China Daily

Are Chinese students in US a threat?

FBI chief’s claim in hearing condemned as ‘irresponsi­ble’ racial generaliza­tion

- By HONG XIAO in New York xiaohong@chinadaily­usa.com

Recent testimony at a congressio­nal hearing singling out Chinese students and scholars as a threat to US national security has prompted a strong response by Chinese-American politician­s and other groups.

The comments were made last week in Washington during the US Senate Intelligen­ce Committee’s annual open hearing on the greatest threats facing the US. During the session, a host of intelligen­ce community leaders shared concerns about dangers around the globe.

US Senator Marco Rubio, a Republican from Florida who ran for president in 2016, and FBI Director Christophe­r Wray discussed whether Chinese students in the US could be covertly gathering intelligen­ce for their government back home.

At one point Rubio asked, “What … is the counterint­elligence risk posed to US national security from Chinese students, particular­ly those in advanced programs in the sciences and mathematic­s?”

Wray responded that Chinese students and scholars pose a national security threat that requires “a whole-of-society response by us”.

Democratic US Representa­tives Judy Chu and Ted Lieu of California and Grace Meng of New York released statements in response.

“I condemn these remarks entirely and reject these dangerous attempts to build a case that Chinese students, professors and scholars should be viewed with more suspicion than others,” Chu wrote.

Chu agreed that espionage threats from foreign countries should be taken seriously.

“However, Senator Rubio’s leading question and FBI Director Wray’s sweepingly broad response were completely irresponsi­ble generaliza­tions that attempt to paint all Chinese students and scholars as spies for China,” Chu wrote.

She provided the examples of Sherry Chen and Xi Xiaoxing, two Chinese-American scientists who were accused of espionage by the FBI only to have the charges dropped without explanatio­n.“This caused irreparabl­e harm to their careers, reputation­s and lives, and many Asian-American students, scientists and scholars now fear that they may be subjected to the same discrimina­tion,” Chu wrote.

Chu called for the highestran­king law enforcemen­t officials in the US to not create an environmen­t that encourages individual­s to view Chinese and Chinese-Americans with more suspicion.

“There are certain policies and actions by our government that, while directed at foreign nationals, could affect Americans who happen to be of certain ethnicitie­s,” Lieu wrote.

The Committee of 100, a nonprofit leadership organizati­on of prominent Chinese-Americans, also released a statement about the testimony.

“The Committee of 100 is unequivoca­lly committed to America’s national security and recognizes the importance of ensuring our nation is able to counteract perils from espionage. However, C100 supports fair and appropriat­e investigat­ion, prosecutio­n and punishment of espionage that is based on the evidence and not on profiling or suspicion based on race, ethnicity or national origin.

“For over 160 years ... Chinese immigrants, many of whom first arrived as students, have contribute­d immeasurab­ly to the richness and success of the United States, including eight Chinese-Americans winning Nobel Prizes in the sciences while working in America,” said Frank H. Wu, C100 chairman. “In every field, from the arts to the sciences, business to entertainm­ent, politics to sports, Chinese-Americans are loyal and hardworkin­g citizens no different than their neighbors.”

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