China decries CIA videos aimed at informants
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China decries CIA videos aimed at informants

Beijing vows to take measures against ‘infiltration and sabotage’

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A man walks through the lobby of the CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia. (Reuters File Photo)
A man walks through the lobby of the CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia. (Reuters File Photo)

BEIJING - China on Tuesday warned it would take all necessary measures to crack down on the “infiltration and sabotage activities of foreign anti-China forces”, in response to Chinese-language videos released by the US Central Intelligence Agency.

A Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson called the videos “a serious violation of China’s national interests” and “naked” political provocation.

“The United States not only maliciously smears and attacks China, but also blatantly deceives and lures Chinese personnel to turn sides, and even directly targets Chinese government officials,” spokesperson Lin Jian told a regular press briefing.

The CIA last Thursday rolled out two Chinese-language videos aimed at enticing officials in China to leak secrets to the US.

The move came after the CIA in October launched a drive to recruit new informants in China, Iran and North Korea by posting instructions online on how to securely contact the agency, following what it said was successful efforts to enlist Russians.

The CIA is confident that the videos are penetrating China’s “Great Firewall” internet restrictions and reaching the intended audience.

“If it weren’t working, we wouldn’t be making more videos,” a CIA official speaking on condition of anonymity told Reuters, adding that China was the agency’s foremost intelligence priority amid a “truly generational competition” between the US and China.

The two short videos posted to the CIA’s social media accounts depict fictional scenes in which a senior Chinese Communist Party (CCP) official and a more junior government worker with access to classified information become disillusioned with China’s system and approach the CIA.

The videos appear aimed at tapping into possible discontent in the Chinese government and senior echelons of the Party, as Beijing has purged top officials and military leaders, some considered close allies of President Xi Jinping himself.

“As I rise within the party, I watch those above me being discarded like worn-out shoes, but now I realise that my fate was just as precarious as theirs,” the narrator says in Mandarin Chinese in one of the videos as the camera shows empty seats around a lavish dinner table.

“My family’s fate cannot rest in their hands,” the man says before the video depicts him contacting the CIA using a tablet computer. It ends with the CIA logo and dark web contact details for the agency.

The CIA official said that the US was not just interested in counterintelligence, but was also seeking information on advanced science, military and cyber technology, valuable economic data, and China’s foreign policy secrets.

CIA Director John Ratcliffe said no adversary had ever posed a more formidable challenge to the US than the CCP.

“It is intent on dominating the world economically, militarily, and technologically,” he said in a statement. “Our agency must continue responding to this threat with urgency, creativity, and grit, and these videos are just one of the ways we are doing this.” 

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