The Wall Street Journal cited US State Department internal documents, saying that the United States is launching a press campaign against China's telecommunications equipment manufacturer Huawei to exclude China's state-of-the-art security inspection equipment maker Nutech from the market. Local time reported on the 28th.

Newtech's equipment is a threat to national security. It's the same logic as the pressure on Huawei.

Newtech is a manufacturer of cargo and passenger search equipment used in airports, ports and borders.

The United States is concerned that personal information, including cargo lists, fingerprints, and passports, collected through these devices will be databased and passed to Chinese authorities.

The Wall Street Journal explained that under the leadership of the White House National Security Council, the United States is campaigning for a Newtek exclusion campaign against European countries such as Greece, Hungary, Italy, Portugal and Germany.

Born in Tsinghua University in the 1990s, Newtech, the son of former President Hu Jintao, Huhaifeng, led the company in the 2000s.

Last year, China's state-owned nuclear power plant, China Nuclear Industry Group Corporation, is said to have become the largest shareholder of the Newtech parent company.

The US Transportation Security Administration banned the use of Newtek equipment at US airports in 2014.

Newtech's cargo checkpoints are also installed in the European Union, the borders of Belarus and Ukraine, and Kaliningrad, the western port city of the Russian Federation.

Finland also selected Newtek as a freight forwarder to be installed on the border with Russia this month in the US pressure campaign.

Newtek is said to have secured a significant market share in Europe by pushing competitors such as the US OIS system and the UK's'Smith Detection Group' with low-priced weapons.

The U.S. Department of State estimates that Newtech accounts for over 90% of the maritime cargo security screening market in Europe and over 50% of the airport cargo and passenger security screening market.

Competitors see Newtech doing offensive marketing at 25-50% lower prices than they do.

Newtek was dumped by the EU in 2010, after which it established a factory in Warsaw, Poland.

The European Commission's German member of the European Commission, e-mailed in December last year to high-ranking members of the Commission, warned that Newtek's overly low prices seemed to be driven by its motive, not for commercial purposes, but for understanding the EU's strategic infrastructure.