Spying, meddling and even torture allegations are riling China’s relations with some of the world’s top democracies just as Beijing seeks to convince nations that its 5G technology can be trusted.
In Australia, it was reported on Sunday that China offered a Melbourne-based auto dealer a bribe to run as a parliamentary candidate before he was found dead in March. The previous day, reports in selected Australian media said that a man who spied for China in Taiwan and Hong Kong offered intelligence information to Australia, and wanted political asylum.
On Monday, just hours after the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs described the defector’s claims in Australia as “bizarre,” Ed Peng Xuehua (彭學華) — who became a naturalized US citizen in 2012 — pleaded guilty to a US criminal charge of spying for Beijing’s security service.
Last week, the UK accused China of torturing a former employee of its consulate in Hong Kong while seeking information about whether the British government was supporting pro-democracy protests there.
The incidents play into fears that China is becoming bolder in undermining democracies under Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平), one of the country’s most powerful leaders in decades. While Beijing has consistently denied the claims made in Australia and elsewhere, the suspicions threaten to impact trade relations and the operations of tech giant Huawei Technologies Co.
“The Chinese Communist Party doesn’t want democratic governments to be viable,” said Michael Shoebridge, a former intelligence official in Australia who is now a director at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute. “The way the Chinese are operating under Xi shows they are becoming ‘out and proud’ in their attempts to infiltrate democracies.”
Beijing’s more assertive foreign agenda prompted four of the largest democracies in the Indo-Pacific region — the US, Japan, India and Australia — to this year elevate so-called Quad talks to ministerial level. They plan to present a united front on regional security issues, a move that Beijing has complained could stoke a new Cold War.
The US has also sought to convince nations around the globe to avoid Huawei for its 5G networks, arguing that China is not a reliable partner.
Last month, Germany’s spy chief said that Huawei “can’t fully be trusted” to participate in its 5G network due to its “very high level of dependence on the Communist Party and the country’s intelligence apparatus.”
Last weekend, newspapers including The Age reported that an alleged Chinese spy, William Wang Liqiang (王立強), sought asylum in Australia.
He had offered secret information including the identities of China’s senior military intelligence officers in Hong Kong, as well as details on political interference operations in Taiwan, Hong Kong and Australia, the report said.
Wang said he was involved in the 2015 kidnapping and abduction of Lee Bo (李波), a major shareholder of Causeway Bay Books in Hong Kong, to the Chinese mainland, and operated under cover in the territory as a businessman for a company that was a front for Chinese intelligence agencies, the newspaper reported.
China has said the man is a fugitive found guilty of fraud.
On Sunday, the Nine Network reported that suspected Chinese operatives had offered A$1 million (US$676,600) to a luxury car dealer, Nick Zhao Bo (趙波), to run as a candidate for a parliamentary seat in Melbourne.
Zhao, 32, approached the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation with the claims and was later found dead in a Melbourne hotel room, it reported.
That report was also denied by Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Geng Shuang (耿爽) in Beijing on Monday.
“No matter how bizarre the plot is and how their tricks are refurbished, lies are always lies,” Geng told reporters. “We have never been and are not interested in interfering in others’ affairs.”
Gao Zhikai (高志凱), a former Chinese diplomat and interpreter for former Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping (鄧小平), said in an interview that few countries could claim innocence when it comes to spying games.
“Espionage started from the beginning of history and will continue until mankind disappears from the world,” Gao said. “Everyone needs to be vigilant and every country needs to protect its own secrets as much as it can, but to accuse another country of espionage as if it itself is an angel is a fallacy no one should believe in.”
Indeed, the US has its own spies.
The US government on Monday said that it uncovered the Californian spy’s identify through a double-agent operation in China that started in March 2015.
According to prosecutors, Peng, 56, worked as a guide for Chinese tourists in the San Francisco area.
Peng was snared in a sting operation in which he allegedly hid envelopes with US$10,000 to US$20,000 in cash in hotel rooms and returned later to pick up memory cards containing classified security information that had been planted by US agents.
He would later fly to China with the cards to deliver them to his handlers at the Chinese Ministry of State Security, prosecutors alleged.
Prosecutors are recommending a four-year prison sentence under the plea deal.
At least three former US intelligence officers have been convicted in recent years of spying for China. Last year, the US Department of Justice launched a China initiative targeting trade-secret theft, hacking and economic espionage.
China’s denials about spying are to be expected, Shoebridge said.
“Like President Vladimir Putin in Russia, China is using deniability as a cover,” he said. “The louder that they deny it, the more they’re pointing to the fact that they’re probably doing it.”
Because much of what former US president Donald Trump says is unhinged and histrionic, it is tempting to dismiss all of it as bunk. Yet the potential future president has a populist knack for sounding alarums that resonate with the zeitgeist — for example, with growing anxiety about World War III and nuclear Armageddon. “We’re a failing nation,” Trump ranted during his US presidential debate against US Vice President Kamala Harris in one particularly meandering answer (the one that also recycled urban myths about immigrants eating cats). “And what, what’s going on here, you’re going to end up in World War
Earlier this month in Newsweek, President William Lai (賴清德) challenged the People’s Republic of China (PRC) to retake the territories lost to Russia in the 19th century rather than invade Taiwan. He stated: “If it is for the sake of territorial integrity, why doesn’t [the PRC] take back the lands occupied by Russia that were signed over in the treaty of Aigun?” This was a brilliant political move to finally state openly what many Chinese in both China and Taiwan have long been thinking about the lost territories in the Russian far east: The Russian far east should be “theirs.” Granted, Lai issued
On Tuesday, President William Lai (賴清德) met with a delegation from the Hoover Institution, a think tank based at Stanford University in California, to discuss strengthening US-Taiwan relations and enhancing peace and stability in the region. The delegation was led by James Ellis Jr, co-chair of the institution’s Taiwan in the Indo-Pacific Region project and former commander of the US Strategic Command. It also included former Australian minister for foreign affairs Marise Payne, influential US academics and other former policymakers. Think tank diplomacy is an important component of Taiwan’s efforts to maintain high-level dialogue with other nations with which it does
On Sept. 2, Elbridge Colby, former deputy assistant secretary of defense for strategy and force development, wrote an article for the Wall Street Journal called “The US and Taiwan Must Change Course” that defends his position that the US and Taiwan are not doing enough to deter the People’s Republic of China (PRC) from taking Taiwan. Colby is correct, of course: the US and Taiwan need to do a lot more or the PRC will invade Taiwan like Russia did against Ukraine. The US and Taiwan have failed to prepare properly to deter war. The blame must fall on politicians and policymakers