US Lawmakers Call for Ban on China-Linked Router Maker TP-Link

Seventeen Republican lawmakers urged the Commerce Department to prohibit further sales of equipment from TP-Link Systems Inc., a Wi-Fi router maker whose links to China have raised concerns and prompted investigations in the US.

Bloomberg
Published15 May 2025, 05:53 AM IST
US Lawmakers Call for Ban on China-Linked Router Maker TP-Link
US Lawmakers Call for Ban on China-Linked Router Maker TP-Link

Seventeen Republican lawmakers urged the Commerce Department to prohibit further sales of equipment from TP-Link Systems Inc., a Wi-Fi router maker whose links to China have raised concerns and prompted investigations in the US.

Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas, a China hawk, as well as 16 senators and representatives wrote a letter to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick on Wednesday accusing TP-Link of deep ties to China’s ruling Communist Party and calling the company a “clear and present danger.” The company denies the allegation.

The letter cites reports that Chinese state operatives have exploited TP-Link’s networking devices, including Wi-Fi routers, to wage cyber attacks, and a Bloomberg story on the Justice Department’s investigation into the company’s pricing strategies. The lawmakers also say that China gains access to US systems via TP-Link’s devices “before American authorities know a vulnerability exists.”

“Each day we fail to act, the CCP wins while American competitors suffer, and American security remains at risk,” wrote the lawmakers, referring to the Chinese Communist Party.

The Commerce Department has started a probe into whether TP-Link’s ties to China pose unacceptable national security risks, Bloomberg reported earlier. Data that the investigators were reviewing show the company has about 60% of the US retail market for Wi-Fi systems and small and home office routers, up from about 10% in early 2019.

Founded in China, TP-Link split into two separate entities last year, with an American unit based in Irvine, California, and its Chinese business headquartered in Shenzhen. However, a Bloomberg investigation found that the US venture still has substantial operations in mainland China.

In an interview with Bloomberg, Jeffrey Chao, who owns TP-Link’s US business, denied that the company has links to China’s military and intelligence apparatus, and said he had moved all of its most sensitive roles to the US.

©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

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