KEY POINTS
  • A Huawei executive was arrested in Poland on allegations of spying this week, and exports of Huawei telecom equipment have been halted out of California.
  • The events come on top of the controversial arrest of Huawei's CFO in Canada in December.
  • Experts say the U.S. government will continue putting pressure on the company over what the intelligence community views as intractable supply-chain issues.
A saleswoman serves customers at a Huawei shop in Beijing, China, December 12, 2018.

It was another bad week for Huawei: A public relations executive was arrested on spying charges in Poland on Thursday, and the U.S. Commerce Department blocked shipment of the company's equipment back to Hong Kong this week. This is on top of the continuing saga of the December arrest of the company's top finance executive.

The U.S. government has shown it intends to take action on more than a decade of accusations against the company at a tenuous time for U.S.-China relations. The moves against Huawei also call into question how the company will be able to expand the reach of its 5G equipment in the West, and how companies it competes with, such as Apple, may be perceived among Chinese consumers.