"I want 5G, and even 6G, technology in the United States as soon as possible," Trump began, postulating a hypothetical future network even beyond 5G.
"It is far more powerful, faster, and smarter than the current standard. American companies must step up their efforts, or get left behind. There is no reason that we should be lagging behind on something that is so obviously the future. I want the United States to win through competition, not by blocking out currently more advanced technologies. We must always be the leader in everything we do, especially when it comes to the very exciting world of technology!" he continued.
Telecom experts agree that 5G is "the future," and that the US lags behind.
Today, China's Huawei "can built 5G from network core to end user and do it at a low price," John Hemmings, director of the Asia Studies Centre at the Henry Jackson Society, told Business Insider.
"There is no American alternative," he continued. While Cisco and to some extent, Erickson and AT&T, all make components of a 5G network, only China offers the soup-to-nuts kit, and they do it cheap, according to Hemmings.
Huawei achieved this feat with support of China's government. The US's piecemeal 5G offerings represent the fruits of the private model, but China's 5G dominance comes from state planning.
But with the state planning comes suspicion of spying.
The Pentagon already bars anyone with ZTE or Huawei phones from entering the building. Telecom networks in the US that handle any government business are barred from using Chinese network equipment.
Trump wants a US Huawei, but can't stomach "socialism"
Air Force Brig. Gen. Robert Spalding served on the NSC as the senior director for strategic planning and warned against China "weaponizing" 5G networks against democracy, and called for Trump to nationalize the development of 5G.
Spalding spoke of the "race to 5G" as if it was a new space race in a memo before his departure on January 31, 2017, Bloomberg reported .
"The more connected we are, and 5G will make us the most connected by far, the more vulnerable we become," he wrote. "Think of self-driving cars that suddenly mow down unsuspecting pedestrians. Think of drones that fly into the intakes of airliners."
After the memo, Spalding was sent back to the Air Force and his security detail not renewed.
Trump and Spalding had both sought the same thing, an American answer to Huawei that would keep China's communist party out of networks critical to the future of democracies, but Spalding's plan would require government intervention in private industry.
Trump routinely rejects plans from Democrats to intervene in private industry as "socialism," a term he frequently misconstrues as the label refers to social safety net programs, many of which the US already has. Trump was expected to sign an executive order banning Chinese telecom equipment in US networks, but his tweets on Thursday seemed to shrink from even that level of intervention into industry.
"There is a great weakness in the American position" on 5G, said Hemmings. "America does capitalism, it doesnt do China. 5G needs some state direction, like getting companies to cluster together with university laboratories" to innovate.
In 5G technology, US private industry has failed to rival its state-backed competitor in Huawei. In the face of this failure of the free market, Trump on Thursday called for US industry to simply try harder or do better.
But without state intervention into the industry, China looks set to peel off US allies with better offerings in the space, and no coherent US alternatives. The UK and Germany, for example, are already balking at US demands to drop Chinese tech from their networks.