Federal News
U.S. Commerce Department Blacklists Huawei Affiliates
March 24, 2026
The U.S. Commerce Department has placed Huawei Technologies and 70 of its affiliates on the Entity List, restricting their ability to acquire U.S. technology without government approval. This action, supported by President Donald Trump and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, aims to protect U.S. national security and foreign policy interests by limiting Huawei's access to American suppliers. The move signals heightened scrutiny of foreign technology vendors and impacts supply chains involving U.S. companies.
- Procurement professionals should anticipate increased regulatory compliance requirements when engaging with foreign technology vendors, especially those linked to Huawei.
- Contractors and suppliers must evaluate their contracts and supply chains for potential exposure to restricted entities to avoid violations.
- This blacklist may shift demand toward alternative vendors not subject to export controls, affecting sourcing strategies.
- Agencies should incorporate these restrictions into acquisition planning and risk assessments to ensure adherence to export control policies.
President Donald Trump backed the decision that will "prevent American technology from being used by foreign owned entities in ways that potentially undermine U.S. national security or foreign policy interests."
— Wilbur Ross, Commerce Secretary
Huaweiβs supply chain depends on contracts with American companies and he urged the Commerce Department to look "at how we can effectively disrupt our adversary.β
— Senator Ben Sasse
Agencies
U.S. Commerce Department, U.S. Justice Department, United States Senate
Vendors
Huawei Technologies Co Ltd, ZTE Corp
Locations
Sources
- China's Huawei, 70 affiliates placed on U.S. trade blacklist - AOL · AOL.com · Mar 24