The Commission asked member nations to implement the guidelines by April 30th, and to provide a report on their implementations by June 30th.

These guidelines could theoretically placate the US by encouraging countries to ban the likes of Huawei if they feel there's a security risk, but American officials might not be happy all the same. They've repeatedly asserted that Huawei could theoretically be used as a conduit for Chinese government surveillance and have sought to ban it completely wherever possible.

The US so far hasn't presented public evidence to support this, though. The newspaper Handelsblatt claimed that the German government had evidence of Huawei cooperating with Chinese surveillance, but it didn't elaborate. Huawei has routinely denied serving as a tool for Chinese spying. As such, it's hard to imagine the EU backing down from its current approach. Huawei may end up with a footprint in Europe, even if it's not as large as the company might like.