(Bloomberg)
-- An investigation by the U.S. Treasury Department found that Vietnam
deliberately undervalued its currency by about 4.7% against the dollar
in 2019, according to a letter sent to the U.S. Commerce Department.
The
State Bank of Vietnam, the nation’s central bank, facilitated net
purchases of about $22 billion worth of foreign exchange last year,
which had the effect of undervaluing the dong in a range of 4.2% to
5.2%, according to the letter. The purchases were estimated to have
pushed down Vietnam’s real effective exchange rate by 3.5% to 4.8%.
The
Treasury’s assessment is part of an investigation by the Commerce
Department into alleged subsidies on passenger vehicle and light truck
tires from Vietnam. A new federal rule published this year in the U.S.
allows the Commerce Department to treat currency undervaluation as a
factor in determining countervailing duties on a trading partner.
Vietnam’s
Ministry of Foreign Affairs didn’t immediately respond to an email
request for comment, while a representative for the central bank wasn’t
immediately available to comment.
The
Ho Chi Minh Stock Index fluctuated on Wednesday and was up 0.2% as of
1:50 p.m. in Hanoi. The dong was little changed at 23,175 per dollar.
The
Treasury’s move is a sign that the U.S. could cite Vietnam for a second
violation in a semi-annual report on foreign exchange policies of major
trading partners.
In the January release of that report, Vietnam
was judged to have violated just one of three criteria that the Treasury
uses to assess a currency manipulator -- namely, it had a bilateral
goods surplus of $47 billion, the sixth-highest among the U.S.’s major
trading partners. Economies with at least two violations are added to a
monitoring list.
(Updates with currency in fifth paragraph.)
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A
former CIA officer has been charged with providing secrets to China
over the course of a decade in a case that a top Justice Department
official describes as coming straight from a "spy novel."
The
former CIA officer who was also a FBI linguist, Alexander Yuk Chung Ma, a
67-year-old resident of Hawaii, was arrested Friday in Hawaii and
charged with conspiring to communicate national defense information to
aid a foreign government, the Justice Department said. He faces up to
life in prison if convicted.
An FBI affidavit alleges an
85-year-old Los Angeles man, a relative of Ma's and also a former CIA
officer, acted as a conspirator but was not charged because he suffers
from a “debilitating cognitive disease.”
“This case demonstrates
the persistence of Chinese espionage efforts,” said John Demers, the
assistant attorney general of the Justice Department's national security
division. “It shows the willingness to betray one’s adopted country and
colleagues. … And it reads like a spy novel.”
Ma, who was being held pending a hearing in federal court, could not be reached for comment.
The arrest is the latest in a series of criminal cases brought by the Justice Department
against current and former U.S. government officials accused of
supplying secrets to the Chinese government. At least four U.S.
government officials have been sentenced to prison in the last two years
for providing sensitive information to the Chinese government.
Court
papers reveal a years-long effort by Ma to provide secrets to China's
government. Born in Hong Kong in 1952, the affidavit says, Ma came to
the U.S. in 1968 and eventually became a naturalized citizen. He joined
the CIA in 1982 and became a case officer stationed overseas. He left
the agency in 1989.
Ma's spying started in 2001, the FBI affidavit
says, when he and his Los Angeles-based relative met in a Hong Kong
hotel room with Chinese operatives and handed over “a substantial amount
of highly classified national defense information," including details
about CIA operations and sources.
The FBI affidavit said the
bureau possessed a videotape of the meeting. The video captured Ma
counting $50,000 in payment from the Chinese operatives while his
relative continued to provide classified information, the affidavit
said. The FBI did not disclose how it obtained the video.
Ma kept
in touch with his Chinese handlers and applied to be an FBI agent in the
hopes of handing over more information, the affidavit alleges. But he
was told he was too old to be an agent, so Ma changed plans and applied
to become a contract linguist for the bureau in Hawaii. A day before
starting the FBI job in 2004, he called a suspected accomplice and said
he would be working for “the other side,” the affidavit alleges.
Over
the next six years, he downloaded, swiped and photographed sensitive
information, the affidavit alleges. The handlers also sent him a
photograph of five sources it wanted to identify. Ma forwarded the photo
to his relative, who identified two of the sources, the FBI alleged.
Ma
left the FBI in 2010. It is not clear why the FBI waited until January
2019 to conduct its sting operation. But the affidavit suggested the FBI
had been tracking Ma’s activities for years, likely while he was still
at the bureau.
In January of last year, an undercover FBI agent
met with Ma. The agent was posing as a Chinese operative conducting an
audit of how his government treated the former CIA officer and and how
he had been compensated. To prove his bonafides, the affidavit said, the
agent played a videotape of the 2001 Hong Kong meeting. Ma bought the
ruse, the affidavit said, and confirmed he had handed over classified
information to the Chinese operatives in 2001 and had continued to work
for them.
They met again two months later, with the undercover
agent giving Ma $2,000 “to acknowledge his work on behalf of China.” Ma
confirmed "he had provided multiple items of valuable U.S. government
information" to Chinese operatives when he worked for the bureau, the
affidavit says.
At a meeting Aug. 12, the affidavit alleges, the
undercover agent gave Ma another $2,000. Ma counted the cash before
putting it in his pants pocket. He told the undercover agent that he
“wanted ‘the motherland’ to succeed," the affidavit said, and would be
willing to continue to work for the Chinese government, “perhaps as a
consultant."
FILE- This undated file photo provided by the University of Kansas shows
researcher Franklin Feng Tao. Tao, of Lawrence, Kansas, was indicted
last year for not disclosing on conflict-of-interest forms work he was
allegedly doing for China while employed at the University of Kansas.
Defense attorneys, on Friday, Aug. 14, 2020, have filed a motion seeking
to throw out the charges. (Kelsey Kimberlin/University of Kansas via
AP, File)
ROXANA HEGEMAN and ERIC TUCKER
BELLE
PLAINE, Kan. (AP) — The prosecution of a Kansas researcher ensnared in a
U.S. government crackdown on Chinese economic espionage and trade
secret theft opens the door to criminalizing workplace disagreements,
his attorneys argued Friday in a motion asking a court to throw out the
charges.
Feng “Franklin” Tao is charged
with not disclosing on conflict-of-interest forms work he was allegedly
doing for China while employed at the University of Kansas — something
federal prosecutors have portrayed as a scheme to defraud the
university, the U.S. Department of Energy and the National Science
Foundation.
In their request to dismiss the case, defense lawyers
Peter Zeidenberg and Michael Dearington wrote that the government seeks
to use Tao's prosecution as a potential new model for the Justice
Department to prosecute professors “without having to produce evidence
of intellectual property theft or export control violations.”
The motion takes aim at the broader China Initiative
announced by the Justice Department in 2018 to counter the threat of
Chinese espionage and intellectual property theft, including on American
college campuses. Since then, federal prosecutors have charged Chinese
academics across the country of failing to disclose foreign sources of
funding and lying about their links to China.
The Trump administration, meanwhile, has escalated its rhetoric
against Beijing and taken steps to confront China, including by shutting
down the Chinese consulate in Houston and through executive actions
that ban dealings with the Chinese owners of TikTok and WeChat. FBI
Director Chris Wray said in a speech last month that the bureau opens a
new counterintelligence case linked to China about every 10 hours.
The
indictment against Tao alleges that the Lawrence man's motive was to
help China by participating in its “talent plan,” which prosecutors
contend is designed to encourage the transfer of original ideas and
intellectual property from U.S. universities to Chinese government
institutions.
Prosecutors accuse Tao of not informing the
University of Kansas that he was selected for the Changjiang
Professorship or the salary for his appointment to Fuzhou University in
China.
In their motion, his lawyers warn that the case would open the door to criminalizing employment disputes
that are better resolved by a human resources department. Tao faces 10
counts, including seven counts of wire fraud, based on two
conflict-of-interest forms he submitted to the university.
“The
Department of Justice is not the Ministry of Truth, and it lacks
authority to regulate routine, private miscommunications between
employees and employers regarding employee activities," the motion says.
The
motion presents hypothetical scenarios in which an employee who
misleads an employer could wind up prosecuted, rather than simply
reprimanded or fired by an employer. It raises questions about whether a
doctor’s office employee in Missouri who falsely calls in sick from his
home in Kansas could be charged with wire fraud if he continues to
collect his salary, or prosecuted with false statements if the office
receives Medicaid reimbursements from the federal government.
“This
is because the Indictment equates dishonesty in the workplace with
fraud, merely because all employees receive salary from their employers,
and false statements, merely because an employer receives federal
funding,” the lawyers wrote.
“If the Court permits this Indictment
to proceed to trial, it would open the floodgates to a vast range of
federal prosecutions for garden-variety employment disputes that
otherwise would have, at most, subjected the employee to administrative
discipline at work," they added. "This government overreach would not be
limited to university professors.”
Tao, an associate professor of
engineering, was born in China and moved to the United States in 2002.
He has been employed since August 2014 at the University of Kansas'
Center for Environmentally Beneficial Catalysis, which conducts research
on sustainable technology to conserve natural resources and energy.
Justice
Department prosecutors in recent years have been particularly focused
on Chinese government initiatives that recruit professors in specialized
areas in the United States to work in China.
A professor who has worked at the University of Arkansas
was indicted last month on charges of wire fraud and passport fraud for
allegedly failing to disclose ties to the Chinese government and
Chinese companies when he received grant money from NASA.
Also last month, a rheumatology professor
and medical researcher who worked at schools including Ohio State
University was charged with using millions of dollars in grant money
from the U.S. government to help China develop expertise in rheumatology
and immunology.
___
Tucker reported from Washington.
---
World
US cabinet member lauds Taiwan's democracy during historic visit
Amber WANG
US cabinet member lauds Taiwan's democracy during historic visit
US Health Secrtary Alex Azar (L) met with Taiwan's President Tsai Ing-wen (R) on a visit China has slammed as a threat to peace
A US cabinet member heaped praise on Taiwan's democracy and its
success in battling the coronavirus as he met the island's leader on
Monday during a historic visit that China has slammed as a threat to
peace.
Health Secretary Alex Azar is in Taipei for a three-day
visit billed as the highest level visit from the United States since it
switched diplomatic recognition from the island to China in 1979.
His
trip comes as relations between the United States and China are in
tumult, with the two sides clashing over a wide range of trade, military
and security issues, as well as the coronavirus pandemic.
Authoritarian China insists Taiwan is its own territory and vows to one day seize it.
On Monday morning, Azar met President Tsai Ing-wen, who advocates the
island being recognised as a sovereign nation and is loathed by China's
leaders.
"Taiwan's response to COVID-19 has been among the most
successful in the world, and that is a tribute to the open, transparent,
democratic nature of Taiwan's society and culture," Azar told Tsai.
Tsai
thanked the US for supporting its bid to be part of the World Health
Organization (WHO), a body Beijing keeps the island frozen out of.
"Political
considerations should never take precedence over the rights to health,"
Tsai said, calling Beijing's refusal to let Taiwan join "highly
regrettable".
Soon after the meeting Taipei's defence ministry
said Chinese fighter jets had made a brief incursion across the median
line in the Taiwan Strait that the two sides have long treated as a
boundary.
Chinese warplanes routinely fly into Taiwan's defence
zone to put pressure on the island but crossings of the median line are
much rarer because it is such a sensitive area.
"China has always
firmly opposed official exchanges between the US and Taiwan," Chinese
foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian told reporters on Monday
afternoon.
- Warming ties -
Azar brushed off China's criticism when asked about Beijing's anger over his visit.
"The
message that I bring from the US government is one of reaffirming the
deep partnership the United States has with Taiwan in terms of security,
commerce, health care and shared common values of democracy, economic
freedom and liberty," he told reporters before his meeting with Tsai.
Azar has previously been critical of Beijing's response to the coronavirus, which began in central China, as well as the WHO.
It was a theme he repeated on Monday saying Taiwan was wise "not trust some of the assertions" coming from Beijing or the WHO
As well as meeting Tsai, Azar will hold talks with his counterpart Chen Shih-chung and Foreign Minister Joseph Wu.
Taiwan
has become a poster child for defeating the coronavirus thanks to a
well-honed track and tracing programme as well as firm border controls.
Despite its proximity and economic links to China it has recorded fewer than 500 infections and seven deaths.
In contrast the US has recorded the most deaths in the world with more than 160,000 fatalities.
Critics
have accused US President Donald Trump of ramping up criticism of China
as a way to divert from growing public anger over his administration's
coronavirus response, especially as he fights for re-election in
November.
Washington remains the leading arms supplier to Taiwan but has historically been cautious in holding official contacts with it.
Throughout the 1990s the United States sent trade officials to Taiwan with regularity.
Douglas
Paal, a former head of the American Institute in Taiwan, Washington's
de facto embassy, said the Trump administration was still paying heed to
China's red line -- that no US official handling national security
visit Taiwan.
The difference this time, he said, is the context,
with Azar travelling at a time when relations between Washington and
Beijing have hit a new low.
"The fact that they didn't choose to
send a national security advisor or someone else suggests they are
trying to come as close as possible to China's red line but don't want
to cross it."
But Washington has described Azar's visit as the
highest level trip made by a senior administration official since the
diplomatic switch.
World's largest naval exercise sparks more friction between US and China
Nicola Smith
Indo-Pacific experts have warned the region is heading towards a dangerous juncture.
Writing
in the Lawfare Blog, Kurt Campbell, former Assistant Secretary of State
for East Asian and the Pacific and Ali Wyne of the Atlantic Council,
said deteriorating ties between the US and China, in part fuelled by the
pandemic, made current dynamics “even more conducive to inadvertent
escalation.”
Dr William Choong, a senior fellow at the ISEAS-Yusof
Ishak Institute in Singapore, told The Telegraph that “you can’t
divorce China and RIMPAC from the broader tensions in the Sino-US
relationship.”
He added that in the bigger picture “it looks like
the Chinese are getting increasingly impatient, although I think that
it’s an action reaction cycle that you see between the Americans and the
Chinese – you can’t really ascertain who started this in a sense.”
Ultimately
the situation was “worrying,” he said, as unlike during earlier
regional clashes, “the balance of power has quite significantly shifted
towards the Chinese side, in terms of the capabilities that the Chinese
are able to bring to the table, which are significantly larger.”
Meanwhile, the US and South Korea will also begin their annual joint military exercises this week.
Despite
a low key programme due to the pandemic, mainly involving
computer-simulated war scenarios, the drills beginning on Tuesday may
still irk North Korea, which views the allies’ training as invasion
rehearsals.
-----
U.S. Navy carrier conducted exercises in South China Sea on Aug. 14
SHANGHAI
(Reuters) - A U.S. Navy aircraft carrier conducted exercises in the
contested South China Sea on Friday, the U.S. navy said in a statement.
A
strike group led by the USS Ronald Reagan conducted flight operations
and high-end maritime stability operations and exercises, the statement
said.
"Integration with our joint partners is essential to
ensuring joint force responsiveness and lethality, and maintaining a
free and open Indo-Pacific," U.S. Navy Commander Joshua Fagan, Task
Force 70 air operations officer aboard USS Ronald Reagan, was quoted as
saying.
The drill comes amid heightened tensions between the
United States and China. Washington has criticised Beijing over its
novel coronavirus response and accuses it of taking advantage of the
pandemic to push territorial claims in the South China Sea and
elsewhere.
The
United States has long opposed China's expansive territorial claims in
the South China Sea and has sent warships regularly through the
strategic waterway.
China has objected to such exercises and said
the U.S. rejection of its claims in the South China Sea has raised
tension and undermined stability in the region.
China claims nine
tenths of the resource-rich South China Sea, through which some $3
trillion of trade passes a year. Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines,
Taiwan and Vietnam have competing claims.
(Reporting by Brenda Goh; Eduting by Shri Navaratnam)
----
Associated Press
US commander affirms US support for Japan on China dispute
YURI KAGEYAMA
In this image made from an online news conference provided by U.S.
Forces Japan, Lt. Gen. Kevin Schneider, Commander of the U.S. Force,
speaks from Yokota Air Base, in Tokyo, to reporters, Wednesday, July 29,
2020. Schneider said Wednesday strict measures were in place among his
ranks to curb the spread of the coronavirus by military service
personnel entering Japan.(U.S. Forces Japan. via AP)
TOKYO (AP) — The United States supports Japan's protests over Chinese
ships venturing into the economic waters near disputed East China Sea
islands, the commander of the U.S. Forces in Japan said Wednesday.
“The
United States is 100% absolutely steadfast in its commitment to help
the government of Japan with the situation in Senkaku,” Lt. Gen. Kevin
Schneider said of the group of islands, which are controlled by Japan.
China also claims the islands, which it calls Diaoyu.
“That’s 365 days a year, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. There is no deviation in that regard,” Schneider told reporters.
Japan has long protested the repeated presence of Chinese coast guard
vessels in the waters. Schneider also noted such incursions had
increased recently.
He called China the “No. 1 challenge” in
regional security, although North Korea was the more “immediate threat,”
given its weapons development.
Schneider said the U.S. was
offering Japan surveillance information and other support, such as
“reconnaissance capability,” which refers to monitoring the whereabouts
of a potential enemy, to help Japan “assess the situation and to figure
out exactly what’s going on in the water in and around the Senkaku.”
China shrugged off such concerns.
Wang
Wenbin, spokesperson for the Chinese foreign ministry, reasserted
China’s claim to the islands, stressing it was the country’s “inherent
right to carry out patrol and law enforcement” activities in the area.
“We
hope that relevant parties will do something helpful to maintain
regional peace and stability and avoid words and deeds that are not
conducive to regional peace and stability,” Wang told reporters at a
daily press briefing.
Schneider was speaking at an online press
briefing that mostly touched on U.S. efforts to combat the coronavirus
among its forces in Japan.
___
Associated Press journalist Haruka Nuga in Tokyo contributed to this report.
Yuri Kageyama is on Twitter https://twitter.com/yurikageyama
US hits China anew for rights abuses in western Xinjiang
MATTHEW LEE
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration
took new aim at China on Friday by imposing sanctions on a major
paramilitary organization in the country’s western Xinjiang region and
its commander for alleged human rights abuses against ethnic and
religious minorities.
The State and Treasury departments announced
the penalties as the White House denounced authorities in Hong Kong for
postponing local government elections ostensibly because of the
coronavirus pandemic. Criticism of the election delay, which Beijing
approved, also came just a day after President Donald Trump suggested
putting off November’s U.S. presidential vote.
The sanctions,
which freeze any assets the targets may have in U.S. jurisdictions and
perhaps more significantly bar Americans from doing business with them,
hit the Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps, its commander and
former political commissar for alleged abuses against Uighur Muslims,
including mass arbitrary detentions, forced labor and torture.
The
production and construction corps is a major operation consisting of 14
military-style divisions that reports to the Chinese Communist Party
and is in charge of billions of dollars in development projects in
Xinjiang, including mining and energy exploration.
"The
United States is committed to using the full breadth of its financial
powers to hold human rights abusers accountable in Xinjiang and across
the world,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in a statement. The
sanctions were imposed under the Global Magnitsky Act, which provides
authority for the administration to penalize human rights abusers
abroad.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the two officials
targeted — the commander, Peng Jiarui, and the former commissar, Sun
Jinlong — would also be subject to U.S. visa restrictions. The Trump
administration has previously sanctioned other officials in Xinjiang
subjecting them to travel bans.
Meanwhile, the White House lashed
out at the postponement of the upcoming Hong Kong elections in comments
likely to draw accusations of hypocrisy from China after Trump's tweeted
suggestion on Thursday that the U.S. elections be postponed to prevent
fraud from mail-in ballots expected to flood the polls because of the
virus outbreak.
“We condemn the Hong Kong government’s decision to
postpone for one year its legislative council elections and to
disqualify opposition candidates,” White House press secretary Kayleigh
McEnany said. “This action undermines the democratic processes and
freedoms that have underpinned Hong Kong’s prosperity and this is only
the most recent in a growing list of broken promises by Beijing."
Earlier
Friday, Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam announced the government was
invoking an emergency ordinance to postpone the highly anticipated
legislative elections by a year, citing a worsening coronavirus
outbreak.
The postponement is a setback for the pro-democracy
opposition, which was hoping to capitalize on disenchantment with the
current pro-Beijing majority to make gains. A group of 22 lawmakers
issued a statement ahead of the announcement accusing the government of
using the outbreak as an excuse to delay the vote.
---
World
US ramps up sanctions over Uighur abuses with penalties on powerful Chinese paramilitary group
The U.S. has sanctioned
a powerful Chinese paramilitary organization in the country's western
province, accusing it of playing a key role in the detention and
repression of Muslim ethnic minorities.
The sanctions could have
far-reaching consequences, depending on their level of enforcement,
given the deep economic and political control of the group, the Xinjiang
Production and Construction Corps, in the Xinjiang region.
This round of penalties is also the second in just three weeks after President Donald Trump said earlier this month that he had withheld them for over a year to protect trade talks with China.
In recent weeks, his administration has bolted toward an increasingly
tough stance against Beijing as the Phase 1 trade deal all but fell
apart and the 2020 presidential election approaches.
On
July 9, the U.S. Treasury sanctioned regional officials and a security
agency for the repressive campaign against Uighurs and other ethnic
minorities that includes detaining over 1 million in "re-education" and forced labor camps, cracking down on practicing Islam and enforcing widespread sterilization practices.
China at first denied such camps existed, then defended them as a
counterterror operation; its foreign ministry has denied mass
sterilization.
"The Chinese Communist Party's human rights abuses in Xinjiang, China
against Uighurs and other Muslim minorities rank as the stain of the
century," U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a statement Friday.
In
addition to the XPCC, the Treasury Department is sanctioning the
organization's commander Peng Jiarui and a former senior official Sun
Jinlong.
The
latest actions mark a profound escalation in U.S. pressure. Described
as a "paramilitary organization" or a "farming militia," the XPCC is a
tool of the Chinese Communist Party first deployed in the 1950s to send
soldiers as pioneers or colonizers to Xinjiang, a largely undeveloped
region nearly 2,000 miles west of Beijing.
After years of
developing farmland, mining, and other industries, the XPCC now controls
huge portions of the region's economy, as well as critical security
functions. Analysts have reported
that the XPCC alone employs approximately 12% of the region's
population and accounts for 20% of the region's total economy, with even
larger shares of agriculture.
Pompeo accused the XPCC of being "directly involved in implementing"
what he called "a comprehensive surveillance, detention, and
indoctrination program" against Uighurs and other minorities.
It's
unclear if the XPCC has any assets in U.S. jurisdiction. But this now
puts any company, including American ones, at risk of U.S. sanctions if
they work in the region or have a supply chain with ties to it,
according to the U.S. Treasury, although teasing out those ties can be
difficult given how murky business in China can be.
"All
US companies (and foreign companies that do business in the US) should
be getting out of Xinjiang now (if they haven't already)," tweeted
Julian Ku, a professor at Hofstra University Law School.
Major
U.S. companies like Apple and Ralph Lauren are already struggling with
their commercial ties to Xinjiang after the U.S. Commerce Department
added to its list of blocked entities based in the region and several
agencies issued a joint warning of "legal risks" if companies' supply chains include the forced labor used in these internment camps.
On Capitol Hill Thursday, Pompeo said the administration hopes to use
these economic levers to change the Chinese government's behavior.
"I'm
really happy with the work we're making to convince businesses -- not
just American business because it's an international place of business
-- that they should really look hard at their supply chains -- not just
their direct employees, but their supply chains -- and what's taking
place there. I think if we get that right, we have the opportunity to
change what's taking place there," he told the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee.
Unleashing
economic pressure on China for the treatment of Uighurs is one of
several moves by the Trump administration to escalate its fight with
Beijing, including a declaration against its claims in the South China
Sea, a new round of arms sales to Taiwan, ending Hong Kong's special
economic status because of the crackdown on democracy and a crippling
campaign against Huawei, the telecommunications giant.
China is
likely to retaliate after Friday's sanctions, although its ability to do
so may be more limited. After the first round of sanctions this month,
it announced visa bans on U.S. ambassador-at-large for religious freedom
Sam Brownback, Sens. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and
Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J. -- four Republicans who have been outspoken on
the Uighur detention camps.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A Chinese scientist
charged with visa fraud after authorities said she concealed her
military ties to China in order to work in the U.S. made her first
appearance Monday in federal court by video.
Juan Tang, 37, was
appointed a federal public defender and U.S. Magistrate Judge Deborah
Barnes ordered Tang to remain in custody, saying she is a flight risk,
while her attorney prepares an argument to allow her release on bail.
The
Justice Department last week announced charges against Tang and three
other scientists living in the U.S., saying they lied about their status
as members of China’s People’s Liberation Army. All were charged with
visa fraud.
Prosecutors said Tang lied about her military ties in a
visa application last October as she prepared to work at the University
of California, Davis and again during an FBI interview in June. Agents
found photos of Tang dressed in military uniform and reviewed articles
in China identifying her military affiliation, prosecutors said.
Prosecutors
said Tang sought refuge at the Chinese consulate in San Francisco after
speaking with agents in June. U.S. marshals arrested her Friday and
booked her into Sacramento County Jail, where she remains.
Heather
Williams, a federal defender, said its common practice for people to
seek help from their consulate when dealing with law enforcement abroad,
and doing so did not make Tang guilty of anything, she said..
Williams added that U.S. agents took Tang's passport, forcing her young daughter to travel to China alone.
It's too soon to know what the photos of Tang mean, and she might have made a mistake on the visa application, the lawyer said.
“We
do know that our government seems to be increasingly hostile to China
and we hope Dr. Tang isn’t paying the price for that hostility," she
said.
The University of California, Davis said Tang left her job
in June as a visiting researcher in the Department of Radiation
Oncology.
The arrests come as tensions rise between China and the U.S.
-----
World
Escalating tensions could lead to US-China military clash: Gordon Chang
----
World
How a Chinese agent used LinkedIn to hunt for targets
Kevin Ponniah - BBC News
Jun Wei Yeo, an ambitious and freshly enrolled Singaporean PhD
student, was no doubt delighted when he was invited to give a
presentation to Chinese academics in Beijing in 2015.
His
doctorate research was about Chinese foreign policy and he was about to
discover firsthand how the rising superpower seeks to attain influence.
After
his presentation, Jun Wei, also known as Dickson, was, according to US
court documents, approached by several people who said they worked for
Chinese think tanks. They said they wanted to pay him to provide
"political reports and information". They would later specify exactly
what they wanted: "scuttlebutt" - rumours and insider knowledge.
He
soon realised they were Chinese intelligence agents but remained in
contact with them, a sworn statement says. He was first asked to focus
on countries in South East Asia but later, their interest turned to the
US government.
That
was how Dickson Yeo set off on a path to becoming a Chinese agent - one
who would end up using the professional networking website LinkedIn, a
fake consulting company and cover as a curious academic to lure in
American targets.
Alumni
at Singapore's Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy (LKYSPP), which
trains some of Asia's top civil servants and government officials, were
left shocked by the news that their former peer had confessed to being a
Chinese agent.
"He was a very active student in class. I always
viewed him as a very intelligent person," said one former postgraduate
student who did not wish to be named
She said he often talked
about social inequality - and that his family struggled financially when
he was a child. She said she found it difficult to reconcile the person
she knew with his guilty plea.
A former member of staff at the
institution painted a different picture, saying Yeo seemed to have "an
inflated sense of his own importance".
Yeo's PhD supervisor had
been Huang Jing, a high-profile Chinese-American professor who was
expelled from Singapore in 2017 for being an "agent of influence of a
foreign country" that was not identified.
Huang Jing always denied those allegations. After leaving Singapore, he first worked in Washington DC, and now Beijing.
During
one meeting he was asked to specifically obtain information about the
US Department of Commerce, artificial intelligence and the Sino-US trade
war.
Bilahari Kausikan, the former permanent secretary at
Singapore's foreign ministry, said he had "no doubt that Dickson knew he
was working for the Chinese intelligence services".
He was not, he said, "an unwitting useful fool".
Yeo
made his crucial contacts using LinkedIn, the job and careers
networking site used by more than 700 million people. The platform was
described only as a "professional networking website" in the court
documents, but its use was confirmed to the Washington Post.
Former
government and military employees and contractors are not shy about
publicly posting details of their detailed work histories on the website
in order to obtain lucrative jobs in the private sector.
In
2017, Germany's intelligence agency said Chinese agents had used
LinkedIn to target at least 10,000 Germans. LinkedIn has not responded
to a request for comment for this story but has previously said it takes
a range of measures to stop nefarious activity.
Some of the
targets that Yeo found by trawling through LinkedIn were commissioned to
write reports for his "consultancy", which had the same name as an
already prominent firm. These were then sent to his Chinese contacts.
One
of the individuals he contacted worked on the US Air Force's F-35
fighter jet programme and admitted he had money problems. Another was a
US army officer assigned to the Pentagon, who was was paid at least
$2,000 (£1,500) to write a report on how the withdrawal of US forces
from Afghanistan would impact China.
In finding such contacts,
Yeo, who was based in Washington DC for part of 2019, was aided by an
invisible ally - the LinkedIn algorithm. Each time Yeo looked at
someone's profile it would suggest a new slate of contacts with similar
experience that he might be interested in. Yeo described it as
"relentless".
According to the court documents, his handlers
advised him to ask targets if they "were dissatisfied with work" or
"were having financial troubles".
William Nguyen, an American former student at the Lee Kuan Yew school who was arrested at a protest in Vietnam in 2018 and later deported,
said in a Facebook post on Saturday that Yeo had tried to contact him
"multiple times" after he was released from prison and his case made
headlines around the world.
In 2018, Yeo also posted fake online
job ads for his consulting company. He said he received more than 400
CVs with 90% of them coming from "US military and government personnel
with security clearances". Some were passed to his Chinese handlers.
The
use of LinkedIn is brazen, but not surprising, said Matthew Brazil, the
co-author of Chinese Communist Espionage: An Intelligence Primer.
"I
think lots of worldwide intelligence agencies probably use it to seek
out sources of information," he said. "Because it's in everybody's
interest who is on LinkedIn to put their whole career on there for
everybody to see - it's an unusually valuable tool in that regard."
He
said that commissioning consultant reports is a way for agents to get
"a hook" into a potentially valuable source who might later be convinced
to supply classified information.
"It's a modern version of classic tradecraft, really."
US
Assistant Attorney General for National Security John Demers said the
case was an example of how China exploits "the openness of American
society" and uses "non-Chinese nationals to target Americans who never
leave the United States".
Singapore, a multicultural society of
5.8 million where ethnic Chinese make up the majority of the population,
has long enjoyed close links with the United States, which uses its air
and naval bases. But it has also sought and maintained positive
relations with China.
Mr Kausikan said that he did not believe the
spying case - the first known to involve a Singaporean - would hurt the
country's reputation with the American government but he feared that
Singaporeans could face greater suspicion in American society.
A
spokesperson at the school told the BBC that Yeo had been granted a
leave of absence from his PhD in 2019 and his candidature had now been
terminated.
Dickson Yeo does not appear to have got as far with
his contacts as his handlers would have liked. But in November 2019, he
travelled to the US with instructions to turn the army officer into a
"permanent conduit of information", his signed statement says.
He was arrested before he could ask.
----
World
Australia rejects Beijing's South China Sea claims, backing US
Chinese navy ships, including the aircraft carrier Liaoning, during military drills in the South China Sea
Chinese navy ships, including the aircraft carrier Liaoning, during military drills in the South China Sea (AFP Photo/STR)
Sydney
(AFP) - Australia has rejected Beijing's territorial and maritime
claims in the South China Sea in a formal declaration to the United
Nations, aligning itself more closely with Washington in the escalating
row.
In a statement filed on Thursday, Australia said there was
"no legal basis" to several disputed Chinese claims in the sea including
those related to the construction of artificial islands on small shoals
and reefs.
"Australia rejects China's claim to 'historic rights'
or 'maritime rights and interests' as established in the 'long course of
historical practice' in the South China Sea," the declaration read.
"There
is no legal basis for China to draw straight baselines connecting the
outermost points of maritime features or 'island groups' in the South
China Sea, including around the 'Four Sha' or 'continental' or
'outlying' archipelagos."
The
declaration comes after US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo declared
Beijing's pursuit of territory and resources in the South China Sea as
illegal, explicitly backing the territorial claims of Southeast Asian
countries against China's.
Beijing claims almost all of the South
China Sea based on a so-called nine-dash line, a vague delineation from
maps dating back to the 1940s.
The latest escalation comes ahead
of annual talks between Australia and the United States, with ministers
travelling to Washington for the first time since Australian borders
were closed due to the coronavirus pandemic.
The meetings come at a
"critical time" and it is essential they are held face-to-face, Foreign
Minister Marise Payne and Defence Minister Linda Reynolds said in a
statement on Saturday.
US relations with China have markedly
deteriorated in recent months, especially over trade disputes, the
coronavirus pandemic and Beijing's crackdown on dissent in Hong Kong.
On
Friday, Beijing ordered the US consulate in Chengdu to shut in
retaliation for the closure of its Houston mission over accusations of
being a hub for intellectual property theft.
Payne and Reynolds
also penned an article in The Australian newspaper on Saturday,
labelling national security legislation imposed on Hong Kong last month
as "sweeping and vague".
"We face a public health crisis, economic
upheaval and resurgent authoritarian regimes using coercion in a bid to
gain power and influence at the expense of our freedoms and
sovereignty," they wrote.
----
Reuters
Australia says China's South China Sea claims are unlawful
MELBOURNE
(Reuters) - Australia has joined the United States in stating that
China's claims in the South China Sea do not comply with international
law in a declaration likely to anger China and put more strain on their
deteriorating relations.
The United States this month rejected
China's claims to offshore resources in most of the South China Sea,
drawing criticism from China which said the U.S. position raised tension
in the region.
Australia, in a declaration filed at the United
Nations in New York on Friday, said it too rejected China’s maritime
claims around contested islands in the South China Sea as being
inconsistent with the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.
"Australia
rejects China's claim to 'historic rights' or 'maritime rights and
interests' as established in the 'long course of historical practice' in
the South China Sea," it said.
Australia
also said it did not accept China's assertion that its sovereignty over
the Paracel Islands and the Spratly Islands was "widely recognised by
the international community", citing objections from Vietnam and the
Philippines.
China claims 90% of the potentially energy-rich
waters but Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam also
lay claim to parts of it.
About $3 trillion worth of trade passes
through the waterway each year. China has built bases atop atolls in the
region but says its intentions are peaceful.
Australia has long
advocated for freedom of navigation in the South China Sea and for all
claimants to resolve their differences in compliance with international
laws.
Its more outspoken position on China's claims comes after
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said this month China had offered no
coherent legal basis for its ambitions in the South China Sea and for
years has been using intimidation against other coastal states.
The
world would not allow China to treat the South China Sea as its
maritime empire, Pompeo said, adding that the United States would
support countries that believed China has violated their maritime
claims.
The United States has long opposed China’s expansive
territorial claims on the South China Sea, sending warships regularly
through the strategic waterway to demonstrate freedom of navigation.
Australia's
declaration on China's claims comes as its foreign and defence
ministers prepare to travel to Washington to attend a bilateral forum on
July 28, the government said.
Diplomatic tension between China
and Australia has worsened recently over various issues including an
Australian call for an international enquiry into the novel coronavirus,
which emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan late last year.
(Reporting by Melanie Burton; Editing by Robert Birsel)
-----
NBC News
Justice Department charges Stanford researcher with lying about ties to Chinese military
Phil Helsel and Andrew Blankstein
A Chinese woman living in the United States as
a visiting researcher at Stanford University has been charged with
lying about her ties to the Chinese military, federal prosecutors said
Monday.
Song Chen, 38, is accused of obtaining a visa by material
false statements, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Northern District
of California said in a statement.
She
was arrested over the weekend and in federal custody Monday night, a
spokesman for the office said. A hearing is scheduled Tuesday that will
deal with detention issues.
Song is not accused of stealing or
sending any materials to China, but she is accused of lying on visa
forms in 2018 to apply to go to Stanford as a neurologist.
Court
documents say Song answered that she had been in the Chinese military
from September 2000 to June 2011, and that she worked at "Xi Diaoyutai
Hospital" in Beijing.
Federal prosecutors say those were lies, and
that was a member of the People’s Liberation Army when she entered the
U.S. in 2018 and when she was here.
They say that the hospital she claimed to work for "was a cover for her true employer, the PLA."
A
criminal complaint says Song is employed by a Chinese air force
hospital and maintained her affiliation after 2011. Investigators think
she is part of a " civilian cadre," whose members are considered active
duty military.
The case was sealed in online records Monday. A
phone message to an attorney who represented her in court Monday was not
immediately returned Monday evening.
A representative for Stanford declined to comment.
An
FBI agent who wrote an affidavit in the case wrote that in an interview
this month, Song "repeatedly and adamantly denied" any current
affiliation with the People's Liberation Army Air Force or the Chinese
military or Fourth Military Medical University.
She said,
according to the affidavit, that after graduating from Fourth Military
Medical University, which is described as a PLA Air Force university,
she disassociated from the Chinese military.
But prosecutors said
that research articles showed her affiliation with institutions under
the air force, and that investigators who searched her computer
recovered a deleted document of a letter to the Chinese consulate in New
York.
Song allegedly "wrote that her stated employer, Beijing Xi
Diaoyutai Hospital, is a false front," according to the U.S. attorney's
office.
The FBI agent who wrote the affidavit in the criminal
complaint wrote that the recovered letter "provides further evidence
that Song works for the PLA and was here on its behalf."
Song is an expert in myasthenia gravis, a rare disorder
that causes muscle weakness. A Stanford professor told an investigator
that Song's research benefitted the work in his lab, according to the
affidavit.
The charge of obtaining a visa by material false
statements is punishable by up to 10 years in prison, according to the
U.S. attorney's office.
Song is only charged with lying in visa forms.
But FBI Director Chris Wray said at an event earlier this month that that nearly half of the FBI's 5,000 active counterintelligence cases relate to China.
In
June, another Chinese national who is alleged to be an officer of the
Chinese military was arrested in California on accusations that he lied
on visa applications to come to the U.S. as a researcher at the
University of California, San Francisco, according to the Justice Department.
Xin
Wang, who federal prosecutors say is a scientific researcher and
officer with the PLA, was arrested at Los Angeles International Airport
as he attempted to leave for China.
Federal prosecutors say he was
instructed by the director of his military university lab in China to
observe the layout of the lab at UC San Francisco so that it could be
replicated in there. Wang was also charged with visa fraud.
----
U.S.
Chinese researcher charged with US visa fraud is in custody
JANIE HAR
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A Chinese researcher
accused of concealing her ties to the Chinese military on a visa
application she submitted so she could work in the U.S. was booked
Friday into a Northern California jail and was expected to appear in
federal court Monday.
Sacramento County jail records show Juan
Tang, 37, was being held on behalf of federal authorities after she was
arrested by the U.S. Marshals Service. It was unclear if she had an
attorney who could comment on her behalf.
The Justice Department
on Thursday announced charges against Tang and three other scientists
living in the U.S., saying they lied about their status as members of
China’s People’s Liberation Army. All were charged with visa fraud.
Tang
was the last of the four to be arrested, after the justice department
accused the Chinese consulate in San Francisco of harboring a known
fugitive. The consulate did not immediately respond to email and
Facebook messages seeking comment and it was not possible to leave a
telephone message.
The
Justice Department said Tang lied about her military ties in a visa
application last October as she made plans to work at the University of
California, Davis and again during an FBI interview months later. Agents
found photos of Tang dressed in military uniform and reviewed articles
in China identifying her military affiliation.
UC Davis said Tang
left her job as a visiting researcher in the Department of Radiation
Oncology in June. Her work was funded by a study-based exchange program
affiliated with China’s Ministry of Education, the university said in a
statement.
Agents have said they believe Tang sought refuge at the
consulate after they interviewed her at her home in Davis on June 20.
The FBI has been interviewing visa holders in more than 25 American
cities suspected of hiding their ties to the Chinese military.
The
allegations came as U.S.-China relations continued to deteriorate,
particularly over allegations of Chinese theft of U.S. intellectual
property.
China's consulate in Houston was scheduled to shut down
Friday on order of U.S. authorities after Washington accused Chinese
agents of trying to steal medical and other research in Texas.
In response, China on Friday ordered the U.S. to close its consulate in the city of Chengdu.
---
CBS News Videos
China vows revenge after U.S. orders consulate in Houston to close
China is vowing retaliation after the U.S. ordered Beijing to close its
consulate in Houston. China received the order on Tuesday, before
reports that someone was burning documents in the courtyard of the
consulate. The U.S. said the facility was ordered closed "to protect
American intellectual property and Americans' private information."
----
World
People
are burning documents at the Chinese Consulate in Houston, as Beijing
says the US abruptly gave it 72 hours to shut it down
An image from video footage appearing to show documents being burned in the courtyard of China's Houston consulate.
Twitter/ KPRC2Tulsi/Breaking 911
People were seen burning documents at the Chinese Consulate in Houston, and fire services were called to the scene.
The
police told multiple outlets that people were burning documents in what
appeared to be open trash cans. It is not clear what those documents
were.
It came as China said the US
ordered the consulate to be closed in an "unprecedented escalation."
Chinese state media reported that the US had given China 72 hours to
close it.
The State Department said the closing was ordered to protect American intellectual property and Americans' private information.
China
painted the decision in light of strained US-China relations, claiming
the US "has repeatedly stigmatized China," and vowed to retaliate if the
US did not reverse its order.
People are burning documents at the Chinese Consulate in Houston after China said the US gave it 72 hours to close.
The local outlet ABC 13 reported early Wednesday morning that trash cans full of documents were being burned in the consulate's courtyard.
A police official told the Houston Chronicle that witnesses saw paper being burned in what appeared to be open trash cans outside the building.
The police also told the local outlet Fox26 Houston that a fire reported at the consulate on Tuesday evening was the result of people burning documents. KPRC 2 reported that the police were told documents were being burned just after 8 p.m. local time on Tuesday.
One witness told KPRC 2: "You could just smell the paper burning."
Fox26
reported that police officers and the fire department were not allowed
onto the premises as it's considered Chinese territory. The police
official told the Houston Chronicle that the police were not allowed to
access the building.
Video footage appears to show documents being burned outside the building:
The Houston police department also tweeted about the apparent document burning.
"About
8:25 pm on Tuesday, our officers responded to a meet the firefighter
call to the China Consulate General in Houston building ... Smoke was
observed in an outside courtyard area," the department said. "Officers were not granted access to enter the building."
Business
Insider was unable to contact the Consulate General of the People's
Republic of China in Houston outside its working hours.
The news comes as China said the US abruptly ordered China to close it immediately.
"On
July 21, the US suddenly requested China to close the Consulate General
in Houston. This was a political provocation unilaterally initiated by
the US against China," a Chinese Foreign Ministry representative, Wang
Wenbin, said on Wednesday, calling it an "unprecedented escalation" in US-China relations.
In
a statement sent to Business Insider, the US State Department
representative Morgan Ortagus said: "We have directed the closure of PRC
Consulate General Houston, in order to protect American intellectual
property and American's private information," using an abbreviation for
the People's Republic of China.
"The United States will not
tolerate the PRC's violations of our sovereignty and intimidation of our
people, just as we have not tolerated the PRC's unfair trade practices,
theft of American jobs, and other egregious behavior," she added.
Wang
said the move "seriously violated international law and basic norms of
international relation" and damaged relations between the US and China.
"China
strongly condemns this. China urges the US to immediately revoke the
wrong decision," he said. "Otherwise, China will definitely make a
proper and necessary response."
Hu Xijin, the editor of China's state-backed Global Times newspaper, said the US gave China just 72 hours to close the consulate.
On Tuesday, the Justice Department charged
two Chinese state-backed hackers with hacking into the computer systems
of hundreds of companies, governments, and individual activists and
stealing their data. It is not clear whether these charges are related
to the ordered closing.
China has four other consulates in the US —
in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and San Francisco — as well as an
embassy in Washington, DC.
The Foreign Ministry statement said the
Houston consulate was being closed "unilaterally" by the US "for a
limited time." It did not specify a deadline given by the US.
The ministry also criticized the US's treatment of China.
"For
a period of time, the US government has repeatedly stigmatized China,
conducted unprovoked attacks on China's development, unreasonably made
things difficult for Chinese diplomatic and consular staff in the US,
and intimidated, interrogated, and confiscated personal electronic
equipment from Chinese students studying in the US," it said, without
giving evidence to back up its charges.
Ortagus, the State Department spokeswoman, said: "President Trump insists on fairness and reciprocity in US-China relations."
Sen.
Marco Rubio, the acting chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee,
celebrated the move to close the consulate in a tweet. The Florida
Republican referred to the Chinese consulate in Houston as a "massive spy center."
"#China's
consulate in #Houston is not a diplomatic facility. It is the central
node of the Communist Party's vast network of spies & influence
operations in the United States. Now that building must close & the
spies have 72 hours to leave or face arrest. This needed to happen," Rubio said. The New York Times noted that while ordering a consulate closed was a strong step, it was one that had been taken before in disputes between countries.
For
example, the US ordered Russia to close its consulate in San Francisco
in 2017 after Russia restricted the number of diplomats the US could
have in Moscow.
An unidentified source told Reuters
that Beijing was considering closing the US consulate in the Chinese
city of Wuhan in retaliation, but China's next moves remain unclear.
Tensions
between the US and China have reached historic heights in the Trump
era, with top experts warning that the two major powers are on the brink of a new Cold War. Though he praised China's handling of COVID-19 early on, President Donald Trump shifted to blaming Beijing for the pandemic as the US coronavirus outbreak worsened, which has exacerbated the situation. The virus was originally detected in Wuhan.
"We're essentially in the beginnings of a Cold War," Orville Schell, the director of the Center on US-China Relations at the Asia Society, told Insider in May. "We are on a downward slide into something increasingly adversarial with China."
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