In November last year, a court heard accusations that two serving soldiers had accepted bribes from Chinese agents to record a video declaring their loyalty to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and their intention to defect in the event of a war. The video reportedly made its way into Chinese propaganda materials.
Weeks later, a conviction over a similar accusation was upheld against a retired army colonel. The colonel was found guilty of having accepted monthly payments totalling more than NT$500,000 (US$16,004) to delay his retirement for years and serve as a spy. Local media reports said the colonel also posed for a photograph holding a handwritten note, pledging his loyalty to Beijing’s cause of annexing Taiwan to China.
The cases are among dozens of espionage allegations tried in the past few years that involve serving or retired soldiers in Taiwan accused of spying for China.
Photo: Reuters
Tensions between the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and Taiwan are at their highest in deacdes.
Under Chinese President Xi Jinping’s (習近平) rule the PRC has ramped up intimidatory and coercive actions against Taiwan, with the aim of eventual annexation. It runs extensive “gray zone” military activities, cyber, economic and cognitive warfare. Beneath all that is an apparently extensive and well-resourced network of spies and agents of influence seeking to steal secrets, gather intelligence, sow discord and undermine Taiwan’s democracy from within.
In 2017, the government estimated there were more than 5,000 spies working for China in Taiwan.
Minister of National Defense Chiu Kuo-cheng (邱國正) said the Beijing intelligence service’s attempts to recruit Taiwanese had been “considerable.”
“China does a lot of things to win our people over,” he said in December last year. “They’ve had a significant impact.”
Some cases involve a Chinese national posing as a businessman, but who has connections to CCP organisations known to conduct foreign espionage and influence work. Lavish dinner invitations and small gifts escalate to overseas trips, financial payments and sexual incentives that are then sometimes used as blackmail against targets.
In another high-profile case, retired senior Taiwan military officials were convicted of charges related to the recruitment of others for a Chinese national, Xie Xizhang (謝錫璋), who allegedly cultivated a network of agents and assets for Chinese intelligence services for decades while undercover as a Hong Kong businessman. Xie is wanted by authorities but is believed to be outside the country.
Targeted nationals in Taiwan are not all military personnel — other cases have involved politicians and community leaders being offered free trips to China and other inducements before elections, or members of the Mongolian and Tibetan communities in Taiwan being recruited to give information on individuals to the CCP. Spies have even been found working in the president’s protection detail. However, the sheer number of current and former soldiers being prosecuted has raised serious concerns about a cohort of people who arguably should be the most loyal to Taiwan.
Institute for National Defense and Security Research research fellow Shen Ming-shih (沈明室) said that several factors are driving recruitment.
Some are ideological and linked to the complicated history of Taiwan and China.
“Because of Chinese sentiment, they do not think China is an enemy country, and their concept of hostility is weak,” Shen said.
Others are simply lured by money and sex, or driven by revenge over their treatment or lack of promotion during service , he added.
He said there has not always been enough understanding about the seriousness of what they are being recruited to do, along with lenient punishments in the past.
In about two-thirds of the cases involving military personnel, the accused are retired. However, this trend appears to be changing, he said.
“The focus used to be on retired generals, but now it is gradually moving towards active-duty, middle-ranking officers, or junior noncommissioned officers and soldiers. The main purpose of this is to learn the combat capability and morale of the army, and to assess the grassroots officers’ and soldiers’ support for the ruling party.”
Chen Xi (陳晞) is a 32-year-old Taiwanese who joined foreign fighters in Ukraine this year. Now back in Taiwan, he is lobbying for improved conditions and training in the military.
He said that morale was being affected by relentless cognitive warfare from China, and “outdated” leadership in the ROC military, which is historically rooted in the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) former leader Chiang Kai-shek (蔣介石), who oversaw decades of brutal martial law in Taiwan, always intended to one day retake China.
“A military that has lost its spiritual beliefs and honor will not have the concept of loyalty to the country and the people, and will naturally not be able to withstand the temptation of high pay across the strait,” Chen said.
He also suggested the complicated questions around Taiwanese identity had a specific effect on the military.
“For whom are they fighting? For what? For Taiwan? Or is it for the morality of the Republic of China? Why fight against China, a country of the same language and race?” he said.
There is some sense among observers that the espionage cases were being promoted by government figures more than usual, in the run-up to Taiwan’s presidential election last month. The ruling Democratic Progressive party campaigned on its stance against Beijing’s aggression.
However, analysts also say the high number of cases shows that authorities are catching up on the problem.
A spokesperson for the defence ministry said it was comprehensively strengthening defensive measures against the CCP’s “diverse means and methods of infiltration and intelligence gathering,” adding that recent arrests stemmed mostly from internal reporting by other active service members.
The government has also hardened national security laws, increased regular questioning of crucial personnel and toughened restrictions on retired officers
visiting China.
Observers said there had been a marked improvement in operational security and counterintelligence in the past few years.
“There is no doubt that China is always trying various ways to damage Taiwan and look for any kind of intel that would benefit them,” defense journalist Liu Ting-ting (劉亭廷) said.
“Taiwan is trying very hard to arrest these people. It is a race against time, and these cases being reported show that the threat is still real,” she added.
A strong continental cold air mass is to bring pollutants to Taiwan from tomorrow, the Ministry of Environment said today, as it issued an “orange” air quality alert for most of the country. All of Taiwan except for Hualien and Taitung counties is to be under an “orange” air quality alert tomorrow, indicating air quality that is unhealthy for sensitive groups. In China, areas from Shandong to Shanghai have been enveloped in haze since Saturday, the ministry said in a news release. Yesterday, hourly concentrations of PM2.5 in these areas ranged from 65 to 160 micrograms per cubic meter (mg/m³), and pollutants were
Taiwan’s armed forces have established response protocols for a wide range of sudden contingencies, including the “Wan Chun Plan” to protect the head of state, the Ministry of Defense (MND) said today. After US President Donald Trump on Saturday launched a series of airstrikes in Venezuela and kidnapped Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, concerns have been raised as to whether China would launch a similar “decapitation strike” on Taiwan. The armed forces regularly coordinate with relevant agencies and practice drills to ensure preparedness for a wide range of scenarios, Vice Minister of National Defense Hsu Szu-chien (徐斯儉) told reporters before a
EVA Airways on Saturday said that it had suspended a pilot and opened an investigation after he allegedly lost his temper and punched the first officer several times as their plane was taxiing before takeoff at Los Angeles International Airport. According to a report published on Thursday by The Reporter, the incident occurred after the flight’s Malaysian first officer tried to warn the Taiwanese pilot, surnamed Wen (文), that he was taxiing faster than the speed limit of 30 knots (55.6kph). After alerting the pilot several times without response, the first officer manually applied the brakes in accordance with standard operating
NOT AN OPENING: Trump’s violation of international law does not affect China’s consideration in attacking Taiwan; Beijing lacks capability, not precedent, an official said Taiwanese officials see the US’ capture of the president of Venezuela as a powerful deterrent to Beijing’s aggression and a timely reminder of the US’ ability to defeat militaries equipped with Chinese-made weapons. The strikes that toppled Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro signaled to authoritarian leaders, including Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平), US President Donald Trump’s willingness to use military might for international affairs core to US interests, one senior official in Taipei’s security circle said. That reassured Taiwan, the person said. Taipei has also dismissed the idea that Trump’s apparent violation of international law could embolden Beijing, said the official, who was not