U.S. Security Reviews Leave China Mobile’s U.S. Operations in Regulatory Limbo
- China Mobile’s U.S. internet business is in limbo amid U.S. security reviews and shifting policy signals.
- Proposals targeting China Mobile’s U.S. assets are on hold, leaving prolonged regulatory risk and strategic uncertainty.
- A U.S. ban/divestiture of China Mobile risks service disruption, contract renegotiations, reputational harm, and losing U.S. presence.
U.S. deliberations leave China Mobile’s U.S. operations in limbo
China Mobile faces growing uncertainty as U.S. security reviews and rapidly shifting policy signals leave its U.S. internet business effectively in limbo. The Trump administration is reviewing — and in some cases shelving — measures that would bar or restrict operations of Chinese telecom firms in the United States, with proposals explicitly targeting the U.S. internet assets of China Mobile and China Unicom placed on hold. The pause aims to avoid jeopardising a planned summit between President Trump and President Xi Jinping, but it also leaves the carrier facing prolonged regulatory risk and strategic uncertainty.
A ban or forced divestiture of China Mobile’s U.S. internet activities would have immediate operational consequences, including potential interruption of services, contract renegotiations with carriers and cloud providers, and constraints on cross‑border data flows. Telecom analysts say regulatory ambiguity complicates network planning and investment cycles, as operators and partners cannot reliably assess compliance costs or future access to U.S. infrastructure. For China Mobile — the world’s largest wireless carrier by subscribers — even limited U.S. exposure can carry outsized reputational and logistical effects given the global nature of carrier interconnection and roaming agreements.
The latest episode highlights how geopolitical bargaining shapes telecom policy. Washington’s move to pause broader tech‑security measures — reportedly including bans on China Telecom’s U.S. operations and restrictions on Chinese data‑center equipment — is framed as pre‑summit calibration, but the abrupt and unexplained posting and withdrawal of a Pentagon list of firms linked to the Chinese military exposes coordination gaps that sustain uncertainty. For China Mobile, the outcome of this policy debate will determine whether it retains any U.S. presence or becomes further isolated from Western markets and partners.
Pentagon list posting and retraction adds confusion
Separately, the Pentagon briefly posts a Section 1260H list including major Chinese firms such as Alibaba and Baidu, then withdraws the document within minutes after a U.S. agency requests removal, prompting questions about internal coordination and raising market noise.
Broader measures stay under review
Sources tell Reuters several other tech‑security proposals — from limits on TP‑Link router sales to contemplated bans on Chinese electric trucks — are likewise on hold as officials weigh their diplomatic impact ahead of the high‑stakes summit, keeping the future regulatory landscape for China’s tech and telecom sector unsettled.