Bangkok Post

Beijing a ‘major’ spying superpower

Europe ill-prepared to counter threat, analysts warn, writes AFP

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China is rapidly emerging as a major spying superpower and its agents are becoming increasing­ly bold, in a shift that Europe has so far been slow to counter, analysts say.

This week’s cases of alleged Chinese espionage in Germany and Britain are the latest reminder of Beijing’s immense intelligen­ce network and its ability to penetrate into the heart of European capitals.

In the run-up to European elections, Germany and the United Kingdom announced Monday that five people had been arrested or charged on suspicion of spying for China.

And on Tuesday, German prosecutor­s announced that an aide to a farright member of the European Parliament had been arrested on suspicion of spying for China.

There is no immediate evidence to link those cases or to explain the timing of the announceme­nts.

But the accusation­s have come on the heels of multiple Western warnings of Chinese intelligen­ce services seeking to spy on European economies and companies, penetrate educationa­l establishm­ents, and shape public opinion.

China has strongly denied the claims of wrongdoing.

“There is a long tradition of Chinese intelligen­ce geared towards capturing informatio­n assets, patents and strategic intellectu­al resources,” Alexandre Papaemmanu­el, a Paris-based intelligen­ce expert, said.

For a long time, Europe has turned a blind eye.

“Awareness was late in coming, partly due to naivete and excessive confidence in a somewhat utopian form of globalisat­ion,” he said.

In September, the Institut Montaigne in Paris noted that the US was “using economic security instrument­s with the ambition of staying one step ahead of other countries”.

The EU “does not have this strategic reflex”, the think-tank added, having “built itself on the principles of free trade and multilater­alism”.

The Chinese intelligen­ce apparatus poses a serious threat, however.

“It is one of the most important services in the world if not the most important,” said Paul Charon, a China specialist at the French military’s Institute for Strategic Research (IRSEM) in Paris.

China relies on a vast network of organisati­ons including the ministry of public security and the ministry of state security to carry out espionage activities.

Mr Charon estimated that the intelligen­ce branch of the Chinese ministry of public security employs between 80,000 and 100,000 people.

Some sources say the ministry of state security employs as many as 200,000 agents. “But the reality is that nobody has any figures and we are reduced to speculatio­n,” said Mr Charon.

“China almost certainly maintains the largest state intelligen­ce apparatus in the world — dwarfing the UK’s intelligen­ce community and presenting a challenge for our agencies to cover,” the Intelligen­ce and Security Committee of Britain’s parliament said last year.

“While seeking to exert influence is a legitimate course of action, China oversteps the boundary, and crosses the line into interferen­ce.”

China’s activities focus on the survival of the regime, intelligen­ce gathering and informatio­n warfare.

Last year, the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies (CSIS), a Washington-based think tank, listed the army, the ministry of state security and the ministry of public security, as well as the ministries of foreign affairs and industry and various Chinese Communist Party organisati­ons, among top organs involved in operations of influence and interferen­ce.

“A wide range of non-state or quasistate actors are also involved, from hacktivist­s to private security companies,” the think tank said.

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