China Daily (Hong Kong)

Chinese students are not spies

- Berlin Fang

Following a deadly Florida school shooting, that resulted in 17 deaths, including that of a Chinese-American student who held the door to let classmates escape, we learned that the FBI received a tip-off about the shooter last month, but failed to act.

The FBI was probably too busy with other threats, such as Chinese students in the United States, who, according to Elizabeth Redden on the website of Inside Higher Ed, could be spies. In a piece titled “The Chinese Student Threat?”, published on Feb 15, Redden wrote that FBI’s director Christophe­r Wray told a Senate panel that the US academic sector is naïve about the intelligen­ce risks posed by Chinese students and scholars.

I was red with anger reading the piece, as Redden portrays all Chinese students and scholars in the US as a risk to its national security. It is hard not to take this personally. Although sometimes I wish my life was that colorful. “The name is Fang, Berlin Fang.”

Then you would see on the screen something like 007. The truth of course is much less interestin­g. In my case, the reality is I have devoted the better part of my working life training people to use educationa­l technology, such as Canvas, Respondus Lockdown Browser, Screencast-o-matic. I have also translated American literature into Chinese, and I write for Chinese media about the things that I observe in the US as a way of making my small contributi­on to promoting goodwill between the two peoples. I also have kids making pledges of allegiance to the American and Texas flags.

Now, all of a sudden, it seems we are suspected of being spies.

Redden wrote another piece for Inside Higher Ed, titled “China’s ‘Long Arm’” that was published on Jan 3. Part of the evidence she put forward for China’s reach was Professor Kevin Carrico twice discovered, in his six years of teaching, that something he taught in class about sensitive topics was reported in China and then back to him. Therefore, the assumption was there were spies in his class.

Carrico should probably be informed that Chinese students use the social media app WeChat, and like US students who post stuff on Facebook or Snapchat, they post things that catch their attention to share with their friends. To think that there is some espionage involved is ridiculous.

Among the other evidence Redden presented was a speech given by University of Maryland student Shuping Yang, which she began by praising the “fresh air” in the US. Yang’s speech came under heavy criticism in China, and I watched the Chinese social media reaction to her speech unfold. If Redden suspects that there was a “long arm” behind this, she is seriously mistaken. When the speech was posted online, Chinese netizens showed their disapprova­l much the same way as middle school students disliking a classmate trying overly hard to impress a teacher. To find some conspiracy with government backing in this fiasco is to tilt at windmills.

 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

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