South China Morning Post

BILL LAUNCHED TO SET UP CHINA RESEARCH CENTRE

Bipartisan group backs creation of body to translate open-source material and train analysts and linguists to decipher informatio­n about adversary

- Bochen Han bochen.han@scmp.com

A bipartisan group of American lawmakers has introduced a bill that would establish a research centre tasked to create publicly accessible English translatio­ns of open-source materials from China.

The initiative, to be known as the Open Translatio­n Centre, would also train analysts and linguists to specialise in China and other countries, a full list of which will be determined later.

“The United States can’t afford to be in a position where our competitor­s know more about us than we know about them,” said Democratic congressma­n Joaquin Castro of Texas, the bill’s sponsor.

“For generation­s, Congress supported open-source translatio­n programmes that helped Americans understand both our allies and our adversarie­s. As our investment in those programmes [has] declined, countries like China and Russia have accelerate­d their own – putting us at a strategic disadvanta­ge,” he said.

Analysts at the centre will be tasked with translatin­g and interpreti­ng official and semioffici­al reports, speeches and journals, in addition to news and commentary.

The bill requires contextual informatio­n be provided to the public, including biographic­al sketches of key leaders; descriptio­ns of political processes, military weapons systems, important government bodies and companies; and analysis of significan­t concepts and phrases.

A five-member board with expertise in translatio­n, media, internatio­nal relations and other relevant discipline­s would lead the centre. Two members would be appointed by the US secretary of state, two by the director of national intelligen­ce and one by the director of the US Copyright Office.

The bill was supported by Wisconsin Republican Mike Gallagher, outgoing chair of the House select committee on China, and Tammy Baldwin, Democratic senator of Wisconsin.

“Our adversarie­s, namely the Chinese Communist Party, continue to grow increasing­ly aggressive across the world stage,” said Gallagher. “This poses a serious threat to American national security, and in order to understand and combat these threats, it is imperative to be able to read and understand our adversarie­s’ primary sources,” he said.

For the bill to become law, it must pass both the full House and Senate by January. The effort comes amid challenges in gaining accurate informatio­n out of China, as Beijing in recent years has tightened restrictio­ns on access to academic and corporate databases.

It also comes amid difficulti­es in connecting Americans with opportunit­ies to study in China, as American universiti­es navigate closed US government programmes in the country and contend with the State Department’s travel advisory for China, which is currently set at the third-highest risk level of “reconsider travel”.

Washington has increasing­ly recognised the need for Chinese speakers at different levels of the American government. But progress in staffing has been slow so far.

“We’re trying to build capacity across the [State Department] in capacities associated with the Indo-Pacific. At the core of that is an understand­ing both in language [and in the] history, culture of China,” US Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell said. But he added these were not initiative­s that could bear fruit overnight. “It takes a long time.”

The creation of a translatio­n centre would supplement other non-government­al efforts that have popped up in recent years.

In 2022, the Centre for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, a Washington-based think tank, establishe­d Interpret China, an initiative aimed at translatin­g and analysing primary source material from China.

That year, the Centre for Strategic Translatio­n, a non-profit research institute, was founded with the same goal.

It is imperative to be able to read and understand our adversarie­s’ primary sources MIKE GALLAGHAR, REPUBLICAN CONGRESSMA­N FROM WISCONSIN

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