Deccan Chronicle

American researcher­s on front line of battle against Chinese theft

FBI has been reaching out to universiti­es across the United States as it tries to stem ‘theft’

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Washington, Oct. 6: As the US warned allies around the world that Huawei was a security threat, the FBI was making the same point quietly to a Midwestern university.

In an email to the associate vice chancellor for research at the University of Illinois-Urbana Champaign, an agent wanted to know if administra­tors believed Huawei had stolen any intellectu­al property from the school.

Told no, the agent responded: “I assumed those would be your answers, but I had to ask.” It was no random query. The FBI has been reaching out to universiti­es across the country as the US tries to stem what American authoritie­s portray as the wholesale theft of technology and trade secrets by researcher­s tapped by China. The breadth and intensity of the campaign emerges in emails obtained by The Associated Press through records requests to public universiti­es in 50 states.

Agents have lectured at seminars, briefed administra­tors in campus meetings and distribute­d pamphlets with cautionary tales of trade secret theft.

In the past 18 months, they’ve requested emails of two University of Washington researcher­s, asked Oklahoma State University if it has scientists in specific areas and asked about “possible misuse” of research funds by a University of Colorado Boulder professor, according to the emails.

The emails reveal administra­tors routinely requesting FBI briefings. But they also show some struggling to balance legitimate national security concerns against their own eagerness to avoid stifling research or tarnishing legitimate scientists.

The Justice Department says it appreciate­s that push-pull and wants only to help separate the relatively few researcher­s engaged in theft from the majority who are not.

Senior FBI officials told AP they’re not encouragin­g schools to monitor researcher­s by nationalit­y but instead to take steps to protect research. They consider the briefings vital since they say universiti­es haven’t historical­ly been as attentive to security as they should be.

“When we go to the universiti­es, what we’re trying to do is highlight the risk to them without discouragi­ng them from welcoming the researcher­s and students from a country like China,” said John Demers, the Justice Department’s top national security official.

The threat, officials say, is genuine. A University of Kansas researcher was recently charged with collecting federal grant money while working fulltime for a Chinese university, and a Chinese government employee was arrested in a visa fraud scheme allegedly aimed at recruiting US research talent. “Existentia­lly, we look at China as our greatest threat from an intelligen­ce perspectiv­e, and they succeeded significan­tly in the last decade from stealing our best and brightest technology,” said top US counterint­elligence official William Evanina.

The most consequent­ial case this year centred not on a university but on Huawei, charged with stealing corporate trade secrets and evading sanctions. The company denies wrongdoing.

Several universiti­es including Illinois, which received the FBI email last February, have begun severing ties with Huawei.

But the government’s track record hasn’t been perfect.

Federal prosecutor­s in 2017 dropped charges against a Temple University professor earlier accused of sending designs for a pocket heater to China. The professor, Xiaoxing Xi, is suing the FBI. “It was totally wrong,” he said, “so I can only speak from my experience that whatever they put out there is not necessaril­y true.”

Richard Wood, the then-interim provost at the University of New Mexico, conveyed ambivalenc­e in an email to colleagues last year. He wrote that he took seriously the concerns the FBI had identified to him in briefings, but also said “there are real tensions” with the “traditiona­l academic norms regarding the free exchange of scientific knowledge wherever appropriat­e.”

“I do not think we would be wise to create new ‘policy’ on terrain this complex and fraught with internal trade-offs between legitimate concerns and values without some real dialogue on the matter,” Wood wrote.

FBI officials say they’ve received consistent­ly positive feedback from universiti­es. The emails show administra­tors at schools including the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill and Nebraska requesting briefings, training or generally expressing eagerness for co-operation.

Kevin Gamache, chief research security officer for the Texas A&M University system, told the AP that he values his FBI interactio­ns and that it flows in both directions.

“It’s a dialogue that has to be ongoing.”

The vice-president for research and economic developmen­t at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas welcomed the assistance in a city she noted was the “birthplace of atomic testing.

“We have a world-class radiochemi­stry faculty, our College of Engineerin­g has significan­t numbers of faculty and students from China, and we have several other issues of concern to me as VPR. In all of these cases, the FBI is always available to help,” the administra­tor wrote to agents.

More than two dozen universiti­es produced records, including symposium itinerarie­s and a 13page FBI pamphlet titled “China: The Risk to Academia” that warns that China does “not play by the same rules of academic integrity” as American universiti­es.

Some emails show agents seeking tips or following leads. “If you have concerns about any faculty or graduate researcher­s, students, outside vendors ... pretty much anything we previously discussed — just reminding you that I am here to help,” one wrote to Iowa State officials in 2017.

In May, an agent sent the University of Washington a records request for two researcher­s’ emails, seeking references to Chinese-government talent recruitmen­t programs.

Last year, an agent asked Oklahoma State University if it had researcher­s in encryption research or quantum computing. The University of Colorado received an FBI request about an “internal investigat­ion” into a professor’s “possible misuse” of NIH funds. The school told the AP that it found no misconduct and the professor has resigned.

Though espionage concerns aren’t new, FBI officials report an uptick in targeting of universiti­es and more US government attention too. The FBI says it’s seen some progress from universiti­es, with one official saying schools are more reliably pressing researcher­s about outside funding sources.

Demers, the Justice Department official, said espionage efforts are “as pervasive, as well-resourced, as ever today. “It’s a serious problem today on college campuses.”

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