (SPD) oversees the interior ministry, the Greens control the foreign and economy ministries, while the Free Democratic Party (FDP) manages the digital ministry.

Deutsche Telekom AG , Germany’s leading mobile operator, previously stated that banning Chinese components by 2026 is impractical.

SPD foreign affairs spokesman Nils Schmid emphasized the party’s firm stance against Chinese components in critical infrastructure and criticized the digital ministry for hindering progress despite support from other FDP members.

Germany has been slower than some allies in banning Chinese technology. The U.K. banned Huawei from 5G networks in 2020, citing supply chain security concerns following U.S. sanctions on the company.

Germany initially allowed Huawei components in its 5G build-out but has adopted a stricter approach following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, seeking to minimize dependence on any single country.
 
All talk no action. Germany cannot afford to ban Huawei or else China ban Airbus in favor of domestic COMAC.
Not airbus but some German company. Or all Chinese company would start getting boot from EU combined.
 
Not airbus but some German company. Or all Chinese company would start getting boot from EU combined.

China don't need to sell anything to EU. China makes tons of money selling to Global South, Russia, Belarus, Serbia, Hungary, Slovakia which don't take orders from the US.
 
Which engines will comac use

COMAC uses Chinese or Russian engines, the latter for export.




 
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Which engines will comac use

China may not have the right engine for COMAC 919 or 929 by now, but they have been manufacturing jet engines for many decades.

With their very high IQ, the time to develop a totally new engine would be much shorter than other doing the same job, so don't worry.
 

US Urges NATO Allies to Use Defense Funds to Replace Huawei Gear​

June 8, 2026 at 11:58 AM UTC

President Donald Trump’s administration urged NATO allies to channel defense spending toward efforts to replace components from China’s Huawei Technologies Co. in their networks and critical infrastructure, according to people familiar with the matter.

The US government has long considered Huawei and other Chinese vendors a national security risk and excluded them from American networks. Trump officials are calling on NATO allies to follow suit.


Germany, Spain Push Back on European Plan to Ban Huawei Gear​

May 28, 2026 at 12:23 PM UTC

Germany and Spain are leading opposition to European Commission plans to ban Chinese technology suppliers from telecom networks as part of new cybersecurity rules, according to people familiar with the negotiations.

Officials from the countries want to keep state-level control, and have expressed concerns that banning products from Huawei Technologies Co. and other Chinese suppliers at the EU level risks retaliation from Beijing, the people said, asking not to be identified as the discussions aren’t public. The states also warned that a ban risks making the bloc’s plans to build out artificial intelligence infrastructure more expensive, they said.
 

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