China a 'central' spying threat
Submitted by Templar Titan on Mon, 10/17/2005 - 18:03.
By Bill Gertz
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Published September 29, 2005
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
China's intelligence services are mounting wide-ranging efforts to acquire
U.S. technology and are among the most active of nearly 100 nations whose
spying has undermined U.S. military advantages, according to a senior
U.S. counterintelligence official.
China's "national-level intelligence services employ a full range
of collection methodologies, from the targeting of well-placed foreign
government officials, senior scientists and businessmen to the exploitation
of academic activities, student populations and private businesses,"
Michelle Van Cleave, the national counterintelligence executive, said
at a recent congressional hearing on foreign spying.
Miss Van Cleave said spies from nearly 100 nations are working to obtain
sensitive U.S. technology, and "two countries that always rank near
the top of the list are, of course, Russia and China."
Although private-sector spies are a problem, "state-directed espionage
remains the central threat to our most sensitive national security technology
secrets," she said.
|
| Chinese intelligence agents are "very
aggressive" in business and at obtaining information through elicitation.
Additionally, "they're adept at exploiting front companies, [and]
they also have very capable intelligence services that target U.S. national
security secrets," she said.
Chinese intelligence efforts "take advantage of our open economic
system to advance China's technical modernization, reduce the U.S. military
advantage and undermine our economic competitiveness," Miss Van Cleave
told the House Judiciary subcommittee on immigration, border security
and claims.
Chinese and other state-run and private spies use a variety of simple
methods to acquire U.S. technology, including e-mail, facsimile and telephone
solicitation or in-person requests, she said. Other methods include visits
by spies to U.S. businesses, military bases, national laboratories and
private defense contractors.
The public identification of China and Russia as spying threats by a senior
official is a departure from past policy, when the identities of foreign
spies were kept secret to avoid upsetting diplomatic ties.
Miss Van Cleave declined to identify other nations involved in technology
spying but said they include some of America's closest allies.
China's government also has obtained sensitive technology through the
access that Chinese students, scientists and other specialists have in
the United States, she said.
"Beijing has established a number of outreach organizations in China,
and it maintains close relations with a number of U.S.-based advocacy
groups that facilitate its interaction with experts here and probably
aid in efforts to acquire U.S. technology," Miss Van Cleave said.
She said U.S. efforts to identify and stop the activities of foreign intelligence
services have "to be more effective."
Larry Wortzel, a former defense intelligence official, told the subcommittee
that China is methodical in its intelligence-gathering efforts in the
United States.
"The U.S. faces an organized program out of China that is designed
to gather high technology information of military use," Mr. Wortzel
said.
|
|