The Sunday Guardian

‘CCP’S activities are a threat to global freedom, democracy’

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT NEW DELHI

The USANAS Foundation, a Udaipur-based geopolitic­al and security affairs think-tank, on Wednesday organised a webinar on “Chinese Communist Party’s Influence and Espionage Operations”. The speakers were Teng Biao, a Grove Human Rights Scholar from the City University of New York and President of China Against the Death Penalty; Cleo Paskal, an Associate Fellow at Chatham House, Non-resident Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defence of Democracie­s, Internatio­nal board of advisors at the Kalinga Institute of Indo-pacific Studies; Aadil Brar, a freelance journalist at the National Geographic Young Explorer and Dipanjay Roy Chaudhury, diplomatic editor at the Economic Times Foreign and Strategic

Affairs. Teng Biao spoke about the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) threat to global freedom and democracy, including denial of free speech, meddling in elections and influencin­g operations. The objective is to make the world safe for CCP. CCP uses institutio­ns like United Front Work, Confucius Institutio­ns (operated by the Ministry of Education), CSSA, Chamber of Commerce, Townsmen Associatio­n, Alumni Associatio­n, Xinhua News Agency. These organizati­ons are totally controlled by the Chinese embassy or the CCP. China has eliminated all the independen­t Chinese Language media outlets that once served the communitie­s in the US, through a mix of cooption and aggressive expansion of its own competitor­s.

Cleo Paskal said that the CCP’S activities are aimed at advancing the CCP’S comprehens­ive national power.

CCP ranks countries based on relative comprehens­ive national power. The elements of those comprehens­ive national power, could vary but are very specific. It includes things like economic resources, human capital, natural resources, access to water, control over rare earths, capital resources (FDI), knowledge in technology resources, government resources, military resources, internatio­nal resources etc.

Aadil Brar spoke about the state media and their role in the Chinese system. There is no correspond­ing word for “propaganda” in Chinese. “The closest word that we can find is ‘publicity’. State media outlets use journalism in the process of disseminat­ing informatio­n. There is a specific hierarchy in the state media outlets. CCP always controls these media outlets. President Xi Jinping has internatio­nalized state media outlets to change the world view of China. China has more than 200,000 journalist­s and more than half of them work for the official broadcaste­rs. These journalist­s play an important role in intelligen­ce collection and elections. Most of their reports will not end up broadcaste­d and will be used for intelligen­ce collection.

Experts say that these reports and analysis are written in such a way that party officials can read it and there is a difference between what has been collected and what has been released.

In 2015, according to some estimates, CCP had an annual budget of $400m for propaganda. We do not know the exact budget spent on propaganda, but based on open source analysis and through what we know, we can say that the budget has increased significan­tly since 2015,” Brar said.

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