It appears that when Dish wants something it doesn’t give up.
After making a surprise bid of $25.5 billion to acquire Sprint on Monday — which would snatch the mobile provider from the hands of Japan’s SoftBank — Dish submitted a filing to the Federal Communications Commission on Thursday claiming a SoftBank acquisition of Sprint wouldn’t be good for U.S. national security.
According to Reuters, Dish requested that the FCC suspend the review of SoftBank’s possible buyout of Sprint. In the filing, Dish claimed that Softbank didn’t have the “existing in-market infrastructure” and that “Dish’s merger proposal is better for American consumers, better for Sprint shareholders, and better for national security than the SoftBank proposal.”
Related stories
- Best Cheap Home Internet and TV Bundles of 2022
- Mint Mobile, Xfinity Mobile, Google Fi, Visible: Which Wireless Networks Do Smaller Providers Use?
- Dish Finally Opens its 5G Network to Everyone, Starting in Las Vegas
- Boost Mobile’s Latest Deal Offers a 5G Phone and a Year of Service For $199
- AT&T and Dish big winners in latest 5G auction
This isn’t the first time that the feds have gotten involved with the Sprint buyout over national security concerns. In January, the U.S. Justice Department asked the FCC to put off SoftBank’s purchase saying it and other agencies need time to review the deal’s implications. Dish’s newest request with the FCC is basically a underscoring of these same arguments.
Sprint’s board of advisors is contemplating Dish’s proposal even though the mobile provider had previously agreed to Softbank’s $20.1 billion offer to buy 70 percent of the company. According to Reuters, Dish asked the FCC to wait to rule on the merger until Sprint had made a decision.
(CBS, which owns CNET, is in active litigation against Dish over its Hopper digital video recorder.)
CNET contacted Sprint for comment. We’ll update the story when we get more information.