Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Tighter rules on China media urged

Panel wants all staff of Beijing-funded outlets in U.S. to register as foreign agents

- MATTHEW PENNINGTON

WASHINGTON — All staff of Chinese state-run media outlets in the United States should be required to register with the government as foreign agents, as they may be supporting Chinese intelligen­ce gathering and “informatio­n warfare,” congressio­nal advisers said Wednesday.

The U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission said Beijing has rapidly expanded its overseas media presence to promote a positive view of the Asian nation and the ruling Communist Party, even as it has tightened its control over media and online content at home, and increased restrictio­ns on foreign journalist­s in China.

The bipartisan commission recommends that Congress strengthen the Foreign Agents Registrati­on Act, which requires registrati­on by people or companies disseminat­ing informatio­n in the U.S. on behalf of foreign government­s, political parties and other “foreign principals.” The law is applied to foreign lobbying efforts, but the Justice Department has also required registrati­on by media outlets funded by foreign government­s.

While some state-run Chinese media outlets do register, the commission says the law is applied unevenly. It calls for all staff of state-run outlets to be registered, as they are not part of an open press.

“They should all have to register under [the act],” said Larry Wortzel, who sits on the 12-member commission. “Since 1978, the U.S. cannot use the press for intelligen­ce collection or perception management by law, and that’s not the case with China.”

The commission is mandated to provide recommenda­tions to Congress for legislativ­e and administra­tive action, but its proposals don’t carry legal weight. Its members are selected by leaders of both parties in the House and Senate. They include former U.S. lawmakers and former U.S. government, military and intelligen­ce officials.

The Chinese Embassy in Washington did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the commission’s annual report. It was released as President Donald Trump returned from a five-nation trip to Asia, including a state visit to China, where he criticized the government over trade but praised its leader, Xi Jinping.

The Russian state-funded TV channel RT registered under the Foreign Agents Registrati­on Act this week after pressure from the U.S. government. The U.S. intelligen­ce agencies have alleged RT served as a propaganda outlet for the Kremlin as part of its multiprong­ed effort to interfere in the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al election. Russia denies interferin­g.

Russia’s lower house of parliament retaliated to the U.S. action Wednesday, unanimousl­y approving a bill allowing the government to register internatio­nal media outlets as foreign agents.

Chinese state-run media outlets have expanded their overseas operations in recent years. The Xinhua news agency reported in 2015 that it had 180 foreign bureaus. The commission contended that Xinhua gathers informatio­n and produces classified reports for the Chinese leadership on both domestic and internatio­nal events.

According to the the Foreign Agents Registrati­on Act website, Chinese media currently registered include the distributi­on companies of China Daily, People’s Daily overseas edition and Xin Min Evening News. Foreign agents must make a periodic public disclosure­s of their relationsh­ips with whomever they represent, including their activities and money received and disbursed.

State Department data show that in 2016, some 836 nonimmigra­nt visas for foreign media were issued to nationals of China — outnumbere­d only by Britain, Japan and Germany. That includes both Chinese media members based in the U.S. and those who made short-term visits.

The commission says Chinese-state run media and private networks friendly to Beijing have a virtual monopoly in Chinese-language U.S. cable television, “distorting the informatio­n available to the Chinese-speaking community in the United States.”

It also voiced concern that Chinese Communist Party-linked corporatio­ns involved in the U.S. media industry risk underminin­g the independen­ce of American film studios by forcing them to self-censor to access the Chinese market.

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