A once-secret White House strategy document reveals that the U.S. has stepped up intelligence activities directed against China's extensive spying operations in the United States and around the world.
Tech giants are giving China a vital edge in espionage
Chinese company Baidu launches on the NASDAQ in New York in 2005. Some 15 years later, questions are being asked about its links with the Chinese Communist Party. Â
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In 2017, as US President Donald Trump began his trade war with China, another battle raged behind the scenes. The simmering, decade-long conflict over data between Chinese and US intelligence agencies was heating up, driven both by the ambitions of an increasingly confident Beijing and by the conviction of key players in the new administration in Washington that China was presenting an economic, political, and national security challenge on a scale the United States had not faced for decades â if ever.
Trump briefed on unverified intelligence about China offering bounties in Afghanistan | Print this article
The Trump administration is declassifying unconfirmed intelligence indicating that the Chinese government offered bounties to nonstate actors in Afghanistan to attack U.S. soldiers, the
Washington Examiner can confirm, following President Trump being briefed on the claims in recent days.
Axios on Wednesday, which cited two senior administration officials, and a senior intelligence official and a senior administration official separately confirmed the reporting related to the declassified intelligence with the
Washington Examiner.
If true, the bounties would represent a massive escalation by China in its power competition with the United States. Last month, the
As the Georgia Senate runoff election fast approaches, questions continue about Democratic Senate candidate Jon Ossoff’s views on and connections to communist China.
In 2012, Ossoff used his Twitter to promote the CCP-controlled media, Xinhua News Agency, which has repeatedly denied human rights violations against the Uyghur people and spoken out against the Hong Kong democracy protests. In his tweet, Ossoff suggested people follow the propaganda outlet for information about China’s political affairs.
“Esp. during 18th Party Congress, #follow @XHNews (Xinhua – Chinese state media). #ff,” he wrote.
Esp. during 18th Party Congress, #follow@XHNews (Xinhua – Chinese state media). #ff