By Francesco Guarascio
HANOI (Reuters) – China’s top telecoms firms Huawei and ZTE have won a series of contracts this year to supply 5G equipment in Vietnam, in another sign of Hanoi’s strengthening ties with Beijing, which has raised concerns among Western officials, seven people with direct knowledge of the situation told Reuters.
For years, Vietnam was seen as reluctant to use Chinese technology in sensitive infrastructure, but in recent months it has embraced Chinese technology companies as sometimes frosty relations with its northern neighbor warmed while ties with Washington soured over tariffs on Vietnamese goods.
While Sweden’s Ericsson and Finland’s Nokia won contracts for Vietnam’s core 5G infrastructure, with US chipmaker Qualcomm providing network equipment, Chinese companies have begun winning smaller tenders with state operators, so far unreported public procurement data shows.
A consortium including Huawei was awarded a $23 million contract for 5G equipment in April, weeks after the White House announced tariffs on Vietnamese goods. ZTE won at least two contracts, one last week, totaling more than $20 million for 5G antennas. The first publicly disclosed agreement came in September, a month after the US tariffs took effect.
Reuters could not establish whether the timing of these wins was linked to the US tariffs, but the agreements raised concerns among Western officials.
Excluding Chinese contractors from Vietnam’s digital infrastructure, including undersea fiber optic cables, has long been identified by Washington as a key condition for support in advanced technologies.
Huawei and ZTE are banned from US telecommunications networks as an “unacceptable risk” to national security. Sweden and other European countries have similar restrictions.
Ericsson declined to comment on the Chinese companies, but said it was “fully committed to supporting its customers in Vietnam.”
Huawei, ZTE, Nokia, Qualcomm, the US embassy in Vietnam, the Chinese embassy, Sweden’s foreign ministry or Vietnam’s technology ministry responded to requests for comment.
VIETNAM-CHINA HOT FRIENDS
The non-aligned Southeast Asian nation is a crucial battleground in the competition for global influence. Its proximity to China has made it a key industrial hub for multinationals such as Apple, Samsung and Nike, which rely on Chinese components and Western consumers.
Under pressure from the West, Vietnam has long taken a “wait and see approach” to Chinese technology, said Nguyen Hung, a supply chain specialist at RMIT University Vietnam. But “Vietnam has its own priorities”, he added, noting that the new agreements could spur deeper economic integration with China.