How China acquires ‘the crown jewels’ of U.S. technology
How China acquires ‘the crown jewels’ of U.S. technology
The U.S. fails to adequately police foreign deals for
next-generation software that powers the military and American economic
strength.
By CORY BENNETT and BRYAN BENDER 05/22/2018 05:10 AM EDT
The U.S. government was well aware of China’s aggressive
strategy of leveraging private investors to buy up the latest American
technology when, early last year, a company called Avatar Integrated Systems
showed up at a bankruptcy court in Delaware hoping to buy the California
chip-designer ATop Tech.
ATop’s product was potentially groundbreaking — an
automated designer capable of making microchips that could power anything from
smartphones to high-tech weapons systems. It’s the type of product that a U.S.
government report had recently cited as “critical to defense systems and U.S.
military strength.” And the source of the money behind the buyer, Avatar, was
an eye-opener: Its board chairman and sole officer was a Chinese steel magnate
whose Hong Kong-based company was a major shareholder.
Despite those factors, the transaction went through
without an assessment by the U.S. government committee that is charged with
reviewing acquisitions of sensitive technology by foreign interests.
In fact, a six-month POLITICO investigation found that
the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, the main vehicle for
protecting American technology from foreign governments, rarely polices the
various new avenues Chinese nationals use to secure access to American
technology, such as bankruptcy courts or the foreign venture capital firms that
bankroll U.S. tech startups.
The committee, known by its acronym CFIUS, isn’t required
to review any deals, relying instead on outsiders or other government agencies
to raise questions about the appropriateness of a proposed merger, acquisition
or investment. And even if it had a more formal mandate, the committee lacks
the resources to deal with increasingly complex cases, which revolve around
lines of code and reams of personal data more than physical infrastructure.
“I knew what was critical in 1958 — tanks, airplanes,
avionics. Now, truthfully, everything is information. The world is about
information, not about things,” said Paul Rosenzweig, who worked with CFIUS
while at the Department of Homeland Security during President George W. Bush’s
second term. “And that means everything is critical infrastructure. That, in
some sense, means CFIUS really should be managing all global trade.”
As a senior official at the Treasury Department, which
oversees CFIUS, put it: “Any time we see a company that has lots of data on
Americans — health care, personal financial data — that’s a vulnerability.”
When CFIUS was formed, in the 1970s, the companies
safeguarding important technology were so large that any takeover attempt by
foreigners would be certain to attract attention. Now, much of the cutting-edge
technology in the United States is in the hands of much smaller firms,
including Silicon Valley startups that are hungry for cash from investors.
The gap in oversight became a more urgent problem in
2015, when China unveiled its “Made in China 2025” strategy of working with
private investors to buy overseas tech firms. A year earlier, Chinese
investments in U.S. tech startups had totaled $2.3 billion, according to the
economic research firm CB Insights. Such investments immediately skyrocketed to
$9.9 billion in 2015. These amounts dipped the following year, as the Obama
administration voided a high-profile deal, but analysts say China’s appetite to
buy U.S. firms and technology is still strong. In 2017, there were 165
Chinese-backed deals closed with American startups, only 12 percent less than
the 2015 peak.
Yet the failure to investigate some forms of Chinese
investments in American technology has flown under the radar as President
Donald Trump goes tit for tat with Beijing, imposing tariffs meant to punish
China for unfair trade practices. Critics noted on Monday that Trump's
tentative agreement to drop his tariff threat in exchange for Chinese pledges
to purchase billions of dollars more in American goods avoided any mention of
the outdated foreign-investment policies that have alarmed lawmakers across the
political spectrum.
On the Senate floor Monday, Minority Leader Chuck Schumer
(D-N.Y.) lashed out at Trump's approach.
"China’s trade negotiators must be laughing
themselves all the way back to Beijing," he said. "They’re playing us
for fools — temporary purchase of some goods, while China continues to steal
our family jewels, the things that have made America great: the intellectual
property, the know-how in the highest end industries. It makes no sense."
National security specialists insist that such a stealth
transfer of technology through China’s investment practices in the United
States is a far more serious problem than the tariff dispute — and a problem
hiding in plain sight. A recent Pentagon report bluntly declared: “The U.S.
does not have a comprehensive policy or the tools to address this massive
technology transfer to China.” It went on to warn that Beijing’s acquisition of
top-notch American technology is enabling a “strategic competitor to access the
crown jewels of U.S. innovation.”
Some congressional leaders concur. Senate Majority Whip
John Cornyn (R-Texas) regularly warns his colleagues that China is using
private-sector investments to pilfer American technology. China has
“weaponized” its investments in America “in order to vacuum up U.S. industrial
capabilities from American companies,” Cornyn said at a January hearing. The
goal, he added, is “to turn our own technology and know-how against us in an
effort to erase our national security advantage.”
Legislation to expand the CFIUS budget and staff has been
moving slowly through the halls of Congress amid pushback from Silicon Valley
entrepreneurs and business groups. The legislation would give CFIUS new
resources to scrutinize bankruptcy purchases and establish stricter scrutiny of
start-up investments.
As months passed without any action, and the issue of
Chinese investments got overshadowed by tariff fights and feuds between Beijing
and the Trump administration, national security experts grew more concerned,
fearing that Congress lacked a sense of urgency to police transfers of
sensitive technology.
AIRING CONCERNS: China has “weaponized” its investments
in America “in order to vacuum up U.S. industrial capabilities from American
companies,” Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn (R-Texas) said at a January
hearing. Heath Tarbert, the Treasury Department assistant secretary overseeing
CFIUS, testified in January that allowing foreign countries to invest in U.S.
technology without making sufficient background checks “will have a real cost
in American lives in any conflict.”
The White House began exploring what more it could do on
its own, asking the Treasury Department in late March to offer a list of
potential Chinese investment restrictions within 60 days.
Finally, earlier this month, Senate and House leaders
announced plans to mark up the bill, starting a process that could lead to
passage later this year.
Still, the failure to act more quickly may itself be
jeopardizing national security. At a hearing in January, Heath Tarbert, the
Treasury Department assistant secretary overseeing CFIUS, testified that
allowing foreign countries to invest in U.S. technology without making
sufficient background checks “will have a real cost in American lives in any
conflict.”
“That is simply unacceptable,” he said.
‘Made in China 2025’
Last October, Chinese President Xi Jinping took the
podium before 2,300 Communist Party delegates to deliver his expansive vision
for China’s future.
Xi was speaking at the party’s 19th Congress, a summit
held every five years to choose the nation’s leaders in the Great Hall of the
People in Beijing, the expansive theater right off Tiananmen Square. Speaking
in front of a giant gold hammer and sickle framed by bright red drapes, Xi held
forth for 3½ hours, declaring that China would look outward to solve its
problems.
“China will not close its door to the world — we will
only become more and more open,” Xi declared to his rapt audience of party
leaders, many of them having close ties to the billionaire investors who
represent China in the global market. “We will deepen reform of the investment
and financing systems, and enable investment to play a crucial role in
improving the supply structure.”
China watchers said Xi was alluding to the government’s
relatively new economic plan, dubbed “Made in China 2025,” which leaders had
unveiled in 2015. The detailed vision shifted the focus on domestic research
investments to the need to pump money into — and better understand — foreign
markets.
“We will,” the document proclaimed, “guide enterprises to
integrate into local culture.”
“We will,” the document continued, “support enterprises
to perform mergers, equity investment and venture capital investment overseas.”
At the top of the investment wish list were high-tech
industries like artificial intelligence, robotics and space travel.
For the increasingly powerful Chinese leader, it was the
culmination of years of efforts to guide how China spends its blossoming
wealth. In addition to luring foreign companies to China, Xi wanted the country
— which is sitting on several trillion dollars in foreign exchange reserves —
to start investing abroad.
The plan had “much more money behind it” and “much more
coordination” between Beijing and Chinese industrialists than previous economic
strategies, according to Scott Kennedy, an expert on Chinese economic policy at
the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank
that specializes in defense matters.
“And a big component of that is acquiring technology
abroad,” he said.
From 2015 to 2017, Chinese venture capitalists pumped
money into hot companies like Uber and Airbnb, but also dozens of burgeoning
firms with little or no name recognition. The country didn’t just want “trophy
assets,” Kennedy explained. China’s leaders wanted to “fill in some of the gaps
they have” in China’s tech economy.
While the Asian power has piled up profits from its large
manufacturing plants that churn out low-cost products, the Beijing government
realized it would face declining productivity unless its economy, from
agriculture to manufacturing, adopted high-tech methods. Essentially, China
wanted to automate entire industries — including car manufacturing, food
production and electronics — and bring the whole process in-house.
So Beijing’s leaders encouraged the country’s cash-rich
investors to search for “emerging companies that have technologies that may be
extremely important … but aren’t proven,” Kennedy said. The initiative has
spawned investments in American startups that work on robotics, energy
equipment and next-generation IT. Of particular concern to U.S. national
security officials is the semiconductor industry, which makes the microchips
that provide the “guts” of many advanced technologies that China is seeking to
leverage.
“A concerted push by China to reshape the market in its
favor, using industrial policies backed by over one hundred billion dollars in
government-directed funds, threatens the competitiveness of U.S. industry and
the national and global benefits it brings,” declared a January 2017 report
from the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology, warning of
the urgent threat to U.S. superiority in semiconductor technology.
Notably, many of China’s investments didn’t register on
the CFIUS radar. They involved the early-seed funding of tech firms in Silicon
Valley and low-profile purchases such as the one in Delaware bankruptcy court.
They included joint ventures with microchip manufacturers, and the research and
development centers created with international partners.
“They have diversified to look for smaller targets,”
Kennedy said. “Those things typically do not generate a CFIUS reaction. That is
part of it.”
An obscure research body
CFIUS was set up by Congress in 1975 amid growing
concerns about oil-rich countries in the Middle East buying up American
companies, from energy firms to arms-makers. Chaired by the Treasury
Department, the committee brought together representatives from all the major
Cabinet agencies to assess the financial, technological and national security
threats posed by such investments. For its first decade, however, CFIUS existed
mostly as an obscure research body. From 1975 to 1980, the committee met only
10 times, according to congressional reports.
Japan’s economic ascendance in the 1980s changed that.
The Defense Department asked CFIUS to step in and investigate potential
Japanese purchases of a U.S. steel producer and a company that made ball
bearings for the military. In 1988, Congress gave the committee the authority
to recommend that the president nix a deal altogether. Still, the committee
remained mostly an ad hoc operation into the 1990s.
“Bureaucratically it was not a very smooth, functioning
operation,” recalled Steve Grundman, who worked as part of the committee during
the Clinton administration. “We had to pick up some intelligence here, some
technology assessment there, some industrial analysis hither.”
After the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, Congress
renewed its interest in CFIUS, passing legislation that instructed the
committee to consider a deal’s effect on “homeland security” and “critical
industries,” a notable change, according to Rosenzweig, the DHS official who
worked with CFIUS during the George W. Bush administration. The directive gave
the committee a mandate to keep an eye on a wider array of industries, such as
hospitals and banks, that DHS considered “critical” to keeping American society
operating.
Rosenzweig called it a “singular shift.” Over time, he
said, the committee went from reviewing acquisitions of steel companies —
involving just two parties and a tangible product — to investigating
technically complex purchases of microchip companies and other software or
data-rich firms.
“When I first came to CFIUS, the filings from the other
side would be a few-page letter about why this was a good deal,” Rosenzweig
said. “Now it’s a stack of books that’s up to my knee.”
The committee’s staffing and resources have not kept pace
with the growing workload, multiple people who work with CFIUS told POLITICO.
While the Treasury Department has been hiring staffers and contractors to help
handle the record workload, the committee’s overall resources are subject to
the whims of the individual agencies involved in the process, said Stephen
Heifetz, who oversaw the CFIUS work at DHS during the second Bush
administration.
A Chinese company’s plan to acquire the American money
transfer company MoneyGram fell apart when the two sides realized they would
likely not get CFIUS approval because of concerns that the personal data of
millions of Americans – including military personnel – could fall into the
hands of the Chinese military.
There is no single budget or staffing figure for CFIUS.
Instead, each agency decides the level of personnel and funding it’s willing to
commit to the committee. The Treasury Department and DHS have two of the larger
CFIUS teams, Heifetz said. During his tenure, Heifetz’s DHS squad included
roughly 10 people, split equally between government workers and outside
contractors.
“Each agency decides more or less on their own how
they’re going to staff it,” Heifetz said.
At Treasury, there are now between 20 and 30 people
working for CFIUS, according to a senior department official. But even with the
expanded team, the committee is stretched precariously thin. The official
described 80-hour workweeks, regular weekend work and no ability to take time
off.
“It’s enough to handle the current mandate, but not
comfortably,” the official said.
Amid this uncertainty over resources, CFIUS
investigations into foreign acquisitions nearly tripled from 2009 to 2015. The
most common foreign investor that hits the CFIUS radar is now China. Nearly 20
percent of the committee’s reviews from 2013 to 2015, the most recent data available,
involved the Asian power, easily ahead of second-place Canada at just under 13
percent.
Since 2015, the Treasury official said, those trends have
only continued: Chinese deals now represent a large plurality of the
committee’s work.
The attention appears to be well-founded. In recent
years, China has been repeatedly accused of industrial espionage — using
indirect means to obtain American software and military secrets, everything
from the code that powers wind turbines to the designs that produce the
Pentagon’s modern F-35 fighter jets. And several Chinese businessmen have
pleaded guilty to participating in complex conspiracies to get their hands on
sensitive technical data from U.S. firms and shuttle it back to Beijing. Again
and again, high-tech products and military equipment have popped up in China
that bear a too-striking resemblance to their American counterparts.
Spurred by these incidents, CFIUS has successfully
advised the president to nix Chinese deals at a record clip. In December 2016,
President Barack Obama stopped a Chinese investment fund from acquiring the
U.S. subsidiary of a German semiconductor manufacturer — only the third time a
president had taken such a step at that point. In September 2017, Trump halted
a China-backed investor from buying the American semiconductor maker Lattice,
citing national security concerns.
Three months later, a Chinese company’s plan to acquire
the American money transfer company MoneyGram fell apart when the two sides
realized they would likely not get CFIUS approval because of concerns that the
personal data of millions of Americans — including military personnel — could
fall into the hands of the Chinese military.
Weeks after that, the committee essentially jettisoned a
Chinese state-backed group’s attempt to buy Xcerra, a Massachusetts-based tech
company that makes equipment to test computer chips and circuit boards. Then,
in March, Trump blocked the purchase of the chipmaker Qualcomm by
Singapore-based Broadcom Ltd. CFIUS said such a move could weaken Qualcomm, and
thereby the United States, as it vies with foreign rivals such as China’s
Huawei Technologies to develop the next generation of wireless technology known
as 5G.
To national security leaders, though, CFIUS is still only
scratching the surface of China’s ambitions to acquire U.S. technology, noting
that traditional sale-and-purchase agreements to obtain a U.S. company aren’t
the only ways to gain access to cutting-edge technology.
“You can buy a [partial] interest in a company and gain
access to the same type of technology,” Attorney General Jeff Sessions told
Congress in October, adding that Justice Department investigators “are really
worried about our loss of technology” in instances where Chinese investors buy
small stakes in American tech companies.
The U.S. military has raised similar concerns. Defense
Secretary Jim Mattis warned last summer that America is failing to restrict
foreign investments in certain types of critical industries, testifying during
another hearing that CFIUS is “outdated” and “needs to be updated to deal with
today’s situation.”
A mysterious takeover
The case that occurred last summer in an obscure
courtroom in Delaware seemed innocuous enough: one relatively small tech firm
buying out a bankrupt competitor, a transaction that elicited about as much
drama as mailing a letter.
The bankrupt semiconductor maker ATop Tech had only 86
employees when it was declared insolvent. But it had a more than a $1 billion
market share of the electronic-design automation and integrated circuits
markets, the company told the bankruptcy court, giving it potential value to
any player seeking to enter the highly specialized semiconductor industry.
Avatar Integrated Systems, the company seeking to
purchase ATop, was apparently such a player. But it was not well known to
others in the semiconductor industry, and its precise ownership was a bit of a
mystery. The sole director listed on its incorporation papers was a Hong
Kong-based businessman named Jingyuan Han, and it issued shares to King Mark
International Limited, a Hong Kong company in which Han was an investor. Avatar
was set up in March 2017, according to the company.
The transaction went ahead despite concerns raised to the
court by other players in the semiconductor industry, as well as those of a
former senior Pentagon official who specifically suggested the Chinese
government may be backing Avatar.
The former Pentagon official, Joseph Benkert, was
enlisted by another American semiconductor company, Synopsys, to help recoup
money it was owed by ATop. He warned the court that the deal might have
national security risks.
“CFIUS has identified businesses engaged in design and
production of semiconductors as presenting possible national security
vulnerabilities because they may be useful in defending, or seeking to impair,
U.S. national security, as semiconductor design or production may have both
commercial or military applications,” Benkert, the former assistant secretary
of defense for global affairs under the second Bush administration, wrote to
the court.
Benkert argued that the question of Avatar’s ownership
needed more review given that the company appeared to be “under the control of
Han, a Chinese national.”
“In my opinion,” Benkert wrote, “the proposed transaction
is likely to receive thorough CFIUS scrutiny and there is a material risk that
it will not receive CFIUS approval.”
But despite those concerns, the deal to buy ATop Tech was
not given a formal review by CFIUS, according to a senior administration
official with direct knowledge of the process. A Treasury Department official,
speaking on behalf of CFIUS, declined to comment on the merger.
An Avatar official, reached at the company office in
Santa Clara, California, did not respond to questions or a request for an
interview with Han. The company did not respond to multiple requests to discuss
its relationship — if any — with the Chinese government or the details of its
business.
Han, who has been described in media reports as one of China’s
wealthiest men, has spent his career almost entirely in the iron and steel
industries. Avatar’s scant history seemed to suggest that it was created for
the sole purpose of acquiring an established American semiconductor firm like
ATop Tech, according to several former national security officials who still
work on CFIUS cases.
Attempts to reach Han through China Oriental Group, the
iron and steel company that he runs, were also unsuccessful.
Officials familiar with the CFIUS process say that bankruptcy
deals such as the Atop-Avatar case sometimes fall off their radar because of
difficulty in discerning whether Chinese investors are working with the
government. In other bankruptcy cases, Chinese investment in a potential buyer
may not be visible in official filings, especially when a web of holding
companies is involved. Thus, say current and former officials working with
CFIUS, a significant amount of detective work is necessary to discern both the
identity and the intentions of the investors.
Traditionally, courts have defined control of a company
as “the ability to direct management to make certain decisions.” But a former
Treasury Department official said CFIUS needs to focus on “beneficial
ownership,” defined as having the ability to obtain technology from the firm,
rather than overall decision-making power.
“It is very hard to find beneficial ownership,” said the
official. “Our concern is the capacity of the system to deal with these.”
The bills pending in Congress to strengthen the CFIUS
review process include provisions designed to make scrutiny of bankruptcy cases
easier. The bills would require CFIUS to “prescribe regulations to clarify that
the term ‘covered transaction’ includes any transaction ... that arises
pursuant to a bankruptcy proceeding or other form of default on debt.”
A sharper focus on bankruptcy cases, particularly in
making sure CFIUS scrutinizes investors to ties to foreign governments, is
desperately needed, said a former Pentagon official who is still involved in
CFIUS cases. “How do they find out about it now? They are reading The Wall
Street Journal late at night,” the official said. “It is not a very systematic
process.”
The former official also recalled that in the past, the
Pentagon has hired an outside contractor to scour around for unreported
transactions that might raise some national security flags, such as in the
semiconductor or aerospace sectors. Such checks need to be performed in a more
systematic way.
“There is no process for surfacing information out of the
bankruptcy courts,” the official said.
China goes to Silicon Valley
In Silicon Valley, Chinese investment isn’t typically
viewed as a threat, but rather more of a blessing.
Chris Nicholson, co-founder of Skymind, an artificial
intelligence company that makes the type of cutting-edge software that both the
United States and China covet, recalls the many long months he spent in 2014
trudging up and down Sand Hill Road, the heart of Silicon Valley’s leading
venture capital firms, and all the doors that slammed shut.
“That was a long, dry year for us,” he told POLITICO.
Nicholson hadn’t sought Chinese money. But then Tencent,
China’s internet and telecommunications giant and now one of the world’s
largest companies, approached the firm, offering $200,000 in seed funding. The
Chinese monetary infusion buoyed Skymind, which soon landed a coveted spot in Y
Combinator, the powerful startup accelerator. American investors, who had only
months earlier eschewed the firm’s overtures, quickly changed their tune.
Chinese investment soon beget American investment.
“It was that crucial piece of Chinese capital that
allowed us to survive,” Nicholson said. “That’s all it took. Now we’re a
company with 35 employees.”
Reflecting a common feeling among his cohorts in Silicon
Valley startups, Nicholson insisted that working with Chinese investors does
not mean granting Beijing officials access to the coding process. “My American
co-founder and I are in control,” Nicholson said, noting that Skymind has given
up none of the rights to its intellectual property and has made its code “open
sourced,” which means the code is freely available for cybersecurity experts to
inspect, audit and offer suggestions.
But Bryan Ware, CEO of Haystax Technology, which works
with law enforcement, defense and intelligence clients on securing their
technologies, cast some doubt on the idea that the owners of tech startups
would naturally refuse to share details of their technology with their
investors: “If you’ve got a Chinese investor and that’s the lifeblood that’s
going to allow you to get your product out the door, or allow you to hire your
next developer, telling them, ‘No, you can’t do that,’ or, ‘No you shouldn’t do
that,’ while you have no other alternatives for financing — that’s just the
nature of the dilemma.”
“Every investment comes with a risk of some loss of
intellectual property or foreign influence and control,” Ware said.
And too many Silicon Valley deals exist in a
“netherworld” between passive investment and absolute takeover, “where there’s
access to information, technical information, [and] there is the ability to
influence and potentially coerce management,” according to the senior Treasury
Department official.
One major concern among specialists like Ware is that
Beijing officials could use early Chinese investments in next-generation
technology to map the software the federal government and even the Defense
Department may one day use — and perhaps even corrupt it in ways that would give
China a window into sensitive U.S. information.
A POLITICO review of 185 tech startups with Chinese
investors found just over 5 percent had received government contracts, loans or
grants ranging from a few thousand dollars to several million dollars. Often,
the contracts simply involved research — renewable energy for the Energy
Department, electronics and communications equipment for the Pentagon, space
technology for NASA. Others ordered lab equipment for the Commerce Department,
or machine tools for the military.
“There’s a tremendous amount of intelligence value
there,” Ware said. “All governments desire to know what other governments are
doing. And knowing the technologies and how they work I think is a big part of
that.”
While there’s no indication that the firms had U.S.
government contracts at the time that Chinese investors became involved, that
may be part of China’s strategy. Derek Scissors, who manages the American
Enterprise Institute’s China Global Investment Tracker, an exhaustive database
of China’s major global investments, said that as welcome as the surge of
Chinese-funded deals may be in Silicon Valley, the engine behind them is the
Chinese government. China’s Silicon Valley investment strategy “was shaped by
the state and that shaping has gotten tighter,” he said.
Still, many Chinese investments in the United States are
not directly backed by the Beijing government, but it can be hard to
distinguish.
Some prominent Chinese VC firms in Silicon Valley have
clear links to the government. Westlake Ventures, for example, received funding
from the government in the coastal Chinese city of Hangzhou, according to media
reports and a Pentagon research paper. And Westlake has put money into other VC
funds, such as the WI Harper Group, which has a stake in a wide slate of
American tech companies, from a dating app to a three-dimensional imaging
company to a maker of robot cooks. Westlake did not respond to a request for
comment.
But it’s not always easy to trace the money back to a
single source, let alone determine what connection that source has to Beijing’s
Communist leadership. Haiyin Capital, a Beijing-based VC firm, is partially
backed by a state-run Chinese company, according to a company release. Also
complex is ZGC Capital Corporation — located in Silicon Valley and focused on
providing startups with basic business help — is a subsidiary of a state-owned
enterprise funded by the Beijing government, according to the organizations’
websites. Attempts to reach each organization were unsuccessful.
Security and economics experts say they are unsure how
much financial or national security harm these Chinese investments are actually
causing the United States — if any — simply because it may not be clear for
years exactly how important the technology may be.
In the meantime, entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley are
blunt: America actually needs Chinese money to maintain its global tech
advantage.
“Here’s my warning shot,” Nicholson said. “If we make it
difficult for foreign talent and foreign capital to find each other by
over-regulating early-stage startup investing … we will lose our supremacy as
the top tech economy in the world.”
Enter Congress
In Washington, Silicon Valley’s warning has been heard
loudly enough to delay the passage of a bill to strengthen the CFIUS process,
despite the support of such bipartisan figures as Cornyn, the second-ranking
Senate Republican, and California’s own Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the
ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Last year, after a cascade of warnings from the Defense
Department, Justice Department and other powerful sources, both the House and
Senate seemed ready to take action to strengthen oversight of foreign
investment in technology companies.
The bipartisan proposal would direct CFIUS to consider
whether pending investments would erode America’s technological edge, enable a
foreign government to utilize digital spying powers that might be used against
the United States, or give sensitive data — even indirectly — to a foreign
government. Similarly, it would expand the definition of “critical industries”
— a reference to sectors like banking, defense or energy — to include “critical
technologies,” a significant expansion of the committee’s current mandate.
Under the bill, CFIUS would have to create a system to
monitor transactions that aren’t voluntarily brought to the committee’s
attention.
The measure would also centralize some of the committee’s
functions and allow the committee to charge filing fees up to 1 percent of the
total value of the transaction up to $300,000, and let Treasury offer a single
CFIUS budget request rather than relying on contributions from other
departments.
The Trump administration offered a full-throated
endorsement of the bill in January, saying it “would strengthen our ability to
protect national security and enhance confidence in our longstanding open
investment policy.”
And while the bill doesn’t explicitly cite China, the
provisions are clearly aimed at limiting its access to the most sensitive
areas.
“Any Chinese-related company that is part of our supply
chain is a concern to me,” Rep. Robert Pittenger (R-N.C.), a lead House sponsor
of the bill, told POLITICO.
Pittenger insisted that Congress’ inaction is allowing
China to brazenly pilfer the technology that drives America’s military might,
and sell that technology to adversaries like Iran and North Korea. He noted
that a Treasury official told him getting the bill signed is the department’s
No. 1 legislative priority for 2018.
“We can’t turn a blind eye to this,” Pittenger said.
But many technology entrepreneurs believe the bill would
simply drive cutting-edge research overseas. In 2016, foreign investors
injected $373 billion into the United States, a figure that has been mostly
increasing since the early 2000s, according to government data. Lengthening the
CFIUS review time — currently 30 days, but set to extend to 45 days under the
new bill — could damage the “brittle process” of early-stage fundraising, said
Nicholson, who encouraged lawmakers to focus on expanding CFIUS powers in other
areas, such as bankruptcy courts.
“I worry that they’re driving a bulldozer towards a rose
garden,” said Nicholson, echoing his claim that training the CFIUS lens on
Silicon Valley could scare off the very financing that keeps America growing.
IBM’s vice president for regulatory affairs, Christopher
Padilla, agreed, warning at a January hearing that the bill “could constitute
the most economically harmful imposition of unilateral trade restrictions by
the United States in many decades.”
He raised particular concerns about expanding CFIUS
authority to cover foreign investments in “critical technologies,” a phrase
tech leaders say is worryingly opaque and that could force companies peddling
sensitive technology to have every single sale reviewed.
Padilla called it a “we’ll know it when we see it”
approach to regulating that “would be deeply damaging to U.S. competitiveness,
and, more important, could lead to a false sense of security.”
Some industry groups have suggested that the bill should
delineate these technologies — robotics or artificial intelligence, for
instance — to avoid having every deal scrutinized from top to bottom.
“We would be well served to define those issues from the
outset,” said Dean Garfield, CEO of the Information Technology Industry
Council, a trade group representing industry heavyweights such as Amazon,
Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft and Twitter. Garfield said getting the bill
revised is a top-five issue for ITI in 2018.
He cautioned that the bill, as written, could spike the
number of annual CFIUS reviews from “a few hundred deals” to “a few thousand.”
Proponents, however, feel that specifying specific
technologies might be impossible. The software powering the country — from
waterways to missile systems — is constantly changing and evolving, they say.
Instead, they suggest, new CFIUS funds and a streamlined reporting process
would help keep the growing stream of deal reviews moving.
“For the price of a single B-21 bomber, we can fund an
updated CFIUS process and protect our key capabilities for several years,”
Cornyn said at a hearing. “That is a down payment on long-term national
security.”
Nonetheless, lawmakers have been working to address
industry complaints, making tweaks to the legislation. And just last week,
lawmakers made a breakthrough, agreeing to slightly narrow the bill’s scope,
raising the chances the measure will make it to the president’s desk.
The House and Senate are scheduled to mark up their
respective CFIUS bills on Tuesday, and lawmakers now are angling to attach the
legislation to the annual, must-pass defense authorization bill as a way to
guarantee it gets through. But lingering disputes could still derail the
process.
National security leaders and lawmakers warn that these
squabbles, while reflecting sincerely held positions, are simply delaying
necessary action. At that January hearing, Cornyn described a changing reality
if CFIUS is left in its current iteration.
“Just imagine if China’s military was stronger, faster
and more lethal,” Cornyn said.
“That is what the future likely holds,” he added, “unless
we act.”
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