Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Feds: Chinese espionage is an ‘existentia­l threat’

- Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON – The number of FBI arrests in cases related to Chinese espionage has risen sharply in the last five years, correspond­ing with what the U.S. government sees as an urgent threat to American economic prosperity and intellectu­al property, federal law enforcemen­t officials said Thursday.

There were 24 China-related arrests in the last fiscal year, up from 15 five years earlier, and there have been 19 this year, according to Justice Department figures presented at a conference on Chinese data theft from corporatio­ns and universiti­es.

Officials described urgent law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce efforts to counter China’s targeting of corporate trade secrets and academic research, including defense informatio­n, software for wind turbines and high-end medical technology. In recent years, U.S. officials say, China has relied not only on hacking to steal informatio­n but also on recruitmen­t of scientists and other individual­s.

“The long-term existentia­l threat to the security of our nation is real,” said Bill Evanina, the U.S. government’s top counterint­elligence official.

An email sent to the Chinese Embassy seeking comment was not immediatel­y returned on Thursday.

The U.S. officials highlighte­d a series of prosecutio­ns over the last year that they say underscore the threat, including the recent arrest of a hospital researcher in Boston accused of attempting to smuggle biological material from a laboratory to China.

Last week, the Justice Department charged the chairman of Harvard University’s chemistry department with misleading U.S. authoritie­s about millions of dollars he had received from China and about his participat­ion in a talent recruitmen­t program run by the Chinese government.

That case prompted consternat­ion on college campuses about whether it was illegal for researcher­s to collaborat­e with counterpar­ts in other countries, said U.S. Attorney Andrew Lelling, the top federal prosecutor in Massachuse­tts, whose office brought the case. The answer is no, but it is against the law to lie to the U.S. about that collaborat­ion.

“The upshot here is that on university campuses, what we have seen is that cases like this have generated a need for better guidelines for academia,” Lelling said.

The Justice Department in 2018 created what it calls the China Initiative to focus attention on the espionage threat, though officials stressed Thursday that the scrutiny was not aimed at individual Chinese citizens.

“To be clear, this is not about the Chinese people as a whole,” FBI Director Chris Wray said. “But it is about the Chinese government and the Chinese Communist Party.”

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