The Guardian Australia

MI6 chief thanks China for ‘free publicity’ after James Bond spoof

- Agence France-Presse in Beijing

Britain’s spy chief has thanked China’s state news agency for “free publicity” after it posted a James Bond spoof that mocked the western intelligen­ce community’s growing focus on threats posed by Beijing.

The rare response by the head of MI6, Richard Moore, on Thursday comes as China and Britain clash over Beijing’s treatment of its Uyghur minority and creeping authoritar­ianism in the former British colony of Hong Kong.

Moore – codenamed C within the agency – previously said adapting to China’s rise was the spy service’s “single greatest priority” and warned of Chinese “debt traps, data exposure and vulnerabil­ity to political coercion”.

“Debt traps” refers to China extracting concession­s such as the use of ports from countries that sign up to its soft-power infrastruc­ture initiative when they default on loan repayments.

In a tongue-in-cheek tweet on Tuesday, the state news agency, Xinhua, said it had uncovered leaked video of a secret meeting between British and

American spies after Moore bumped Beijing higher up MI6’s agenda.

The attached clip – titled No Time to Die Laughing – featured a pair of Chinese actors playing fictional British spies called James Pond and Black Window.

In response, Moore tweeted: “Thank you for your interest (and the unexpected free publicity!)”

He posted a link to a speech he gave in November in which he said China sought to “exploit the open nature” of British society and “distort public discourse and political decision making across the globe”.

In four and a half minutes of what Xinhua called “rib-tickling moments” filled with canned laughter, the elegantly dressed duo enter a castle and start discussing a dossier on Chinese espionage tactics, only to realise the papers actually refer to the United States.

Pond – codenamed Agent 0.07 – then blasts the “fictional Chinese debt trap and data trap” as a “pathetic” excuse to get more funding for British intelligen­ce.

In a call with an apparent CIA operative, Pond learns the US has tapped his mobile phone. He is warned not to buy a model made by sanctioned Chinese company Huawei due to a supposed “backdoor”, before being given a new phone by the CIA.

“To be America’s enemy is dangerous,” says the champagne-swilling Pond. “But to be America’s friend is fatal.”

Britain caused outrage in China last year after blocking the telecoms company Huawei from involvemen­t in its 5G broadband rollout, after the US raised spying concerns.

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