Author Topic: China Chinese Penetration and Invasion of America  (Read 76506 times)

ccp

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Re: China Chinese Penetration and Invasion of America
« Reply #500 on: January 14, 2025, 02:39:39 PM »
The public should know China could damage our civilians causing mass deaths as he heads out the door.

OMG.

What were our intelligence people doing all this time besides getting Trump?
People like Brennan should be hanged.  He has to have known all this. 

And out big tech companies entering China's markets gave away GOD knows what and imported all their corrupted devices, machines and now they brainwash our children who don't understand what is going on.

We are in a world of hurt.    And no, this is not chicken little talk.


ccp

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Crafty_Dog

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Re: China Chinese Penetration and Invasion of America
« Reply #502 on: January 16, 2025, 08:49:27 AM »
Good to see FBI beginning to do its job.

ccp

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John Stewart - well he could do his show on Newsmax maybe.
« Reply #503 on: January 18, 2025, 06:18:37 AM »
all the intertwining of business with China was supposed to lower risk of war and bring out countries to cooperate and need each other.

Instead the CCP manipulated it all.

Like Newt Gingrich's interview of the author of the book about how Hollywood kowtows to Chinese communists.

https://omny.fm/shows/newts-world/episode-261-feeding-the-dragon-the-movies-the-ccp


Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: Trump, TT, and Xi
« Reply #505 on: January 18, 2025, 08:23:56 AM »
Trump, TikTok and Xi Jinping
The President’s duty is to enforce the law, not cut a deal with China.
By The Editorial Board
Jan. 17, 2025 5:44 pm ET

The Supreme Court on Friday unanimously upheld a law requiring TikTok to divest from its Chinese owner ByteDance or face a U.S. ban. Now the question is whether Donald Trump will enforce this law.

The Justices in an unsigned ruling (TikTok v. Garland) affirmed the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals decision last month that the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act doesn’t violate the First Amendment. That’s because the law is content-neutral and narrowly tailored to address Congress’s compelling national-security concerns.

TikTok hoovers up data on U.S. users and their contacts. Chinese law requires its companies to share data with Communist Party officials on demand. The Court notes that U.S. officials worry Beijing could “track the locations of Federal employees and contractors, build dossiers of personal information for blackmail, and conduct corporate espionage.”

For these reasons, Mr. Trump in 2020 ordered TikTok to be banned if it wouldn’t divest. A lower court blocked his order because it exceeded his executive power. The Biden Administration then spent two years trying but failing to reach a deal with ByteDance that addressed the government’s security concerns.

Congress finally roused itself and passed the law giving TikTok 270 days—until Jan. 19—to divest or be banned. Beijing has effectively blocked a divestment by prohibiting ByteDance from ceding control over TikTok’s algorithms, which it treats as a state secret.

Yet after the Justices appeared poised in last week’s oral arguments to uphold the law, media outlets reported that Chinese officials are considering a sale of TikTok to Elon Musk. How interesting. Could Beijing be trying to play Mr. Trump?

President Biden on Friday kicked the issue to Mr. Trump, who says he wants to save TikTok. But the law lets the President extend the deadline by 90 days only if there is “significant progress” on a sale. There isn’t. Yet Mike Waltz, Mr. Trump’s pick for national security adviser, on Wednesday said the President-elect is actively exploring options to save TikTok.

Mr. Trump would do best to let ByteDance negotiate with willing buyers and not try to broker a deal as he did during his first term. His advisers at the time scotched a deal with Microsoft because it might be compromised from operating a search engine in China that complies with Beijing’s censorship. Mr. Musk would be similarly conflicted owing to his Tesla investment in China.

Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin then tried to cut a deal in which U.S. investors including Oracle (whose co-founder Larry Ellison was a Trump fundraiser) would obtain majority ownership of a new TikTok Global, which would hire 25,000 Americans.

But the deal collapsed, and nothing short of a full divestment would mitigate the national security risks. Congress judged that alternative remedies would let ByteDance still use “surreptitious surveillance,” the High Court explains in its Friday ruling, and “the ‘size’ and ‘complexity’ of TikTok’s ‘underlying software’ may make it impossible for law enforcement to detect violations.”

One question is whether ByteDance and Beijing are now stringing Mr. Trump along by suggesting openness to a deal. Mr. Trump considers himself to be a master negotiator, and Chinese President Xi Jinping may try to coax him into a deal—perhaps by offering some trade concessions—that preserves the Communist Party’s control of the app.

Tech companies such as Apple and Google are subject to stiff penalties if they don’t remove TikTok from their app stores come Jan. 19. But it will be up to the Trump Justice Department to enforce the law. Non-enforcement would send a message that Mr. Trump isn’t serious about national security—or the law.

Mr. Trump on Monday will take an oath to be Commander in Chief, not to be Broker in Chief. His duty as President is to enforce the TikTok law, not ignore it in the hope of cutting a deal with China’s dictator.

ccp

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Re: China Chinese Penetration and Invasion of America
« Reply #506 on: January 18, 2025, 09:36:30 AM »
agree with above post

https://www.cnn.com/2025/01/17/world/trump-xi-phone-call-us-china-intl/index.html

Trump :  I had a "very good" phone call with Xi

If IIRC this is the exact same words he uses to describe every single phone call with all foreing leaders............... :roll:


Body-by-Guinness

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Opening the Books re Chinese Influence @ US Universities
« Reply #508 on: January 22, 2025, 11:04:33 AM »
Universities openly colluding with China to create programs that facilitate technology transfer to China discussed here.

I've had a front row seat to how and why universities seek outside funds that lead to partnerships that may not be in the long term interest of the school, let alone the nation. Preserving the status quo as enrollment declines and federal and state funding gets cut or remains uncertain is on the mind of just about every educrat out there, while university presidents--as they relentlessly climb institutional ladders as they all want to run an Ivy League school at the terminus of their careers--all want to leave a signature building or program behind they can point to as they climb the institutional prestige ladders. One way of doing so involve various university contracts where vendors offer to pay X amount up front "in support of university programming," change management, or some other fig leaf, with those monies dumped into this slush fund or that.

What often happens is the school ends up with a contract that is more expensive for the school, or that provides fewer services for the same spend, or otherwise isn't the best use of funds, but that does manage to conceal those facts while dropping unrestricted funds into this bucket or that. My guess is the Chicoms are well aware of this....

Joint University Programs with China Escape Financial Reporting
Unreported billions could be helping China access American STEM research, defense tech.
OPENTHEBOOKS
JAN 22, 2025

Following last year’s reporting on DEI spending, federal money and foreign donations at elite private universities, Open the Books auditors have been taking a closer look at the finances of a sampling of public universities across the country.

Strikingly, these problems have spilled far beyond those elite Ivory Towers and out to some of the best state schools around the nation.

For example, tens of millions of dollars in contracts from China have demonstrably been used to establish joint university programs that then went unreported to our federal government.

It’s a troubling comparison. Over the past decade, American institutions began pouring money into counterproductive, divisive DEI infrastructure. Meanwhile, China was spending to gain influence in American academia, accessing research and technology to advance their national interests. It happened under Uncle Sam’s radar, and Congress believes the spending continues unreported today – to the tune of hundreds of millions or billions!

Chinese Funding at University of California - Berkeley

UC Berkeley has accepted $790.8 million from foreign sources since 2013, including a staggering amount of Chinese funding.   

China sent $87.5 million to UC Berkeley, more than any other country. The figure doesn’t include $59.4 million from Hong Kong and $57.5 million from Taiwan, which are reported separately.    

The two largest Chinese contracts — worth $19 million and $15 million — were to help fund the Tsinghua-Berkeley Shenzhen Institute (TBSI), a partnership with Tsinghua University that has campuses at Berkeley and in Shenzhen, China.   

In September 2024, an investigation from the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party concluded that the institute and similar programs “serve as conduits for transferring critical U.S. technologies and expertise to China, including to entities linked to China’s defense machine and the security apparatus it uses to facilitate human rights abuses.”   

As of September 2024, following the committee’s investigation, UC Berkeley leadership said they had “started the process of relinquishing all ownership in TBSI.”   

Chinese Funding at Georgia Tech

The Georgia Institute of Technology has accepted $162.8 million from foreign sources since 2013. 

China has spent at least $32.3M with the school in that time period, and at least $18.3 million worth of those contracts helped fund the Georgia Tech-Shenzhen Institute (GTSI). Like Berkeley’s, it’s another partnership with Tsinghua University that has campuses in Georgia and Shenzhen, China. 

As university officials learned of the coming congressional report, they acted even faster than Berkeley did. Days before the House report was released, Georgia Tech announced it was ending its partnership with the Shenzhen Institute. The 300 current GTSI students will still be allowed to finish their degrees. 

CONGRESSIONAL INVESTIGATION

The actual amount of Chinese funding flowing into UC Berkeley is potentially much higher than $87.5 million, and at Georgia Tech it’s perhaps much higher than $32.3 million.

The Committee “uncovered significant failures in the reporting of foreign funding by UC Berkeley and Georgia Tech under section 117 of the Higher Education Act” and projected there are “likely hundreds of millions, if not billions in total” of unreported Chinese gifts sent to American universities. 

“The Chinese Communist Party is driving its military advancements through US taxpayer-funded research and through joint US-[People's Republic of China] institutes in China. Georgia Tech did the right thing for US national security by shutting down its PRC-based joint institute, and UC Berkeley and other universities should follow suit,” Rep. John Moolenaar (R-MI) said at the time.

In its January 2024 report, the Select Committee on the CCP spelled out how the party “exercises control” over these joint programs, saying they are “designed to favor Beijing’s interests.” There are more than 1,500 collaborations with more than 300 U.S. universities and other entities. “Notably, 21 of these US-[China] partnerships are joint institutes that are predominantly focused on STEM fields critical to military and economic superiority.”

Tsinghua and the other participating Chinese universities are “jointly administered by Ministry of Education and SASTIND [State Administration of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense], which…is an arm of the Chinse government whose stated purposes include ‘strengthening military forces with additional personnel and more advance equipment.’”

Tsinghua University also “has a documented history of serving the PRC’s national security and defense apparatus, including involvement in defense research and alleged cyberattacks targeting various international entities,” members of the committee reported.

HOW DID WE MISS THIS?

Yes, the law requires reporting on foreign funding, but these joint projects are often established as their own legal entities – separate from their American university partners. Then the schools have failed to report it exhaustively, and the federal government has sometimes been slow to provide oversight.

Georgia Tech argued GTSI was a separate legal entity and not an “intermediary,” which would trigger reporting. That was false, the committee concluded.

From the House report:

Of relevance, Georgia Tech’s statements of milestone events and promotional information state, “At GTSI, [Georgia Tech] students will earn the same Georgia Tech diplomas as that [sic] issued in Atlanta.” Yet, Georgia Tech contends GTSI is neither an “additional location” nor “branch campus” of Georgia Tech under the [law]. Georgia Tech asserts, instead…that GTSI is simply an “administrative entity” of the “joint initiative between Georgia Tech, Tianjin University, and the Shenzhen Municipal People’s Government,” and that it is an “off-campus instructional site for Georgia Tech students to pursue a master’s degree.” Given GTSI carries out many of the functional duties of an “additional location” or “branch campus,” it certainly appears to have a much closer affiliation with Georgia Tech than a mere “administrative entity.” Bottom line, Georgia Tech failed to comply with section 117 in a timely manner.

For all that legal and technical jargon, Georgia Tech’s joint program certainly got past the spirit of reporting requirements. According to the committee report, the university’s General Counsel began reviewing the school’s reporting in 2022 and determined there was a contract of $17 million “’between’ GTSI and Georgia Tech that originated in 2016, the year Georgia Tech signed a three-way agreement to develop [the] join institute…The $17 million was finally disclosed in Georga Tech’s report to the Department in January 2024 – eight years after inception. Georgia Tech said the money was ‘unintentionally omitted.’”

Berkeley made the same claim – that TBSI was a separate legal entity that they didn’t need to report. And they added a second defense: their contracts were with TEFNA (the Tsinghua Education Foundation of North America). TEFNA is simply an American-based arm of Tsinghua University, but its U.S. base means it’s technically not a “foreign” entity under the law.

According to the House Select Committee on the CCP, the Trump administration carried out various compliance investigations with American universities to ensure the accuracy of their reporting on foreign gifts and contracts. “These investigations by the Trump administration discovered $6.5 billion in previously undisclosed gifts and contributions…from countries that pose serious national security threats. The investigations found many schools failed to disclose more than half of foreign gifts and contracts they received.” A similar 2019 staff report from the U.S. Senate found “up to 70 percent of institutions reviewed failed to comply with section 117 and those that do comply often underreport. These findings showed widespread lack of compliance even though [they] have been in place for over 30 years.”

By contrast, the Biden administration has not opened any new compliance investigations under Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona.

MORE CHINA CASH

Joint programs are not the only way China has gotten a considerable foothold in American universities. Another example at Georgia Tech seems so on the nose it could be part of a spy movie:

The university partnered with the Tianjin International Center for Nanoparticles and Nanosystems to create the world’s first semiconductor made of graphene in January 2024, which could help military computers run faster.

Who founded the Tianjin Center in 2015? That would be an American scientist who fled to China after receiving $5 million from the Department of Defense to research graphene’s applications to the military.

In recent Open the Books reporting on Ohio State University, we found yet another researcher appropriating our intellectual property.

In 2021, Ohio State researcher Song Guo Zheng pleaded guilty in Ohio to fraud for spending a $4.1 million grant from the National Institutes of Health on immunology research for China. Zheng — a member of the Thousand Talents Program, through which China recruits foreign researchers — never disclosed his Chinese affiliations to Ohio State when he was hired in 2013.

He was sentenced to 37 months in prison and fined $3.8 million for lying on applications and using the grants to develop China’s expertise in the areas of rheumatology and immunology.

“For years the defendant concealed his participation in Chinese government talent recruitment programs, hiding his affiliations with at least five research institutions in China. Zheng greedily took federal research dollars and prevented others from receiving funding for critical research in support of medical advances.” - Alan E. Kohler Jr., Assistant Director, FBI Counterintelligence Division.

CONCLUSION

With hundreds of millions or billions behind China’s efforts to penetrate American academia, it’s critical that universities take a closer look at their own reporting and ensure every foreign dollar makes its way into their government reporting.

Similarly, Congress should take action on the House Select Committee’s findings, clarifying the law as needed in order to capture every dime of foreign influence.

https://openthebooks.substack.com/p/joint-university-programs-with-china?r=2k0c5&fbclid=IwY2xjawH-GOlleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHd05MyD-Raq637aVwFi0cSg92JJxuIG5563synn7QEGQ4KuEcOPQOUVuQw_aem_Nks_QYxBqsfwX4HgngYGIw&triedRedirect=true

ccp

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from 11/23
« Reply #509 on: January 22, 2025, 12:12:04 PM »

Crafty_Dog

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Chinese transforners
« Reply #510 on: January 23, 2025, 07:01:40 AM »


Crafty_Dog

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FO: It's getting worse in Telcoms space
« Reply #512 on: January 27, 2025, 09:45:45 AM »


(1) CHINA SEEKING CONTROL OVER GLOBAL TELECOMS: During a House Energy Committee hearing, Open RAN Policy Coalition Director Diane Rinaldo said China is pushing proprietary technologies through the International Telecommunications Union to create a first-mover advantage, forcing other countries to adopt Chinese technology standards and gain long-term control over global telecommunications infrastructure.

Rep. Richard Hudson (R-NC) said China is stealing U.S. intellectual property to gain an unfair advantage in setting international technology standards.

China is using cyber intrusions on U.S. critical infrastructure networks to gain access to sensitive data and influence how global networks operate, Hudson added.

Why It Matters: China has used overproduction to subsidize tech production, allowing China to gain global market dominance on key technologies and expand into the Western Hemisphere and Europe with 5G telecom deployments. Lawmakers proposed reauthorizing Federal Communications Commission authority to expand U.S. telecoms deployments. The Trump administration will likely expand efforts to kick Chinese suppliers off of U.S. telecoms networks and sanction Chinese tech firms. - R.C.

Crafty_Dog

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WT: China aims at states, localities
« Reply #513 on: January 30, 2025, 05:40:36 AM »
China takes aim at states, localities for subversion

Targets include infrastructure, farmland, universities

By Bill Gertz THE WASHINGTON TIMES

The People’s Republic of China is focused on subverting the United States through operations at the state and local level, and greater efforts are needed to counter the danger, according to a report made public Wednesday.

Chinese government agents are waging a large-scale Cold War-style campaign against America that includes fueling deadly fentanyl trafficking, cyber infiltration into critical infrastructure systems, subverting universities and spending large amounts to influence state and local governments to support the ruling Chinese Communist Party’s goals, the report said.

The 64-page collection of 10 essays, “Threat Assessment: The CCP Threat and How State Leaders Can Protect Our Country and Citizens,” is being made public Wednesday. The report was by two groups focused on regional security issues, State Armor and Citizens for Free Enterprise.

Former Arizona Republican Gov. Doug Ducey, head of Citizens for Free Enterprise and author of one of the sections of the report, said state governors are becoming better educated about subversive Chinese activities and are working with their legislatures to meet the challenge.

“Our goal with ‘Threat Assessment’ is to sound the alarm for state leaders and give them a playbook and tools so they can take action to protect their states from CCP threats,” Mr. Ducey said. “This is a drum that we intend to continue to beat.”

Former White House National Security Adviser Robert C. O’Brien said in the report that China is spending “trillions of dollars” under an initiative called Made in China 2025 to achieve global domination of high-tech industries such as robotics, advanced information technology, aviation, electric vehicles, quantum computing, artificial intelligence and autonomous systems.

Chinese firms are buying up U.S. farmland, posing a threat to American food supplies, and Chinese-owned apps like TikTok are feeding vitriolic anti-U.S. propaganda to young people, he said. “China’s ambitions have become clear: Undermine the West at any cost,” Mr. O’Brien stated in a foreword to the report. “U.S. vulnerabilities are not only a federal problem but also a national problem that requires a coordinated response at the state and local level.”

Alexander Gray, another former Trump administration White House official, wrote in the report that the Biden administration in March sent a letter to all governors warning about the threat of Chinese infiltration of critical infrastructure. The letter urged state governments to partner with state, local, tribal and territorial governments to counter the threats.

But Mr. Gray said many states and localities remain unaware of the dangers and are susceptible to Chinese influence operations in peacetime and, in a potential wartime scenario, a wide array of potential Chinese coercive measures.

Peacetime concerns include China’s recruitment of experts to obtain sensitive technology from U.S. universities and the use of Beijing-funded centers that promote Chinese Communist ideology on campuses. CCP agents also are deployed in the United States to harass and intimidate people in universities that oppose Chinese authoritarianism.

The activities also include cooperative initiatives “to subvert or compromise state and local officials,” Mr. Gray said.

Two recent FBI investigations uncovered Chinese agents working for state and local governments: Linda Sun, an aide to New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, was arrested in September and charged with being a Chinese agent, while in California, FBI agents arrested a campaign official for a local politician who was charged in December with acting as a covert Chinese agent.

Mr. Ducey, the former Arizona governor, said local officials need greater support and information from federal law enforcement and intelligence officials to neutralize Chinese operations that include offers of economic development.

“If the goal is to promote state economic development, there are far better ways to benefit your state and community than by acting as an unwitting participant in the [China’s] influence operations,” Mr. Ducey said.

Governors should develop strategies to bring back critical production in their states and attract foreign direct investment from trusted nations “that share our values and not adversaries that are trying to engineer our downfall,” he said.

Mr. Ducey was in office when in 2020 the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) agreed to spend $12 billion on a microchip plant in Arizona.

Michael Lucci, director of the group State Armor, said states are now on the front lines against U.S. adversaries and need to develop new security measures to protect against the Chinese threat.

“State leaders must contribute to whole-of-government deterrence by boldly countering the CCP across all domestic threat areas, defending against China’s hybrid warfare and reorienting state policies in recognition of the Communist Party’s comprehensive strategy to undermine the United States,” said Mr. Lucci, whose Texas-based group has been working to help states better defend against global security threats.

DougMacG

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Re: China Chinese Penetration and Invasion of America
« Reply #514 on: January 30, 2025, 06:38:56 AM »
The idea that China doesn't want to take over the world sure runs up against a lot of stubborn facts.

ccp

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Re: China Chinese Penetration and Invasion of America
« Reply #515 on: January 30, 2025, 06:40:33 AM »
"“State leaders must contribute to whole-of-government deterrence by boldly countering the CCP across all domestic threat areas, defending against China’s hybrid warfare and reorienting state policies in recognition of the Communist Party’s comprehensive strategy to undermine the United States,” said Mr. Lucci, whose Texas-based group has been working to help states better defend against global security threats."

Yup - we have to turn our nation into an entire war machine like they did to stop them.

Body-by-Guinness

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Look Ma, Another Reason to End the Fed
« Reply #516 on: January 31, 2025, 09:26:56 PM »
@BNONews
·
8m
NEW: John Rogers, a former Senior Adviser to the Federal Reserve, has been arrested for giving trade secrets to China

Crafty_Dog

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Are you fg kidding me?
« Reply #517 on: February 01, 2025, 06:25:22 AM »
FO:

(1) DOD EMPLOYEES ACCESSED DEEPSEEK WITH WORK COMPUTERS: Department of Defense employees reportedly accessed the Chinese AI DeepSeek from their work computers for at least two days before the Defense Information Systems Agency blocked access to the website.
The official said military personnel downloaded an earlier version of DeepSeek on work stations in 2024, which did not raise red flags with officials since the connection to China was unclear.
Why It Matters: It is possible China-linked hackers gained further access to Defense Department networks in 2024, around the same time the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency said it detected early signs of the Salt and Silk Typhoon hacks on government networks. China already has extensive access to U.S. critical infrastructure and telecom networks, and has almost certainly infiltrated other U.S. government networks beyond the Treasury Department hack reported last year. - R.C.