Author Topic: China Chinese Penetration and Invasion of America  (Read 63057 times)





Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: Cases against US profs faltering
« Reply #154 on: December 20, 2021, 08:04:54 PM »

The U.S. Pursued Professors Working With China. Cases Are Faltering.
MIT professor’s academic collaboration in Shenzhen led to criminal charges, but the university says such ties are ordinary practice
Representatives of MIT, Chinese university SUSTech and the Shenzhen government after striking a collaboration agreement in 2018. MIT professor Gang Chen is at far right. ALLEGRA BOVERMAN/MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
By Aruna Viswanatha
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 in Boston and Sha Hua
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 in Hong Kong
Dec. 20, 2021 11:05 am ET


In January 2020, Gang Chen and about two dozen other professors and students from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology traveled to Shenzhen, China, to talk about overlapping university research, visit local companies and interview students interested in studying at MIT.

When Mr. Chen landed back at Boston’s Logan airport, Customs and Border Protection agents pulled him aside, seized his laptop and two cellphones and began asking him what he had been doing in China and why. Mr. Chen, a professor of mechanical engineering and an American citizen, told them he had been collaborating with a Chinese university and that all his research had been conducted in the U.S.

One year later, he was arrested on charges of concealing extensive ties to China in grant applications he had made to the U.S. government. It was one of a string of attention-grabbing cases brought by the Justice Department to address suspicions that the Chinese government was exploiting academic ties to engage in technological espionage.

Since then, the government’s pursuit of academics for alleged lying about their affiliations has faltered. The first such case to go to a jury ended in an acquittal. Out of 24 other cases, nine defendants have pleaded guilty. Charges have been dropped completely in six others, five of which officials said they dismissed because the scientists involved already had been sufficiently punished by being detained or otherwise restricted for a year.

The rest are pending, including one against a professor at Harvard University who went on trial on Dec. 14. By comparison, about 92% of the Justice Department’s overall white-collar prosecutions end in convictions.

In recent weeks, Justice Department officials have discussed whether to drop additional cases against academics, including Mr. Chen, according to people familiar with the matter. Mr. Chen has pleaded not guilty.


The allegations against Mr. Chen and others, which came amid sharp anti-China rhetoric from the Trump administration, sparked criticism from some in academia that the Justice Department was improperly targeting American scientists of Chinese descent—something the department has denied. At a minimum, the cases showed that at times what the Justice Department saw as suspicious contacts between American professors and scientists and government officials in China were something the universities regarded as ordinary academic collaboration.


Attorney General Merrick Garland, questioned by a lawmaker in October about the cases, said the new head of the Justice Department’s national security division planned to review the department’s approach to countering threats posed by the Chinese government. A spokesman said that review would be completed soon, and the agency would provide additional information in the coming weeks.

Chinese officials have called on the U.S. to halt the effort. In a written statement, Liu Pengyu, a representative of the Chinese Embassy in Washington, said that China’s policies in connection with U.S. scientists “are no different from the common practice of other countries,” and that U.S. authorities should “stop stigmatizing China’s programs.” The embassy didn’t comment on the details of Mr. Chen’s case.

The U.S. effort seems to have helped Beijing attract Chinese-American scientists to China. More than half a dozen top researchers of Chinese descent said in interviews they had either moved from posts at U.S. universities to China or were looking for a chance to do so, saying they feared becoming a target of what they viewed as Justice Department overreach.

The federal government has estimated that each year more than $225 billion in intellectual property is lost to China. National-security officials have said publicly that U.S. universities are a key conduit in that loss of technology.

Beginning in about 2018, as the Trump administration criticized a variety of China’s trade and technology practices, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and U.S. agencies that sponsor much university research began flagging instances where grant recipients appeared to be trying to transfer sensitive technologies to China and to hide Chinese funding when applying for U.S. government support.

Separately, American officials urged universities to more thoroughly vet certain types of collaborative research with institutions in China, citing Chinese law that allows the government to tap any technology or research conducted under such collaborations to advance its own interests.

In 2019, federal prosecutors began charging academics with lying to U.S. grant-giving agencies about their China connections. In the summer of 2020, FBI Director Christopher Wray told lawmakers that the agency was opening a China-related counterintelligence case every 10 hours, and warned that Americans “are the victims of what amounts to Chinese theft on a scale so massive that it represents one of the largest transfers of wealth in human history.”

On Jan. 13, days before President Biden’s inauguration, prosecutors charged Mr. Chen with failing to disclose some of his ties to China to the Energy Department, which funded some of his research. They alleged he had served as an adviser to the Chinese government, to a Beijing-funded development company and to the board at Shenzhen’s Southern University of Science and Technology, or SUSTech, the institution with which MIT was collaborating.

As agents investigated Mr. Chen, they suspected he had pursued the collaboration at SUSTech not to benefit MIT but to benefit China, according to people familiar with the matter.

“The allegations of the complaint imply that this was not just about greed, but about loyalty to China,” said Andrew Lelling, then the U.S. attorney in Massachusetts, in announcing the case.

In a later filing, lawyers for Mr. Chen, who became a naturalized American citizen in 2000, described Mr. Lelling’s “speculation” about Mr. Chen’s loyalty as “grossly insulting.”

From the moment that charges were filed, MIT has offered vigorous defenses of its professor and the university’s SUSTech collaboration, saying such cooperation was crucial to advancing science. MIT President Rafael Reif called the arrest “deeply distressing and hard to understand.”

In a group letter to Mr. Reif, more than 200 of Mr. Chen’s colleagues wrote: “The complaint against Gang vilifies what would be considered normal academic and research activities, including promoting MIT’s global mission.”

A lawyer for Mr. Chen, Robert Fisher, said his client was grateful for the support and “looks forward to his day in court.”

Mr. Chen was born in 1964 and grew up in China’s Hubei province, where his mother had been forced to move during the Cultural Revolution. His university assigned him to study thermal power, which his father thought meant he would become a boilermaker. Instead a Chinese-American scientist recruited him to the University of California, Berkeley, where he earned a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering in 1993.

After stints at Duke University and the University of California, Los Angeles, he moved to MIT in 2001, assembling a large research group and churning out papers on topics such as how to use batteries to convert thermal energy into electricity. In 2013, he became head of MIT’s mechanical engineering department.


By the mid-2010s, MIT was cultivating ties with China. It received $125 million from Chinese nationals and organizations between 2015 and 2019, more than any of its university peers, according to self-reported data collected by the Education Department. It also received around $11 million from now-blacklisted Chinese telecom giant Huawei Technologies Co., other Education Department data show. The U.S. government alleges that Huawei gear could be used by Beijing to spy globally, which Huawei has denied.

Chinese diplomats in New York often dropped by MIT to visit Chinese students, and they were in frequent contact with Mr. Chen, who was one of the most cited researchers in his field and was well-known in China. Those contacts, captured as the U.S. monitored Chinese diplomats, landed Mr. Chen on the U.S. government’s radar, according to people familiar with the matter.

The diplomats asked Mr. Chen to serve in various posts. Mr. Chen spurned some Chinese requests and accommodated others. In 2013, he declined to serve on an advisory panel for the Chinese government, according to people familiar with his activities. The next year, told it would involve minimal effort, he accepted the offer, but there is no record that he followed up or was paid for it, those people said.

In February 2016, China’s then vice minister of science and technology, Wang Zhigang, visited Boston and spoke to MIT officials and faculty, including Mr. Chen, both on campus and at a dinner with Chinese-American scientists. In the subsequent complaint against Mr. Chen, prosecutors cited notes he took on his phone that day as evidence of his efforts to advance China’s strategic goals.


The most recent convention of the Chinese Communist Party had “scientific innovation placed at core,” Mr. Chen had written, noting that the question was “how to promote MIT China collaborations.” Mr. Chen later said the notes merely reflected Mr. Wang’s words to him.

After the meeting, MIT’s associate provost for international affairs, Richard Lester, asked Mr. Chen how China’s science ministry could be a partner for MIT in China. “It would seem from today’s meeting that there is a possible path forward there,” Mr. Lester wrote in an email.

At MIT, officials were particularly interested in Shenzhen, a city adjacent to Hong Kong that had grown into an advanced manufacturing and technology center.

In 2016, Ma Xingrui, then-Communist Party secretary for Shenzhen, pushed visiting U.S. professors for partnerships between the city’s institutes and U.S. universities, including the Georgia Institute of Technology and Stanford University. He suggested to Mr. Chen that he consider a collaboration between MIT and SUSTech, the university the city’s government had set up to complement the economic growth.

Former national-security officials not connected to Mr. Chen’s case said SUSTech’s recruitment of scientists with experience at labs run by the U.S. Department of Energy, including the SUSTech’s past president, had raised suspicions among government security officials.

MIT officials viewed a SUSTech collaboration favorably, given SUSTech’s Western-trained faculty and its decision to teach many classes in English. They believed Shenzhen’s manufacturing prowess would be valuable for MIT students to experience.

U.S. investigators were concerned about Mr. Chen’s continued contacts with Chinese government officials as he kept them apprised of the SUSTech-MIT plans.


Shenzhen, a city adjacent to Hong Kong, has grown into an advanced manufacturing and technology center.
PHOTO: BERTHA WANG/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
In January 2017, Mr. Chen accompanied a dozen MIT faculty members to SUSTech for a workshop to discuss areas in which the two schools could cooperate.

That February, a Chinese diplomat sent Mr. Chen another note that was flagged by prosecutors. In it, Mr. Chen was told that the science ministry had launched a new area of funding for “key special projects” between China and other governments. The diplomat encouraged Mr. Chen to consider the MIT-SUSTech collaboration as such a project, provided he obtain related U.S. government funding. Mr. Chen never responded.

One month later, Mr. Chen renewed a grant he has received for more than a decade from the Energy Department, to continue his research into how atoms vibrate and carry heat in plastics.

Mr. Chen was reimbursed for his travel to speak at a California conference hosted by ZGC Capital Corp., a Silicon Valley fund affiliated with Zhongguancun Development Group, a company funded by the city of Beijing that was a member of an MIT program that connects faculty with industry. Prosecutors later alleged he hid from the Energy Department a post ZGC offered him. He turned down the post but continued to work with the Beijing company through the MIT program, people familiar with the matter said.

In the fall of 2017, Mr. Chen took a paid position to mentor students at a middle school in Chongqing, whose headmaster, Wu Xianhong, was the founder of investment company Verakin and had endowed a fellowship at MIT. Mr. Chen gave a speech there, encouraging students not to fear science. Mr. Wu’s investment company advertised the affiliation, saying it offered a talent program that had “famous experts and professors from top universities” as tutors. Prosecutors said in the indictment that Mr. Chen hid that post from the U.S. as well. Lawyers for Mr. Chen have argued he was under no obligation to disclose it.


In June 2018, MIT and SUSTech struck a deal under which SUSTech agreed to pay MIT $25 million over five years. SUSTech would send some faculty members and students to MIT each year, and MIT faculty members and students would travel to Shenzhen. That fall, Mr. Chen took a sabbatical from MIT and spent part of the semester at SUSTech.

That November, MIT continued to expand its engagement with China, hosting with the Chinese Academy of Sciences a science and technology conference in Beijing. MIT’s president and Mr. Chen introduced the event.

The event included discussions between MIT professors and the founders of technology companies iFlytek Co. Ltd. and SenseTime. The following year, the U.S. Commerce Department added both firms to its blacklist, accusing them of playing a role in Beijing’s repression of Muslim minorities in northwest China. SenseTime described the allegations as unfounded, and iFlytek has said the U.S. move wouldn’t have a serious effect on its business. MIT has since terminated a research collaboration with iFlytek.

In 2019, Congress held a hearing in which U.S. national-security officials warned about scientific interactions with China.

That April, MIT said it wouldn’t renew its contracts with Huawei, and would intensify its vetting of projects that involved China, Russia or Saudi Arabia. Apparently, it didn’t think its January 2020 visit to SUSTech—which preceded Mr. Chen being questioned at the airport—would present any problem.



After Mr. Chen’s arrest early this year, Mr. Reif, MIT’s president, indicated that MIT and the government appeared to be construing the SUSTech collaboration very differently. “These funds are about advancing the work of a group of colleagues, and the research and educational mission of MIT,” he said. MIT has continued to pay Mr. Chen’s legal bills.

In a recent LinkedIn post, Mr. Lelling, the former Massachusetts U.S. attorney whose office charged Mr. Chen, said he thought the Justice Department should rethink its efforts to “avoid needlessly chilling scientific and business collaborations with Chinese partners.”

Meanwhile, professors at MIT and SUSTech are continuing their collaborations. University officials say they are still working to figure out how to respond to the growing calls to decouple the U.S. and Chinese economies while maintaining a welcoming research environment.

At an October hearing on research security before a House subcommittee, MIT’s vice president for research, Maria Zuber, said law enforcement and the university would benefit from better understanding each other, given the differences in the ways they work and share information. “It’s a work in progress,” she said.

—Lekai Liu contributed to this article.

Write to Aruna Viswanatha at Aruna.Viswanatha@wsj.com and Sha Hua at sha.hua@wsj.com

« Last Edit: December 20, 2021, 08:07:38 PM by Crafty_Dog »

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Gov DeSantis moves to take FL pension funds out of China
« Reply #156 on: December 22, 2021, 03:52:32 AM »
DeSantis aims to pull all state pension funds out of China

Investors accused of ties

BY JAMES VARNEY THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and some of his administration’s top officials moved Monday to take control of the state’s huge pension portfolio from private asset managers that invest heavily in communist China.

At a meeting of the State Board of Administration, Florida Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis and Attorney General Ashley Moody joined Mr. DeSantis, a Republican, in a motion to “revoke all proxy voting authority that has been given to outside fund managers.”

The state officials said they need to ensure that fund managers “act solely in the financial interest of the state’s funds.”

The measure also orders a survey of the Florida Retirement System’s investments “to determine how many assets the state has in Chinese companies.”

The state took action after Consumers’ Research, a conservative watchdog group, launched a campaign accusing BlackRock, the world’s largest investment company by assets under management, of close and growing ties with Beijing.

The bond between BlackRock CEO Larry Fink

and China’s communist leaders also has drawn criticism from left-wing billionaire George Soros.

In addition to investing clients’ money in Chinese companies, BlackRock was awarded a contract to sell mutual funds in China. The venture has raked in some $1 billion, according to published reports.

“I would like the SBA to survey the investments that are currently being done,” Mr. DeSantis said in a statement. “When the Legislature comes back, they can make statutory changes to say that the Communist Party of China is not a vehicle that we want to be entangled with. I think that that would be something that would be very, very prudent.”

Figures for BlackRock’s investments in China are difficult to pinpoint, but they represent a small portion of the more than $9.6 trillion in assets that the firm manages.

BlackRock’s China A Opportunities Fund, which has returned more than 32% since its 2018 inception, has more than $47.4 million, according to its most recent report.

“BlackRock has been using their proxy votes to hamper American companies, leading to higher burdens on Americans when we can least afford it,” Consumers’ Research Executive Director Will Hild said. “They have used American investment dollars to cozy up to the Chinese Communist Party in a betrayal of our nation that puts American pension dollars at risk.”

BlackRock declined a request for comment.

Although Mr. Fink is an ardent supporter of green initiatives and BlackRock has tried to force American companies to follow an environmental agenda, China is the world’s biggest producer of greenhouse gases.

China also has been accused of numerous human rights violations, including forcing Muslimminority Uyghurs into labor camps, stifling Hong Kong’s traditional democracy, and silencing and coercing tennis star Peng Shuai over rape charges against a high government official.

National security officials have raised concerns about investments in Chinese companies that operate with the permission of the communist leadership and, in some cases, work closely with the military.

Published reports show Black-Rock has invested in at least two Chinese companies, iFlytek and Hikvision, that have been added to the U.S. “entity list” as national security and foreign policy threats.

It is not illegal to invest in such companies, although they are forbidden from trading with U.S. corporations.

Florida’s announcement is the latest in a string of state initiatives to signal that companies should focus on business and profits for shareholders rather than a political agenda.

Last month, West Virginia Treasurer Riley Moore led a coalition of 15 states that threatened to pull funds if bankers tried to stifle oil and gas companies to appease environmentalists.

Mr. Moore called the warning a “pushback against woke capitalism.”

Some top Florida officials supported Mr. DeSantis’ concern Monday.

“As Americans got our cheap goods, the Chinese government wasn’t playing by the rules when it came to intellectual property or trade,” Mr. Patronis said.

“I take my fiduciary responsibilities seriously, and I think the SBA needs to start asking harder questions when it comes to whether investing any more in China is a good idea. It seems limiting our exposure to China is not only good for our country, but it is the financially prudent thing to do for our state,” he said.

The Securities and Exchange Commission and other federal agencies have cautioned that Chinese investments can be subject to the whims of communist leaders and are outside the influence of U.S. or other regulators.

In September, the SEC warned of risks associated with variable interest entities, which are listed on U.S. stock markets but are essentially shell companies with no control over the Chinese entities.

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Harvard prof convicted
« Reply #157 on: December 22, 2021, 05:25:22 AM »

ccp

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Harvard Prof smuggling suitcases full of cash to US from China
« Reply #158 on: December 22, 2021, 06:20:00 AM »
From Wikipedia :

notice the bullshit part about this is "McCarthyism" and linkage to "Trump"

no mention out scientists are being bribed by Chinese so they can steal our science
and they are happily taking cash, grants and other bribes to do so , selling us all out in the name of "SCIENCE".  And speak out against this traitorous behavior and you get called "McCarthyist",  a MAGA etc .

And of course he has to be Jewish.....Harvard Prof.  Anyone think he is a Democrat - but he does vote for the party that states they represent the poor. so it is all ok because he feels for the poor in his righteous heart  :roll:

Federal charges
On January 28, 2020, Lieber was charged with two federal counts of making a materially false, fictitious and fraudulent statement about his links to a Chinese university. According to the Department of Justice's charging document,[72] there are two counts of alleged crime committed by Lieber. First, during an interview by DoD on April 24, 2018, Lieber was asked whether he was involved in the Thousand Talents Program. Lieber stated that "he was never asked to participate in the Thousand Talents Program", adding that "he 'wasn't sure' how China categorized him." The DOJ believes that Lieber's statement was false, because an intercepted email dated June 27, 2012, from Wuhan University of Technology ("WUT") included a contract for Lieber to sign. Second, in November 2018, the NIH inquired of Harvard University about Lieber's foreign affiliations. In January 2019, Harvard interviewed Lieber and reported to NIH that Lieber "had no formal association with WUT" after 2012. The DOJ believes Lieber's statement was false. Lieber was charged with two counts of violating 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(2), one on April 24, 2018, and one in January 2019 for making the allegedly false statements.

During his arraignment, authorities executed search warrants at his home and office in Lexington, Massachusetts. Lieber was placed on paid administrative leave by Harvard.[73]

On June 9, 2020 the Department of Justice indicted Lieber on false statement charges alleging that, unbeknownst to Harvard University and beginning in 2011, Lieber became a "Strategic Scientist" at Wuhan University of Technology (WUT) in China. He later became a contractual participant in China's Thousand Talents Plan from at least 2012 through 2015.[74] A month later he was also charged with four tax offenses for failing to report income he allegedly received from China.[75]

Critics expressed worry that Lieber's arrest could be McCarthyism, as a part of the rising tension with China due to China–United States trade war, started under the Presidency of Donald Trump.[76][73][77][78] Dr. Ross McKinney Jr., chief scientific officer of the Association of American Medical Colleges, reports anxiety among his colleagues that scientists will be scrutinized over legitimate sources of international funding, "...slowly but surely, we're going to have something of a McCarthyish purity testing."[76] In March 2021, several dozen scientists, including seven Nobel Prize winners, published an open letter in support of Lieber, arguing that his prosecution by the government was "unjust" and "misguided" and "discouraging US scientists from collaborating with peers in other countries."[79]

In the spring of 2021, Lieber requested that his trial be expedited because he was suffering from lymphoma.[75]

Lieber's trial opened on December 14, 2021 in Boston with jury selection. He pleaded not guilty to all six felony charges.[80][81][82] On December 21, 2021, Lieber was found guilty on two counts of making false statements to the U.S. government, and of failing to declare income earned in China and a Chinese bank account.[83] In a taped interview, Lieber admitted travelling from China with tens of thousands of dollars in bags of cash, which he said he never disclosed to the IRS.[84]"


Crafty_Dog

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Re: China Chinese penetration of America
« Reply #159 on: December 23, 2021, 02:07:53 AM »
Perhaps a certain amount of puffery on the part of the organization, but worth noting nonetheless

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2021/12/21/report-33-members-congress-advisory-board-group-ties-ccp-affiliated-organization/



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Thirty months for treason
« Reply #162 on: December 25, 2021, 05:56:35 AM »

https://www.theepochtimes.com/former-us-navy-sailor...
Former US Navy Sailor Sentenced to 30 Months for Exporting Military Equipment to China
By Frank Fang December 22, 2021 Updated: December 22, 2021 biggersmaller Print

A former U.S. Navy sailor has been sentenced to 30 months in prison for conspiring with her husband to illegally ship export-controlled sensitive military equipment to China for profit, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) announced on Dec. 21.

Ye Sang “Ivy” Wang, 37, a naturalized U.S. citizen from China, was a logistics specialist for the U.S. Naval Special Warfare Command from 2015 to 2019, where her duties included making military equipment purchases, according to a DOJ statement.

The Naval Special Warfare Command—the naval component of U.S. Special Operations Command (USSOCOM)—includes the Navy’s SEALS and Special Boat Teams.

Her husband, Shaohua “Eric” Wang, 38, also a naturalized U.S. citizen, enlisted his wife to “use her Navy position” to purchase military equipment for resale, according to the statement. He traveled to China frequently, had buyers in the country, and maintained a warehouse in China to house the military equipment.
In March 2018, Ivy used her military email and her mailing address at the Navy command to order “a device for identifying United States military personnel in the field,” the DOJ stated. When the device arrived at the Navy command, she was deployed in Iraq. She told her command that the item was for her husband for an upcoming camping trip.

Upon her return from Iraq in October 2018, she admitted to law enforcement agents that she knew that her husband was shipping military equipment to China illegally.

Her husband continued to press her to make more purchases, even handing her an Excel spreadsheet of items that he wanted her to buy. According to prosecutors, Ivy got so “annoyed” at her husband that she “gave him her password to her military email and told him to buy the export-controlled military equipment posing as her” when she was deployed overseas.

“Ms. Wang betrayed her oath to the U.S. Navy and ultimately threatened the operational readiness and safety of our nation’s military by attempting to acquire and illegally export sensitive military equipment to China,” said Joshua Flowers, special agent in charge of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service’s Southwest Field Office, according to the statement.

In addition to her 30-month sentence, Ivy was also fined $20,000. Her husband was sentenced to 46 months for his role in the scheme on Feb. 3, 2020, according to the DOJ. The couple is from San Diego.

According to a court document (pdf), Ivy became the target of an investigation when a special security officer in Navy command was alerted that she had repeatedly tried to obtain a top security clearance. Her job already granted her a classified security clearance. The officer was also alarmed to learn that she was compiling a list of the Navy command’s deployment personnel records, including names and addresses, according to the court document.

Court documents also show that one of the companies that she reached out to was the U.S.-based Airborne Systems, a maker of military parachutes. It’s unclear if she purchased anything from the company on behalf of her husband.



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« Last Edit: January 03, 2022, 08:36:15 AM by DougMacG »

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Re: Chinese Comm... Faucian Slip
« Reply #169 on: January 03, 2022, 12:14:21 PM »
https://media.gab.com/system/media_attachments/files/094/792/039/original/4444b06d41a8abf7.mp4


Fauci:  "Yes, we had a very minor collaboration with the Chinese Communists, uh, Chinese scientists."

Let's see.  Do the Communists or the scientists run the Institute?  I believe he had it right the first time.

If what they did was good and right and the responsible thing to do, why is the qualifier, "very minor", so emphasized?

If you did it to gain function, er, knowledge, of all these viruses, where is that knowledge of all these viruses.
Very, very, very best case, you squandered that taxpayer money and should be fired or prosecuted.  Worst case, your recklessness funded this pandemic.

https://nypost.com/2021/06/04/wuhan-lab-was-to-get-1-5m-in-federal-grant-money-for-bat-study-emails/

If you gave me $1.5 million to gain no knowledge of viruses whatsoever, would the money be very minor or would it be criminal?
« Last Edit: January 03, 2022, 12:29:23 PM by DougMacG »

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Re: Chinese penetration in Times Square
« Reply #171 on: January 08, 2022, 11:37:55 AM »

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Re: China Chinese penetration of America
« Reply #172 on: January 08, 2022, 05:37:51 PM »
Of course, but OTOH I'm not seeing that we should limit our access to all sides because the other side does.

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ET: Looming Threat of Chinese Spyware
« Reply #173 on: January 18, 2022, 04:05:27 AM »
The Looming Threat of Chinese Spyware
Bruce Abramson
Bruce Abramson
 January 17, 2022 Updated: January 17, 2022biggersmaller Print
Commentary

One of the great lessons of the past two years has been that the events poised to change our lives often percolate far from public consciousness.

Gain-of-function research on coronaviruses interested almost no part of the general public until it was far too late.

Critical race theory took over our classrooms long before parents began to notice, complain, and find themselves playing a late defense.

Street riots had been part of the American terrain since 2014, but most people other than those directly involved more-or-less shrugged them off until a massive wave engulfed urban America.

Few other than activists or election scholars thought much about the role of propaganda, or about balancing ballot access and election integrity, until the credibility of America’s elections came under attack.

Which is why it might be worthwhile to set these now-front-burner issues aside for a moment and consider another critical threat arising in a place that few Americans care to look: the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) spyware worming its way into our defenses, infrastructure, communities, schools, and homes courtesy of procurement policy and purchasing decisions.

Like the issues that dominate today’s front pages, this one is already visible—at least at the federal level—to those who are willing to look:

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) maintains a National Vulnerability Database (NVD). Relying in part on the NVD, a 2019 Inspector General report (pdf) singled out the Department of Defense’s procurement of Lenovo computers, Lexmark printers, and GoPro cameras as potential threats to national security—a threat that we have yet to address.

Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), in a February 2021 report (pdf) raising awareness about China’s economic long war against the United States, argued that “Chinese firms’ presence in Silicon Valley should not be treated as aboveboard commercial ventures but as spying outposts for the CCP.”

And just last week, a letter from representatives John Katko (R-N.Y.) and Andrew Garbarino (R-N.Y.) (ranking members of the House Committee on Homeland Security and Subcommittee on Cybersecurity, Infrastructure Protection, and Innovation, respectively) to Secretaries Alejandro Mayorkas (Homeland Security) and Gina Raimondo (Commerce), called for an inquiry into whether “civilian agency procurement of commercial off-the-shelf information technology items may pose cybersecurity risks for telecommunications infrastructure,” comparable to the national security vulnerabilities discussed in the IG report.

In a sign of the glacial pace that the federal government has set in addressing these critical issues, last week’s letter was essentially a followup of their inquiry dated last April 13 (pdf).

Still, the federal government deserves at least some credit for basic awareness of the issue. That’s more than can be said for the states. Lenovo, Lexmark, and other brands with CCP ties are used widely in state government offices around the country. Robert Chernin, my colleague at the American Center for Education and Knowledge (ACEK), recently called out the National Association of State Procurement Officials (NASPO) for its master contracts with Lenovo.

That contract is hardly the only problem at the state level. The procurement contracts that landed these Chinese products in government offices positions the CCP to track critical information on American infrastructure, energy, security, emergency awareness, and personnel. Perhaps hitting a bit closer to home, it also gives the Chinese regime a far better window into America’s classrooms than most American parents can claim.

It seems likely that most of these potential incursions are happening not because of corruption or maliciousness, but rather because of laziness, inattention, and the insularity of procurement decisions. If Lenovo or Lexmark makes your school district a compelling offer, why not take it?

We’ve all been there. Though we all know today that our devices and software spy on us, most of us can remember when we first learned that “if you’re not the customer, you’re the product.” Millions of us have simply accommodated ourselves to a world in which a few tech titans—and the various companies to whom they’ve sold their collected data—know the most intimate details of our lives.

Perhaps it’s time to consider that these giant and intrusive American corporations may be the least of our problems. According to a recent report in the Washington Post, China has been so pleased with its domestic surveillance network and social credit scores that it’s now expanding its reach across the globe. America’s wide open procurement policies and love of low prices is welcoming that expansion with open arms.

Taken together, the dissemination of Chinese technology products at all levels threatens the privacy and security of every American. It’s long past time to think about the implications of our purchasing and procurement decisions. As we learned the hard way with the issues that have dominated the past two years, the time to act is before things hit the front page.

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.


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Case against MIT prof dropped
« Reply #175 on: January 20, 2022, 01:42:50 PM »
U.S. Drops Case Against MIT Professor Accused of Hiding China Ties
Gang Chen was one of around two dozen academics charged since 2019 with allegedly lying about their affiliations

The U.S. had pursued Gang Chen on suspicions that he had forged a collaboration between MIT and a university in Shenzhen to benefit China.
By Aruna Viswanatha
Updated Jan. 20, 2022 1:48 pm ET


Federal prosecutors dropped criminal charges against a Massachusetts Institute of Technology mechanical engineering professor accused of hiding his China ties, saying in a Thursday filing that the government no longer believed it could prove its case at trial.

Gang Chen was arrested last January on charges of concealing posts he held in China in a grant application he had made to the U.S. Department of Energy in 2017. The Wall Street Journal reported last week that prosecutors had recommended that the Justice Department drop the case, based in part on witness testimony that investigators obtained since his arrest, citing people familiar with the matter.

One of those people included an Energy Department official who told prosecutors in recent weeks that the agency didn’t believe Mr. Chen had an obligation to disclose the posts at the time, and didn’t believe the department would have withheld the grant if officials had known about them. The Energy Department later started asking researchers for more information about their foreign connections.

“As a result of our continued investigation, the government obtained additional information bearing on the materiality of the defendant’s alleged omissions,” prosecutors wrote. “Having assessed the evidence as a whole in light of that information, the government can no longer meet its burden of proof at trial.”

The judge overseeing the case, U.S. District Judge Patti Saris, signed off on the dismissal, but could ask the government for more information about its decision.

In a statement, Mr. Chen’s lawyer, Rob Fisher, said: “The government finally acknowledged what we have said all along: Professor Gang Chen is an innocent man.” Mr. Fisher added that Mr. Chen was never in a Chinese government talent recruitment program and never served as an overseas strategic scientist for Beijing, as prosecutors had initially alleged.

In a separate statement, Mr. Chen thanked his friends and colleagues for their support “during this terrible year,” and said the Justice Department’s other similar cases continue “to bring unwarranted fear to the academic community and other scientists still face charges.”


In a December article, the Journal reported on how U.S. government investigators pursued Mr. Chen on suspicions that he had forged a collaboration between MIT and a university in Shenzhen to benefit China, though the collaboration had the support of MIT. Some of the posts Mr. Chen was accused of hiding, the Journal reported, were either connected to his relationships through MIT or those he wasn’t paid for, and Justice Department officials had discussed dropping his case last year.

The U.S. Attorney in Boston, Rachael Rollins—who was sworn in to the post last week after Vice President Kamala Harris broke a tie on her confirmation—said in a statement that prosecutors had an obligation “to continually examine the facts while being open to receiving and uncovering new information.”

“Today’s dismissal is a result of that process and is in the interests of justice,” Ms. Rollins said.

MIT had supported Mr. Chen since his arrest and continued to pay his legal bills. After prosecutors’ Thursday filing, MIT President Rafael Reif posted a letter to the MIT community saying, “Having had faith in Gang from the beginning, we can all be grateful that a just outcome of a damaging process is on the horizon. We are eager for his full return to our community.”

Mr. Chen was one of around two dozen academics charged since 2019 with allegedly lying about their affiliations, in attention-grabbing cases brought by the Justice Department to address suspicions that the Chinese government was exploiting academic ties to engage in technological espionage.

Some of the cases have been successful for the U.S. government. A jury convicted Harvard University chemistry professor Charles Lieber in December 2021, for example, of lying to Defense Department investigators and others about his participation in the Chinese government’s Thousand Talents program aimed at wooing foreign experts.

But another case, the first to go to trial, ended in an acquittal in September after a judge said that prosecutors had provided no evidence that the professor intended to deceive the government, and prosecutors have dropped several other cases.


Attorney General Merrick Garland said in October that he would task the Justice Department’s assistant attorney general for national security, Matt Olsen, with reviewing the department’s approach to countering threats posed by the Chinese government. The Justice Department is expected to provide more information about the results of that review in the coming weeks, a spokesman has said.

Write to Aruna Viswanatha at Aruna.Viswanatha@wsj.com

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Podesta, Bill's Chief of Staff, and Huawei
« Reply #176 on: January 23, 2022, 12:24:31 PM »
China’s Huawei Pays Tony Podesta $1 Million for White House Lobbying
By Eva Fu January 22, 2022 Updated: January 22, 2022biggersmaller Print
Long time Democratic power broker Tony Podesta has earned $1 million over the past half year lobbying the Biden White House at the behest of a blacklisted Chinese tech giant, recent federal disclosures show.

Huawei, which was placed under trade sanctions during the Trump administration, paid Podesta $500,000 in the fourth quarter of 2021 in an attempt to shake off the trade impact of the restrictions, according to the disclosure form filed on the evening of Jan. 20. With the $500,000 Podesta made from the previous three months lobbying the White House, he has been compensated $1 million over a six-month period for the lobbying effort.

Podesta’s latest lobbying campaign targeted the Executive Office of the President and centered around “telecommunications services and impacted trade issues,” the disclosure said.

Huawei, once the world’s largest telecom makers, has been facing international scrutiny in recent years. U.S. authorities have flagged the China-based company as a national security threat, saying the company’s close ties with China’s ruling communist regime, as well as Chinese law, could make it a potential espionage tool for Beijing.

A stream of U.S. sanctions since 2019—which have barred Huawei from using U.S. technology and software, and shut out its gears from critical U.S. infrastructure—have slashed the company’s annual revenue by a third. In November, President Joe Biden signed into law a bill that further tightened restrictions on Huawei by restricting it from receiving new equipment licenses from U.S regulators.

Battered by the restrictions, Huawei has ramped up its U.S. influence operation in recent months. Podesta is one of half a dozen lobbyists the firm has engaged since July, which includes a former congressman and one former congressional aide, according to disclosure filings.

At the time, the company had been pushing for the release of its chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou, the daughter of Huawei’s founder Ren Zhenfei, who had been detained in Canada on fraud charges for business dealings with Iran evading U.S. sanctions.

Meng was eventually allowed to return to China after inking a deal with the Department of Justice.

Tony Podesta’s brother, John Podesta, served as White House chief of staff to former U.S. President Bill Clinton and the chairman of Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign. He was also a former counselor to President Barack Obama, overseeing climate and energy policies.

Epoch Times Photo
President Bill Clinton (R), his Chief of Staff John Podesta (C), and his aid Doug Band (L), leave the Oval Office of the White House for the last time on Jan. 20, 2001. (STEPHEN JAFFE/AFP/Getty Images)
The filings indicate that Huawei spent $3.59 million on lobbying in the United States in 2021, nearly eight times as much as the year before. The$3.59 million was also half a million higher than heightened spending in 2019, when the sanctions were first put into place.

The White House and Huawei did not immediately respond to The Epoch Times’ inquiries. Tony Podesta declined to comment and directed all questions to Huawei.





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Re: China Chinese penetration of America
« Reply #181 on: January 27, 2022, 09:37:10 AM »
you beat me to the above posts

this is really a scandal of the highest order

how crooked and f'g stupid these politicians
are

yet no comment for the corrupt msm who also is bribed to look the other way
 
 :x :x :x

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Re: China Chinese penetration of America
« Reply #182 on: January 27, 2022, 09:39:22 AM »
Both my mom and I bought the book yesterday!

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Re: China Chinese penetration of America
« Reply #183 on: January 27, 2022, 11:41:59 AM »

http://ace.mu.nu/archives/for%20your%20leader%20choose.jpg



you beat me to the above posts

this is really a scandal of the highest order

how crooked and f'g stupid these politicians
are

yet no comment for the corrupt msm who also is bribed to look the other way
 
 :x :x :x

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ET: Rep. Tenney slams China-run tech co for attempting to interfere w Congress
« Reply #184 on: January 29, 2022, 09:41:18 AM »
Malicious’: Rep. Tenney Slams China-Run Tech Giant for Attempting to Interfere With Congress
By Rita Li and Steve Lance January 28, 2022 Updated: January 28, 2022biggersmaller Print

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Rep. Claudia Tenney (R-N.Y.) criticized Chinese surveillance giant Hikvision as being “very malicious and malevolent” for attempting to interfere with U.S. government protocols and silence dissenting voices.

“It is really just no business of a foreign Chinese-backed company to be interfering and trying to use and exploit our Ethics Committee to try to spy on and try to cause sanctions, or even fining or any other penalties, to be weighed in on a U.S. company that is actually exposing them in the media,” Tenney told NTD, The Epoch Times’ sister media, during a Jan. 26 program.

Washington has blacklisted China’s Hikvision, a leading video surveillance gear maker both at home and abroad, since 2019 under Trump-era orders over cybersecurity and human rights concerns. The U.S. government said the company, with a market value of over $70 billion, supports the Chinese Communist Party’s human rights abuses in the far-western Xinjiang region.

IPVM specified in a March report last year how data captured by facial recognition cameras across China should be segmented by dozens of characteristics—from eyebrow size to skin color and ethnicity.

The congresswoman said the state-controlled Chinese company had attempted to go after IPVM, a Pennsylvania-based video surveillance research firm that has published key investigations revealing the long-standing issues against the tech giant. Last year, Hikvision wrote to congressional ethics officials, asking to investigate IPVM’s alleged illegal activities, Axios reported.

“It was attempted censorship, using our very own government against another [U.S.] company,” Tenney said during the interview.

Play Video
“This company is very malicious and malevolent,” she said. “Hikvision is actually a Chinese backed state-run surveillance company that actually sadly, is doing the type of surveillance and video surveillance to actually determine ethnicity. And it’s been used against the Chinese Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities in China to segregate them and to target them.”

In a joint letter with Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) sent on Jan. 18 to congressional clerks, Tenney said Hikvision is “bullying” American publisher IPVM into silence for its unfavorable reporting.

The alleged influence attempt came after Hikvision resigned its membership in the Maryland-based trade organization Security Industry Association (SIA), putting it down to IPVM’s participation. IPVM called the act an excuse in a statement, saying Hikvision was being investigated for violating the SIA ethics code and facing the risk of being expelled.

Tenney said many companies in the West hope in a good faith that China open up and minimize human rights violations. “But the opposite is true. They’re really naturally and instinctively authoritarians, and they can be cruel and exacting.”

“And they’ve used the United States. And some of these, I’ll say naive … U.S. partners, who have allowed this to continue to fester and grow. … They undermine freedom and they undermine human rights along the way,” she said.

re-education camp in Xinjiang
The outer wall of a believed re-education camp is equipped with several surveillance cameras in China’s northwestern Xinjiang region on May 31, 2019. (Greg Baker/AFP/Getty Images)
Hikvision, together with Dahua Technology, another one of China’s largest artificial intelligence companies also blacklisted by Washington, owns one-third of the global market share for video surveillance, according to a report by Deutsche Bank AG (pdf).

More than 300 different U.S. government organizations, including local governments and public schools, have purchased cameras and surveillance systems from the two companies since August 2019, government contract data show.

The Epoch Times has reached out to Hikvision for comment.



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CCP collecting US Olympians DNA?
« Reply #187 on: January 31, 2022, 12:29:16 PM »
CCP May Collect Top American Athletes’ DNA at Beijing Olympics, Experts Say
By Dorothy Li and Joshua Philipp January 30, 2022 Updated: January 31, 2022biggersmaller Print

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Sealed from the rest of Beijing in a “closed-loop” bubble, over 200 American athletes are receiving daily COVID screening for the Winter Olympics. But some experts worry that U.S. Olympians’ DNA might be collected by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

Patricia Adams, executive director of Canada-based non-profit Probe International, said “it’s a very likely possibility” that the CCP will be collecting top-performing athletes’ DNA at the Games.

“They [CCP] are doing the testing every day … and [there’s] absolutely no oversight over the use of the products that they’re getting,” Adams said during a Jan. 26 webinar on EpochTV’s “Unmasking Communist China” program.

In the online event, Stephen Yates, chief executive of consultancy firm DC International Advisory, spoke of the threat posed by the Chinese regime’s mass collection of personal information and health data. U.S. officials and experts have previously sounded the alarm that Beijing is amassing a large database that includes Americans’ personal and health information, which could be used to enhance artificial intelligence systems and fields of medicine, as well as assist in espionage and military operations.

The danger, Yates said, lies in the CCP using the mass data set for unethical purposes.

“China has weaponized artificial intelligence and a lot of other studies of the human process in ways that civilized countries wouldn’t even allow, so we don’t have any way to really know what this dark window of the future might be,” he said.

According to Yates, CCP may use the massive data set to give their athletes a competitive advantage or increase opportunities for psychological warfare.

The Winter Olympics is set to open in Beijing on Feb 4. The diplomatic boycotts announced by the United States and a spate of other countries, which is meant to hold the communist regime accountable for its human rights violations in Xinjiang, don’t keep athletes from competing at the Games.

The U.S. athletes arrived in Beijing on the evening of Jan. 28, and were sent straight to hotels situated in a closed-loop system surrounded by wire fences. Everyone in the bubble can only leave via special vehicles, and staff in full protective suits carry out mouth swabs on them every day.

Epoch Times Photo
A security guard stands guard at a hotel parking in Beijing on January 29, 2022. (KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV/AFP via Getty Images)
In the online event, Adams suggested that the CCP may “get rid of an American who’s the likely winner of the gold” through what she described as “nefarious means using false positive COVID test.”

Beijing’s Olympic organizers on Jan. 29 denied reports that they may potentially manipulate COVID test results, saying that the tests are up to international standards, according to state media China Daily.

Adams said that “at the end of the day, it’s all being done by the Chinese government, and nobody really knows what’s going to happen to the data.”

She noted the problem is “nobody trusts the Chinese government.”

“The Chinese government has demonstrated to the world over and over and over again that they don’t follow rules. They follow their own rules. They don’t follow international rules. They don’t follow treaties that they’ve signed.”

The CCP’s known record of cyber espionage has led several countries, including the United States, UK, and Canada to tell their athletes to bring a burner phone for the Games. Cyber security experts warned that Beijing 2022, a compulsory health app for the Games, may spy on users through encryption flaws.

“I think that athletes are very, very nervous. And they’re not happy,” said Adams.

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Schweizer: Chinese capture of US elites
« Reply #188 on: January 31, 2022, 12:34:38 PM »
China Is Undermining the US Through Elite Capture: Author
By Frank Fang and David Zhang January 30, 2022 Updated: January 31, 2022biggersmaller Print

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The United States is currently traveling down a losing path in its battle against China because the communist regime has co-opted many American elites in Washington, Wall Street, corporate America, and the U.S. tech sector, warned author Peter Schweizer.

Schweizer, who recently released his new book “Red-Handed: How American Elites Get Rich Helping China Win,” said that his book shows how appalling it is that some of the elites have been willing to “kowtow to the regime” just so that they have access to the Chinese market.

“They should be embarrassed,” he added. “They seem to be all too happy to do the bidding for Beijing when it comes to American politics.”

Schweizer made the remarks during a recent interview with EpochTV’s “China Insider” program. He is also the president of U.S.-based think tank Government Accountability Institute.

“I think what’s important for people to keep in mind is that Beijing doesn’t have to lobby for its own interest, because there are so many powerful interests in the United States that will lobby on their behalf,” he said.

The present course will only mean that China will replace the United States as the world’s top superpower, according to Schweizer.

“Unless we start to take radical action, we will lose, there is no question in my mind,” he said. “We will lose because our elites will be happy to sell out, collect their money, and position themselves in elite positions for generations to come.”

That outcome does not necessarily mean that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) would occupy the United States, he added, but America as people know it will be very different.

“For some people who say, ‘Look, that’s not my concern,’ this should be their concern,” he said. “Life here is going to be heavily influenced by what the regime in Beijing wants.”

Washington
One of the U.S. government officials named in the book is Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), and how the longtime senator has come to the defense of the CCP while her husband, Richard Blum, reaped profits by inking business deals with Chinese firms with ties to the Chinese regime.

In defending the Chinese regime, Feinstein compared the 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre—where at least 10,000 people were killed by Chinese tanks and soldiers—to the 1970 Kent State shootings and the 1993 Waco siege in Texas, according to Schweizer’s book.

“I was appalled as anyone by the tanks at [Tiananmen] Square, but three tanks of this government went into Waco and killed 29 children,” Feinstein said during a Senate hearing. “Now those are not analogous; they are different situations. It was wrong of our government, and it was wrong of the Chinese government.”

In 1994, when the U.S. Senate was contemplating rescinding most-favored-nation trading status with China, Feinstein objected and said such a move would be “counterproductive” and would “inflame Beijing’s insecurities.”

The book also explores the relationship between Feinstein and former Chinese leader Jiang Zemin, going back to the days when they were mayors in San Francisco and Shanghai, respectively. The book quotes the Los Angeles Times saying the relationship gave Blum “access to the normally impenetrable Beijing political system.”

In 2000, Kam Kuwata, who was Feinstein’s then-spokesperson, was quoted in SFGate saying that Blum “has a right to do business and he’s never done anything wrong.”

Silicon Valley
“Beijing is very sophisticated in appealing not only to the pocketbooks of these players, but also to their egos,” Schweizer said, pointing to Microsoft founder Bill Gates as an example of the latter.

In 2006, China’s state-run media outlet People’s Daily Online named Gates as one of 50 foreigners shaping “China’s modern development.” According to his book, Gates was the only true technologist on the list.

“He’s a member of something called the Chinese Academy of Engineering (CAE), which sounds sort of friendly and nonpolitical. It’s actually, of course, an organization run by the [Chinese] Communist Party, and its goal is to advise the Chinese government on technology policy,” Schweizer said.

Gates was one of 18 foreigners selected by the CAE to be one of its lifetime members in 2017, according to People’s Daily Online. The media outlet explained that the foreigners would be to “improve CAE’s status in the field of engineering.”

The CAE supports the Chinese regime’s policies. In a 2018 article published on its website, CAE’s party committee stated that it provided “important scientific support” to the regime’s industrial blueprint of “Made in China 2025,” while endorsing its “Military-Civil Fusion” strategy and “Belt and Road” initiative.

In June last year, Microsoft was in the middle of controversy when its search engine Bing yielded no results when users in several countries including the United States entered the query “tank man,” the iconic unidentified man who was pictured standing in front of a line of tanks leaving Tiananmen Square in 1989. Microsoft’s explanation for the empty search result, “accidental human error,” drew criticism from human rights organizations.

The CCP
In short, the Chinese regime doesn’t care if American politicians are Republicans or Democrats, as long as they are willing to do Beijing’s bidding, Schweizer said.

“They don’t mind if American politicians talk about the Uyghurs occasionally, or say we should have a diplomatic boycott,” Schweizer said. “They’re fine with that.”

“As long as you’re helping them on the main tenets of what they want, which is access to American finance and access to American technology, and a few other things.”

Schweizer added: “That is the strategy they’re employing.”

The Commission on the Theft of American Intellectual Property estimated in 2017 (pdf) that the U.S. economy suffers an annual loss of between $225 billion and $600 billion due to China’s intellectual property theft each year.

Last year, FBI Director Christopher Wray said that the agency is opening one new China-related counterintelligence case every 10 hours, and has about 2,500 active investigations across the United States.

“My sense of what people have to understand is, the nature of the Chinese regime is such that it cannot be trusted,” Schweizer said. “And I don’t think it can be trusted in its relationship with us and we need to keep that in mind with everything.”

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Feinstein’s office did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

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WT: FBI freaked by level of Chinese penetration
« Reply #189 on: February 02, 2022, 03:22:15 AM »
With mass data theft, China poses threat unlike all others

FBI tries to protect U.S. technological know-how

BY BILL GERTZ THE WASHINGTON TIMES

China’s intelligence services and related hackers are engaged in a “massive, sophisticated” program to steal information as part of a technology theft campaign larger than all other foreign adversaries combined, said FBI Director Christopher A. Wray.

Additionally, Chinese intelligence agents, including professional officers, government officials and co-opted Americans, are all part of a plan to obtain valuable American proprietary technical know-how to support the ruling Communist Party regime, Mr. Wray said in a speech in California on Monday night.

The China threat today “reached a new level — more brazen, more damaging than ever before — and it’s vital that all of us focus on that threat together,” the FBI chief said. He noted that more than 2,000 FBI investigations are focused just on Chinese efforts to steal U.S. information and technology.

“There’s just no other country that presents a broader threat to our ideas, innovation and

economic security than China,” he said. “The Chinese government steals staggering volumes of information and causes deep, job-destroying damage across a wide range of industries, so much so that we’re constantly opening new cases to counter their intelligence operations about every 12 hours.”

In some of his most extensive comments on the campaign, Mr. Wray, noting the FBI’s role in battling the Soviet Union during the Cold War, said the primary adversary for the U.S. now is with China.

“Today, we in the United States and the Western world find ourselves in a very different struggle against another global adversary: the Chinese Communist Party,” he said. “There are some surface-level similarities between the threat posed by the Chinese government and the historical threat of the Soviet Union. The Chinese government also rejects the fundamental freedoms, basic human rights and democratic norms we value as Americans.”

Unlike with the Soviet Union, U.S. companies are heavily invested in China’s economy, and Beijing dispatches large numbers of students to elite U.S. universities. China also commands a far greater financial power and a more dynamic economy than the Soviet Union had before its collapse in 1991, Mr. Wray said.

He said Beijing is using its global reach and market power “to steal and threaten rather than to cooperate and build.”

“That theft, those threats, are happening right here in America literally every day,” he said.

The threat is not just economic; it also poses a challenge to American freedom, the FBI chief said.

China’s state-controlled media provided no response to Mr. Wray’s remarks.

Neal Ziring, technical director of the National Security Agency’s cybersecurity directorate, seconded the FBI chief’s warnings. He said Tuesday that Chinese threats in cyberspace are “huge.”

“The Chinese government has a large number of folks that are dedicated to doing this, spread across multiple elements of their government,” Mr. Ziring said during an online meeting of the Intelligence and National Security Alliance. “And they are very aggressive at what they do.”

The Chinese operations are targets of U.S. intelligence agencies, including the National Security Agency, as well as private-sector security companies, he said. But more needs to be known about Chinese cyber-espionage tradecraft to better counter the threat, he said.

Asked about knowledge of Chinese hacking activities, Mr. Ziring said, “We have some good insights, but we always like to have more.”

Noting his past remarks highlighting the dangers China poses, Mr. Wray doubled down on the problem in the speech at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in California.

The Chinese government uses multiple avenues of attack, often in seemingly nonthreatening ways, analysts say.

For example, President Xi Jinping’s “Made in China 2025” plan targets 10 areas where China seeks to be a technological and market world leader in robotics, green energy production and vehicles, aerospace, pharmaceuticals and other industries.

Chinese spies “throw every tool in their arsenal at stealing the technology to succeed in those areas,” Mr. Wray said. “Here in the U.S., they unleash a massive, sophisticated hacking program that’s bigger than those of every other major country combined.”

The technology collectors operate from most major cities in China and often join forces with cybercriminals whom the FBI chief described as “cyber mercenaries.” He cited the example of a group of Chinese cybercriminals associated with the Ministry of State Security, the civilian spy agency, which he said stole “terabytes” of data from hundreds of companies.

“They’re not just hacking on a huge scale but causing indiscriminate damage to get to what they want, like in the recent Microsoft Exchange hack, which compromised the networks of more than 10,000 American companies in a single campaign alone,” he said.

Chinese intelligence officers support those efforts by targeting the same information, exploiting “scores of cooptees” — people who are not technically Chinese officials but take part in intelligence operations and identify sources, providing cover and communications for spy operations. The human spying networks seek to obtain secrets in nontechnical ways.

China’s government also invests in partnerships with U.S. companies that will give proxies supporting Beijing inside access to valuable technology.

“Sometimes they just wave enough money to get what they want, but often they also conceal which companies they actually control or use companies they don’t literally own but instead can control through embedded Chinese Communist Party cells,” Mr. Wray said.

One goal of the Chinese covert operations is to disguise their technology acquisition efforts from American companies and the U.S. government. The case in Ohio of Chinese intelligence officer Xu Yanjun, recently convicted of economic espionage, highlights what Mr. Wray said is an example of efforts to steal aviationrelated technology.

The FBI said Mr. Xu was engaged in getting proprietary information on an advanced aircraft engine produced by General Electric and a foreign joint venture. Mr. Xu recruited company insiders with access to sensitive data who assisted MSS hackers operating from inside China to target the same data. He also exploited his relationship with a senior information technology official to plant malware in a joint venture laptop.

As a result, the Chinese government was able to steal technology related to a composite turbofan blade technology unique to GE and is now working to produce a copy of the engine.

The operation also involved the use of the social media business platform LinkedIn, a favorite of Chinese intelligence, Mr. Wray said.

“Xu is just one Chinese intelligence officer working for an entire unit dedicated solely to stealing aviation secrets, which is just one of those 10 technology areas the Chinese government has prioritized for stealing,” he said.

Chinese government hackers also have obtained massive amounts of personal data on millions of Americans from hospitals, health insurance companies and credit card firms.

Mr. Wray said Mr. Xi’s promises in 2015 to halt the hacking of U.S. technology and supplying it to Chinese companies did not reduce the problem. “In the years since, they’ve hit ever more companies and workers,” he said.

Stolen data includes source codes from U.S. software companies, testing data and chemical designs from drug companies, and engineering designs from manufacturers.

“The common thread is that they steal the things companies can’t afford to lose, so the Chinese government’s economic theft campaign is not just unprecedented in its breadth, it’s also deeply damaging, undoing the labor, ideas and investments of decades, and leaving lives overturned in its wake,” Mr. Wray said.

China’s government also is targeting people inside the United States “for personal and political retribution,” Mr. Wray said. They include perceived enemies, refugees, dissidents and minority Uyghurs in western China who the State Department declared last year were victims of a government policy of genocide.

Beijing launched its “Fox Hunt” program in 2014 under cover of an anticorruption drive but in reality “targets, captures and repatriates former Chinese citizens living overseas whom it sees as a political or financial threat,” he said.

More than 9,000 people have been forcibly repatriated as part of the Fox Hunt program, under which they are imprisoned or controlled by the government. The program was successful, Mr. Wray said, because much like Beijing’s economic espionage program, the Chinese involved disregard diplomatic norms and international law in grabbing victims.

Hundreds of people in America, primarily green card holders or naturalized citizens, are on the Fox Hunt target list.

The program is “the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the Chinese government’s transnational repression,” Mr. Wray said.

“For decades, the Chinese Communist Party has targeted, threatened and harassed U.S.-based Tibetans and Uyghurs, Falun Gong adherents, prodemocracy advocates and any others who question their legitimacy or authority,” he said.

Mr. Wray said the FBI is applying lessons learned from fighting terrorism to countering the Chinese government threat, using joint counterintelligence task forces around the country.

“The volume of criminal and threatening actions we see from the Chinese government is immense, but the good news is that our partners and allies these days are more alert to the danger than ever,” he said.


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WSJ: FDA raises concerns about China developed drugs
« Reply #191 on: February 10, 2022, 08:46:56 AM »
FDA Raises Concerns About China-Developed Drugs
Agency could slow the plans of big Western drugmakers to sell Chinese-tested medicines in U.S.

Officials at the Food and Drug Administration say they are concerned about the quality of the studies evaluating China-developed drugs.
PHOTO: JASON REED/REUTERS
By Peter Loftus
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Updated Feb. 9, 2022 7:25 pm ET


U.S. regulators are poised to tap the brakes on approving dozens of cancer drugs and other new medicines developed in China.

The regulators have expressed concerns about the quality of studies largely conducted in China and whether the results can apply to patients in the U.S.

The shift threatens to halt the plans of Western drugmakers, including Eli Lilly LLY -0.37% & Co. and Novartis AG NVS -0.60% , who were eyeing billions of dollars in sales from bringing the Chinese medicines to the U.S. It could also raise a new source of tension between the two countries.

Lilly this year was aiming to roll out a lung-cancer immunotherapy developed in China and sell it at a lower price than similar drugs already on the market.

The Food and Drug Administration’s reservations threaten to upend the plans. The impact of its concerns could become clearer Thursday, when agency advisers consider the evidence for the drug from Lilly and its Chinese partner Innovent Biologics Inc. 1801 +6.06%


The advisory committee is expected to vote on whether to recommend FDA approval of the drug and to discuss whether the Chinese clinical-trial results for it are applicable to American patients.

FDA officials say they are concerned about the quality of the studies evaluating China-developed drugs. The officials are also concerned the drugs haven’t been tested in U.S. patients.

“We have nothing against drugs being developed in China,” said Richard Pazdur, director of the FDA’s cancer-drugs division. “Our issue is, are those results generalizable to the U.S. population?”

Two Chinese drug-industry trade groups didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Drug-industry executives and analysts say the apparent shift in tone could lead to delays or outright FDA rejections of efforts to bring a growing pipeline of the treatments to American patients.

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Chinese biotech companies and their Western partners may have to conduct additional tests of their proposed new drugs in U.S. patients, some analysts say.

“There does seem to be a change in tone as to the approvability of these data sets in the U.S.,” said Jacob Van Naarden, president of Lilly’s oncology unit. Innovent didn’t respond to requests for comment. The company said in a document submitted to the FDA that its study conducted in China supports approval.

China, long a source of drug ingredients, has placed a priority on developing a homegrown biotechnology industry in recent years.

In 2019, the FDA approved the drug, Brukinsa, a lymphoma treatment from BeiGene Ltd. , that had been primarily tested in China. Most subjects in the clinical studies that led to the approval were in China, but some were in the U.S.

That same year, Dr. Pazdur said at a medical conference the FDA would accept Chinese-only drug-study results if they were “quality” data.


Researchers work inside a Beijing laboratory at BeiGene, a Chinese biotechnology firm.
PHOTO: GILLES SABRIE/BLOOMBERG NEWS
Clinical trials, especially the large, late-stage studies that regulators review to decide whether to approve a new drug, are among the biggest research and development expenses.

Industry executives and analysts viewed Dr. Pazdur’s comments as offering a kind of shortcut for China-tested drugs to get cleared in the U.S. without having to do extensive U.S. trials.

“Now that path appears to be closing,” Bernstein analyst Ronny Gal said in an interview. He said Dr. Pazdur’s more recent comments amounted to “a clear change in tone at the FDA, from encouraging this to discouraging this.”

Dr. Pazdur said his 2019 comments have been misinterpreted as encouraging companies to take certain steps.

When drugs are tested only or primarily in one country such as China, Dr. Pazdur said, it is difficult to assess whether the drug would have the same benefits and safety profile in the U.S. population.


Richard Pazdur, director of the FDA’s cancer-drugs division, says he has concerns that the Chinese drug studies used outdated study designs.
PHOTO: JOSHUA ROBERTS/BLOOMBERG NEWS
There may be differences between countries in medical care and population that affect how a drug performs, he said.

The FDA has more flexibility to accept China-only clinical data for diseases that are less common in the U.S. than in Asia, such as nasopharyngeal carcinoma, Dr. Pazdur said.

Dr. Pazdur said he was concerned the Chinese studies used outdated study designs, which don’t directly establish whether the China-developed drug works as well as similar drugs approved in the U.S. in recent years.

He also expressed concern about the integrity of data generated by drug studies in China.

An analysis by Chinese regulators in 2016 found that about 80% of domestic drug applications reviewed at that time contained fabricated, flawed or insufficient data from studies, the British Medical Journal has reported.

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In some cases, there were discrepancies between original study data and what was submitted to regulators.

“The elephant in the room is obviously, what is the quality of the data that is coming from these foreign countries?” Dr. Pazdur said.

There are about 25 potential new cancer treatments that were tested only or predominantly in China and which companies have told the FDA they would like to sell in the U.S., Dr. Pazdur said.

FDA officials including Dr. Pazdur raised some of the concerns in an article published by the New England Journal of Medicine in December, titled “The Wild West of Checkpoint Inhibitor Development.”

Checkpoint inhibitors are cancer immunotherapies like the one that Lilly and partner Innovent want to bring to the U.S., named Tyvyt.

Lilly executives have said they would sell Tyvyt in the U.S. at a substantially lower price than older, similar drugs such as Merck & Co.’s Keytruda and Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. ’s Opdivo. Lilly said Wednesday it would sell the drug at a 40% discount to comparable brands, pending regulatory approval.

Keytruda and Opdivo can cost more than $150,000 per patient annually.

Innovent conducted a trial of Tyvyt in nearly 50 hospitals in China that enrolled nearly 400 patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer.

Researchers found that giving patients both Tyvyt and chemotherapy prolonged the median time to disease progression or death to about 8.9 months, versus five months for those on chemotherapy alone.

Mr. Van Naarden said he thought the Tyvyt study was well-conducted and the results are applicable to the U.S. population.

FDA staff said, in a document posted online Tuesday, the data from the clinical trial “are not applicable to the U.S. population and U.S. medical practice.”

A final agency decision on whether to clear the Lilly-Innovent drug is expected by the end of March.

Write to Peter Loftus at peter.loftus@wsj.com


ccp

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Re: China Chinese penetration of America
« Reply #193 on: February 10, 2022, 08:56:49 AM »
".Blackstone founder pumped $100m into Marxist education"

schwarzman
is a "republican"
"close friend to Trump"

but apparently also to RED CHINESE

think of the bright side - he probably gets loads of $$$$
from , thru China ties........ :-P



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Corporate America continues to suck up to China
« Reply #197 on: February 24, 2022, 04:17:54 AM »
https://www.theepochtimes.com/corporate-america-continues-to-coddle-communist-china_4289775.html?utm_source=Opinion&utm_campaign=opinion-2022-02-24&utm_medium=email&est=sZeCzBkyVu2iTqBWxA1WFfC%2FNbjomqI%2BsG3p3FGr1mbYX5frXBf9iGtxVpJMuTYNgiC9

Corporate America Continues to Coddle Communist China
Jared Whitley
Jared Whitley
 February 23, 2022 Updated: February 23, 2022biggersmaller Print

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Corporate America wants you to know that they’re making the world a better, more inclusive, more sustainable, and more (insert buzzword of the day) place. Just look at all their donations to left-wing nonprofits, and rainbow flags, and green logos. They must be good if they say they are, right?

Well, just so long as you don’t look too deeply. When Corporate America jangles “environmental, social, and governance” (ESG) credentials in one hand to distract you like a kitten with a shiny thing, they’re shaking the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) hand with the other hand.

For example, Disney will only make movies that “look like” America, but it isn’t about to put black people on their Chinese movie posters. Big Tech has long since sold out to China, with last year Microsoft-owned LinkedIn even blocking an Axios reporter’s profile in China because she wrote about “prohibited content.” Amazon, Nike, and others were alleged to have potentially used in their supply chains forced Uyghur labor.

Coming full circle, Disney was quick to thank Chinese authorities for their help with “Mulan,” which was filmed right on the doorstep of the Uyghur concentration camps, of which China reportedly has 260.

This kowtowing to pure evil is in spite of the fact that one in five corporations say China has stolen their IP within the last year—and that wealth could be turned against us to blow up our aircraft carriers.

Congress has started paying attention to this, with Republican members of Congress introducing sanctions against China for its horrifying behavior toward the Uyghurs. Whether the Biden administration will respond is doubtful, even when they pay lip service to the idea of growing a spine.

If the embarrassingly low ratings for the Olympics in China are any sign, the American public is sick of this self-destructive selling out to Beijing. Corporations will start pulling out of China, but they need a leader.

Without closely examining the facts at hand, one would think that person could be South African entrepreneur Elon Musk, who is beloved by many on the right and the left. His alternative energy efforts earned him Time’s Person of the Year, and he then went to the conservative Babylon Bee to denounce wokeness as “divisive, exclusionary, and hateful. It basically gives mean people a reason—it gives them a shield to be mean and cruel, armored in false virtue.”

However, Musk seems to be in on the China long-game as well.

In January, two Democrat representatives, Bill Pascrell (D-N.J.) and Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.), joined Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) in castigating Musk for opening a showroom in the Xinjiang region, the heart of the CCP’s anti-Uyghur atrocities. They implored Tesla to set a better example against the CCP’s crimes. It’s unknown the extent of Tesla’s involvement behind China’s red curtain, but we do know Musk took more than $2 billion in loans from China to build its Gigafactory.

In 2021, Musk tweeted well-wishes to the Chinese Communist Party for their 100th anniversary, calling the “economic prosperity” of the oppressive regime “truly amazing.” The previous year, he’d told one podcast that “China rocks.” He criticized the “complacency and entitlement” in the United States, especially in the Bay Area, Los Angeles, and New York—three cities conservatives aren’t going to rush to protect—while praising the Chinese as a “hard-working people.”


Praising slaves… for being hard working?

World affairs have shifted seismically in the last few years. The fact that Western European and North American benevolence and power have positively determined the course of history for the past 100 years is no measure that they will do the same for the next 100. Unless dramatic measures are taken, the CCP will guide the fate of the human race.

This is a group that horribly abuses its own people. The CCP responds to domestic protests with tanks, not open arms. Who knows what their plans are for the rest of us, once nothing can stand in their way?

For years, liberals hated Corporate America because of the corporate part. Now conservatives hate Corporate America for abandoning America. Both sides should come together to oppose abuse of slave labor in China’s oppressive regime. It’s disappointing to see Musk’s name on the list of companies linked to Xinjiang—let’s hope his name will be at the top of the list to reject it.