Weekend Herald

Bombshell claim about NZ politics

- David Fisher

An influentia­l United States Congress hearing has been told “one of the major fundraiser­s for Jacinda Ardern’s party” is linked to the Chinese Communist Party and it showed China had penetrated New Zealand’s political networks.

As a result, US lawmakers needed to consider whether New Zealand should be kicked out of the Five Eyes intelligen­ce alliance because of problems at its “political core”.

The bombshell testimony included claims from a former Central Intelligen­ce Agency analyst that “anything on China that was briefed to Bill English was briefed to Mr Yang Jian”, the National MP revealed last year as having trained spies for China.

The hearing of the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission was aimed at gathering evidence on China’s relationsh­ip with traditiona­l US allies.

UN Senator James Talent — once touted as Donald Trump’s pick for Secretary of Defence — raised concerns about “a sharp rise in political donations” from Chinese Government-backed bodies to political parties in Australia and New Zealand.

China’s actions included getting people linked to the Communist Party or People’s Liberation Army elected and had made it worth the while of political figures “to parrot its line on issues it deems important”.

The hearing heard testimony from former CIA analyst Peter Mattis who said the Chinese Communist Party had worked “very close to or inside the political core” of Australia and New Zealand and “one of the major fundraiser­s for Jacinda Ardern’s party has United Front links”.

However, he said New Zealand “have denied that there’s a problem at all” and failed to follow Australia’s lead in setting up an inquiry into China’s activities.

As a result, he said New Zealand’s Five Eyes partners (Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom and the US) “need to have a discussion about whether or not New Zealand can remain given this problem with the political core”.

He said “it needs to be put in those terms so that New Zealand’s Government understand­s that the consequenc­es are substantia­l for not thinking through and addressing some of the problems that they face”.

New Zealand’s membership of the Five Eyes has been considered by successive government­s as a cornerston­e of our security.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said the Five Eyes relationsh­ip was strong. “None of them have ever raised such concerns with me, nor have I heard that they’ve ever been raised with anyone else.

“Our intelligen­ce agencies are constantly undertakin­g a wide range of investigat­ive activity on foreign threats and we constantly review our safeguards.”

Labour’s General Secretary Andrew Kirton said the party followed the law on donations and had no idea which donor the Congressio­nal testimony referred to.

“We have no knowledge whatsoever of what or who this is referring to.”

Opposition leader Simon Bridges rejected claims Yang received improper briefings from the former Prime Minister.

He also said National followed the law on political donations and had seen no sign of improper influence.

Bridges said there should be no risk to the Five Eyes relationsh­ip.

“What it does show, however, is a growing mistrust of this Government in the US. If New Zealand is being viewed with increasing mistrust by the US then the Prime Minister needs to get to work repairing what is an extremely important relationsh­ip to New Zealand.”

NZ Security Intelligen­ce Service director-general Rebecca Kitteridge said she would not reveal the areas on which spies were focused because it would harm their work.

“Investigat­ing foreign intelligen­ce activity and interferen­ce in New Zealand is a core function of NZSIS.”

David Fisher is a member of a

Reference Group formed by the Inspector General of Intelligen­ce and Security. No informatio­n in this story was sourced from Reference Group discussion­s.

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