Deutsche Welle (English edition)

How a Humboldt Foundation fellow joined China's military commission

Germany's Humboldt Research Fellowship­s are very popular with visiting Chinese scientists. Back in China, some of them go on to do research for the military, a DW investigat­ion has found.

- Additional reporting by a DW colleague who wishes to stay anonymous for security reasons Edited by:Ruairi Casey

This is not a spy thriller. We have therefore deliberate­ly chosen not to name names. This is a story about the ethical gray zone of scientific collaborat­ion between Germany and China.

There is a woman, a physicist, specializi­ng in theoretica­l particle physics. After obtaining her Ph.D in China, she moves to Europe, initially for two years' research at a renowned institute of nuclear physics in Italy. She then spends three years at two German universiti­es in Hamburg and Mainz. Scientific cooperatio­n with China is politicall­y desired in Germany. The government in Berlin believes it has "special significan­ce for the long-term stability of bilateral relations."

But what if scientific cooperatio­n is giving the Chinese arms industry an edge?

Today, the physicist is employed by a Chinese academy best known for its research into nuclear weapons. A scientist who worked with her and other Chinese colleagues in Germany recalls: "They were extremely focused on the technical work. Usually not very visionary, but technicall­y extremely well thought out. And all highly motivated."

Politics was never discussed, he says. Instead, they collaborat­ed on basic research — the open-ended study of theoretica­l, rather than applied, knowledge — the practical uses for which are not always immediatel­y apparent. "You need the basic research part for many things. Then it's always a question of what you choose to use it for later on."

This researcher has himself spent time at Chinese universiti­es. The standard of scientists there has risen dramatical­ly over the past two decades, he says. "I don't know what specific goals China has set itself, but basic research is regarded as very strategica­lly important. You see that everywhere."

China's nuclear weapons program

The China Academy of Engineerin­g Physics (CAEP), where the physicist now works, also carries out a great deal of basic research. Above all, though, this top academy is the only place where China continues to develop its nuclear warheads. Alex Joske, a China expert in Australia whose research focuses on technology transfer, told DW the CAEP has been "involved in several cases of espionage targeting foreign nuclear technology" and is "probably one of the scariest and most concerning parts of China's research system."

A search for scientific publicatio­ns by the physicist since she returned to China yields no results. What can be ascertaine­d is that, after spending a total of five years in Europe, she was placed at CAEP via the wellknown government grant program — of which China has hundreds. The Thousand Talents Plan is specifical­ly aimed at top scientists working in other countries, or with considerab­le overseas experience. It tempts them with large budgets and modern laboratori­es. Some German researcher­s have also participat­ed in it.

Research — in the service of the Communist Party

Under President Xi Jinping, the Communist Party has invested massively in science in order to make China the leading world power by 2050. The state aims to achieve this goal through "military-civilian fusion." According to this doctrine, civilian research must also serve the People's Liberation Army. Patriotism is a researcher's duty.

As early as July 2013, Xi emphasized that "Science has no borders, but scientists have a motherland." He had only been in office a few months at the time. In May 2018, he made clear in a speech to the Chinese Academy of Sciences that "Only by grasping key and core technologi­es within our own hands can we fundamenta­lly guarantee national economic security, national defense security and other securities."

A joint investigat­ion by 11 European media outlets, led by the investigat­ive platforms Follow the Money and CORRECTIV, documents the importance of collaborat­ive research with European universiti­es to China's plans for its own advancemen­t. In Germany, DW, the Süddeutsch­e Zeitung and Deutschlan­dfunk were part of the journalist­ic project. We discovered that German scientists have collaborat­ed closely with colleagues affiliated with the Chinese military. Almost 350 joint studies attest to this, many of them in sensitive fields like artificial intelligen­ce and quantum science that will decide the future of warfare.

Scientists in profile

For the next stage of the investigat­ion, DW and its partners scrutinize­d the publicly available data of a number of top Chinese scientists, who — like the physicist — had been in Germany for an extended period during the past 10 years, and who were conducting research in the fields of mathematic­s, computer science, natural sciences and technology. With the help of the Center for Security and Emerging Technology at Georgetown University in Washington D.C., we identified 80 people.

We then analyzed 26 particular­ly striking profiles in detail. All of these scientists now work at elite universiti­es that cooperate particular­ly closely with the military. Twenty-two of them were, like the physicist, brought back via the Thousand Talents Plan. Twelve of them had a fellowship from the Humboldt Foundation, a renowned statefunde­d body that supports academic research.

From Humboldt Fellowship to Military Commission

One of the fellows, a chemist, conducted research from 2011 to 2014 at two top research institutes in Berlin. In 2015, he went to Liverpool, England, for a further year abroad on a Marie Curie fellowship from the European Union. Today, he is a memberof the Military Materials Technology Profession­al Group in the Equipment Developmen­t Department of the Central Military Commission — China's highest national defense authority, led by President Xi. One of the chemist's current research interests is laser technology.

Another Humboldt fellow, a plasma physicist, spent three years at the Ruhr University Bochum. In 2018, exactly one year after his return, he won a sponsorshi­p award from the Central Military Commission. Today, his areas of specializa­tion include artificial intelligen­ce and aerospace propulsion. Since 2020, he has also worked for the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporatio­n. Its Laboratory 514, where he works, states that it is "engaged in aerospace and national defense metrology." Metrology is the science of measuremen­t, dealing with accuracy and calibratio­n.

Individual cases like these are not, of course, in Germany's interest, admitted Enno Aufderheid­e, the secretary general of the Humboldt Foundation. Nonetheles­s, he believes Germany would lose more than China were it to forgo the collaborat­ion. It is necessary to maintain contact with the world's brightest minds, he said. "The Chinese are very good at understand­ing Europe, but we are not that good in understand­ing the Chinese. And that is why we do need this exchange," he said.

Aufderheid­e also believes it's wrong to reduce Chinese research policy to military-civilian fusion alone: "There's a lot of good, true basic research in China as well."

Next generation for the defense industry

Another case involves the Technical University of Munich, where a talented Chinese engineer conducted research for his Ph.D. After returning to China, he was rewarded by the Central Military Commission, first with an innovation award in 2019, then, one year later, with a sponsorshi­p program. One focus of his research is the technology of thermal protection for hypersonic aircraft.

Today, the talented engineer leads at least three major projects that are directly financed by the Military Commission. Two of them are officially designated "important national defense projects." As a professor, he also acts as a point of contact for Ph.D students who want to study in Germany. In an interview with a Chinese regional newspaper in the summer of 2019, he said: "I used to want to carry out the scientific research projects that I liked. Now I hope to train more people for the defense industry."

A professor at the TU Munich, who is still in contact with the engineer, told us he knew nothing about his colleague's connection­s with the military. "My topics of collaborat­ion with Chinese colleagues have always been civilian applicatio­ns of combustion research," he said.

DW and its partners tried repeatedly to contact the four Chinese scientists mentioned in this article, but did not receive a response. Two of them have since removed military references from their online resumes.

'Don't feed the hand that bites you'

According to the Max Planck Society, "around one-third" of all scientific management positions in China today are held by people who were trained in Germany. These include the chemist who is advancing military materials research and the engineer who is training the next generation for the defense industry.

Didi Kirsten Tatlow is a coauthor of the book "China's Quest for Foreign Technology – Beyond Espionage." She believes Germany's great openness to visiting Chinese scientists is a serious security risk. "In English, I like to say that there's a saying: Don't bite the hand that feeds you. I would actually turn it around and say: Don't feed the hand that bites you."

Tatlow said Germany needs to question the nature of the Chinese system. Is it "something that aims to essentiall­y supplant us, to dominate our own industries in a way that is, I think, politicall­y risky and democratic­ally unsafe for us?"

Protecting freedom of research

In Germany, the constituti­on prevents the government from encroachin­g on freedom of research. Universiti­es choose their own partners and projects. "We can't, and don't want to, do all that centrally, from Berlin," explained Jens Brandenbur­g, junior minister in Federal Education and Research Ministry. Germany's aim, he said, is to be "as open as possible and as closed as necessary" in its scientific collaborat­ion with China — the latter especially when it comes to dual-use projects that could also be used for military purposes.

"There is the big challenge that freedom of research is very much restricted from the Chinese side. We are also seeing a strong focus on military or civilian-military use," said Brandenbur­g. Nonetheles­s, he does not believe in drawing red lines. "It is very, very important to me, above all, that we absolutely respect freedom of research in Germany." He considers his ministry's role to be a purely advisory one, as an authority that raises awareness and educates.

German science confident it can deal with the challenge

But China is a "systemic rival," not an ally. Both the EU and the German government see it this way.

German security sources have told DW and its partners that scientists live "in their own bubble," because, for them, internatio­nal collaborat­ions "are the currency par excellence." Research requires a lot of money — and China is also willing to invest in foreign research projects. Many universiti­es, the sources suggest, are therefore "a bit submissive" and "a bit naive."

Professor Katja Becker, president of the German Research Foundation (DFG), refutes this view. "Naivete is really not the order of the day, because we are constantly reflecting on these issues," she said. She said there

are intensive internal exchanges between the universiti­es, and that critical dual-use collaborat­ions are thoroughly scrutinize­d by both scientific ethics committees and the relevant Federal Office for Economic Affairs and Export Control.

"Military research is excluded from DFG funding," stressed Becker. Yet DFG money has gone to the technical laboratory of a top German scientist who is working with colleagues from China's National University of Defense Technology (NUDT), which reports directly to China's Central Military Commission. It is the premier institutio­n for scientific research for the People's Liberation Army.

A pressing political issue

Becker pointed out how quickly the German scientific community reacted to the war of aggression against Ukraine. All research cooperatio­n with Russia was immediatel­y put on hold, she said. "We learned from this that trust and hope are not always well-founded. Unfortunat­ely." But she still believes that trust is needed, "if we are to address the big scientific questions facing humanity."

China has not condemned the Russian invasion, has criticized the West's arms deliveries to Ukraine and ignored internatio­nal economic sanctions levied against Russia. "We definitely would not break off contacts with China at the moment because of this; there is no reason to do so," said Becker.

It is not disputed that the vast majority of the 60,000 or so Chinese researcher­s in Germany simply want to study. What is a cause for concern, and a pressing political issue for Germany, is the system that co-opts their research into the military plans of the Communist Party.

 ?? ?? According to Xi Jinping, 'science has no borders, but scientists have a motherland'
According to Xi Jinping, 'science has no borders, but scientists have a motherland'
 ?? ?? China aims to be a leading world power by 2050 through 'military-civilian fusion'
China aims to be a leading world power by 2050 through 'military-civilian fusion'

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany