The decision by Bain Capital to include China's Huawei
Technologies - a company that grew out of the People's Liberation
Army (PLA) General Staff Department's Information Engineering
Academy in 1988 and the PLA has been its political patron, customer
and R&D partner ever since - in a buyout of 3Com Corporation
has drawn headlines and the intense scrutiny of American lawmakers.
In light of several Chinese cyber attacks on the Pentagon and
other US government agencies over the past year and fact that the
US Department of Defense is among 3Com's clients for technology
designed to prevent just such attacks, members have expressed alarm
at the implications for national security. How should the
U.S. handle telecommunications and Information technology
investments from Chinese companies? Do they pose unique
threats to American national security? What is the threat,
and is it mitigated by the details of the particular
investment? Can controls be put in place to eliminate the
risks? The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United
States (CFIUS), which is designed specifically to evaluate foreign
buyouts, was strengthened this year with an eye to decisively
answering these questions. Is CFIUS up to its task of
balancing the need for security with historical American openness
to foreign investment? Please, join us as we discuss the
national security risk of Chinese investment.
More About the Speakers
Featuring Keynote Remarks by:
Senator Christopher "Kit" Bond,
Vice Chairman,
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence
Followed by a Panel Discussion with:
James Mulvenon
Director
Center for Intelligence Research and Analysis
John J. Tkacik, Jr.
Senior Research Fellow
Asian Studies Center
The Heritage Foundation
Todd M. Malan
President & CEO
Organization for International Investment
Hosted By
Walter Lohman
Director, Asian Studies Center
Read More