New York:The United States is urging telecom operators around the world to follow the Reliance Jio template of developing homegrown 5G solutions, while delivering stinging criticism against Chinese telecoms giant Huawei and the consequences of "untrusted" Chinese components in 5G infrastructure.
"I think the lesson of Reliance Jio is that there's nothing mystical about 5G technology. It has the same types of components that 4G technology has; it's just evolved to another level," Robert L. Strayer, a top US cyber diplomat, told IANS.
Strayer was offering the US assessment of Jio's 100 per cent Made-in-India 5G solution, announced July 15 by Reliance chairman Mukesh Ambani at the company's 43rd AGM.
Strayer is the US Deputy Assistant Secretary for Cyber and International Communications and Information Policy. He leads development of international cybersecurity, Internet, data, and privacy policy and negotiations with foreign governments for the United States. A big part of Strayer's job involves getting allies and other countries over to the US side to invest in non-Huawei equipment and components for 5G networks.
Asked specifically what Airtel, Voda Idea, BSNL should do given dependencies on Chinese gear, Strayer spoke to the realities of technology life cycle and depreciation as a way to "migrate" away from "untrusted vendors to trusted vendors".
"Our campaign is focused on the move to 5G, but we realize the legacy 3G and 4G infrastructure will underpin the move to 5G. So we do encourage governments and telecom operators just to look at how they can start moving, migrating away -- that is, from untrusted vendors to trusted vendors."
The US has praised Telefonica in Spain, Orange in France, Jio in India, Telstra in Australia, SK and KT in South Korea, NTT in Japan, and the telecom operators in Canada and Singapore for their decision to only use "trusted vendors" in their 5G deployments.