terça-feira, 12 de dezembro de 2017

Espionagem Chinesa Está Mais Agressiva no Exterior

Os "serviços" chineses voltaram a subir o seu grau de actuação no exterior e estão muito agressivos no ciberespaço e muito presentes nos "facebooks" que tornaram numa nova frente de recrutamento. Assim, os chineses usam "social networks to try to cultivate lawmakers and other officials as sources"... Alemanha e Austrália estão na frente da denúncia desta ofensiva dos "serviços" de Pequim. Ao recrutar "lawmakers and other officials as sources", a China mostra-se uma boa aluna da escola do velho KGB. Ao usar as redes sociais para esse efeito (muito embora cultive outros canais mais clássicos...), mostra-se igualmente boa aluna do... Daesh (que foi pioneiro nessas malasartes). Quando Berlim e Camberra resolvem denunciar publicamente esta ofensiva da espionagem chinesa, é talvez altura de perguntar que diabo se está a passar em Lisboa, onde o Estado chinês, através de empresas públicas e outras fachadas, já controla vários sectores económicos estratégicos. E também altura para ler ou reler o romance de Paulo Reis, "Operação Negócios Privados", uma ficção que resolve muito da realidade.


China ups its spy game

German spies say their Chinese counterparts are getting more aggressive in cyberspace. 

The D Brief  | 11 Dez. 2017

ABC News: The head of Germany's domestic intelligence agency warned Sunday that China allegedly is using social networks to try to cultivate lawmakers and other officials as sources.

Also: Australia

After reports of Chinese spies and influence ops in a lot of places, China is pushing back on "racist" allegations. Reuters, here.

U.S. microchip engineers 

"Liang Chen, Donald Olgado, Wei-Yung Hsu and Robert Ewald are accused of downloading data from [their employer, Applied Materials, Inc.'s] internal engineering database, including more than 16,000 drawings." Their goal: "lure investors to fund a U.S. and China-based startup that would compete with their former employer," Bloomberg reports. "If convicted, the four face as long as 10 years in federal prison for each of 11 counts of possessing stolen trade secrets. They're scheduled to be arraigned on Dec. 15 in San Jose, California." More, here.  


9 comentários:

  1. An Australian lawmaker said he’ll resign over his China connections. Sam Dastyari had been a rising star in the Labor party until a donation scandal last year highlighted his links and interactions with Chinese donors. Last week Australia introduced laws to ban foreigners from donating to political campaigns, in a bid to curb foreign influence on its policies.

    Quartz | 12 Dec 2017

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  2. On Tuesday, as you may have read in yesterday's edition, Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull announced a ban on foreign political donations, citing “disturbing reports about Chinese influence.” These include the allegations surrounding Sam Dastyari, a Labor Party senator “accused of endorsing China’s controversial actions in the disputed South China Sea, against his party’s platform, in return for support from donor Huang Xiangmo,” as The Post's Simon Denyer wrote. “He was also reported to have given Huang advice on how to evade Australian surveillance and to have unsuccessfully tried to pressure Labor’s deputy leader not to meet a Hong Kong pro-democracy activist in 2015.”

    On Wednesday, attention in Australia centered on a Chinese letter calling on Australian Chinese to vote against the ruling Liberal Party; its origins, though murky, appeared to have some connection to an agency within the Chinese Communist Party. China's Foreign Ministry and the state mouthpiece, the People's Daily, rebuffed any suggestion of manipulation, asking Australians to “discard their political biases and prejudices.”

    Australia and New Zealand have so far allowed foreign donations. But the growing clout of China, which retains huge economic interests in the Antipodes, is causing alarm. In its own annual report to Parliament, Australia's domestic intelligence agency warned of foreign influence posing “a threat to our sovereignty, the ­integrity of our national institutions, and the exercise of our citizens’ rights.” In September, a comprehensive report by New Zealand academic Anne-Marie Brady on Chinese soft power there — including Chinese patronage networks reaching into the political elite and the use of the country's dairy farms to test Chinese satellites — shook up New Zealand's election campaign.

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  3. China is, of course, a world power, and it is natural for it to cultivate extensive ties in foreign lands. Chinese investments and other soft-power influences have factored into election campaigns in developing countries as diverse as Zambia, Peru and Nepal. That is a reality Americans can hardly begrudge, given their own nation's lengthy history of meddling in elections elsewhere.

    In many cases, China's interests are primarily economic. As new studies point out, its cultivation of foreign assets follows rather traditional lines: making connections through people-to-people exchanges, wooing the political elite with generous gifts and hospitality, and using partnerships with local universities and its vast network of Chinese government-sponsored Confucius Institutes to influence attitudes about China abroad.

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  4. In the longer term, U.S. strategists may be less worried about the influence of Moscow abroad than that of Beijing.

    On Wednesday, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) convened a hearing on the “Long Arm of China,” focusing on China's capacity to launch influence operations abroad to gain leverage over democratic rivals. “We have a lot of discussion of Russian interference in our elections, but the Chinese efforts to influence our public policy and our basic freedoms are much more widespread than most people realize,” Rubio told my colleague Josh Rogin ahead of the session.

    But Rubio and others warn of a more dangerous ideological edge to China's international agenda. They argue that as China creates an increasingly sophisticated online police state at home — built on maximizing surveillance and censorship — it is intensifying efforts to explore other countries' vulnerabilities.

    “In an era of hyperglobalization, the regimes in Russia and China have raised barriers to external political and cultural influence at home while simultaneously preying upon the openness of democratic systems abroad,” wrote the researchers for a new report from the National Endowment for Democracy that focuses on the “sharp power” of authoritarian regimes.

    “The Chinese government has spent tens of billions of dollars to shape norms, narratives, and attitudes in other countries,” said Shanthi Kalathil of the National Endowment for Democracy, speaking at Wednesday's hearing.

    Chinese authorities also appear to be deepening their monitoring of their citizens on foreign soil. “China’s influence campaign appears to have extended further in Australia,” wrote Joshua Kurlantzick of the Council on Foreign Relations. “China’s state security forces have reportedly engaged in a campaign to monitor Chinese nationals, including many students there — even warning them not to offer any criticism of Beijing lest their relatives in China be harmed.”

    In his Dec. 10 article, Rogin wrote: “China’s overriding goal is, at the least, to defend its authoritarian system from attack and at most to export it to the world at America’s expense.”

    On Wednesday in Washington, Rubio said the emerging Chinese strategy “directly threatens our most deeply held values and our national interest.” He added: “Chinese leaders are engaged in the long game. And it is something that policymakers in the United States and our like-minded allies must take seriously.”

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  5. “The problem for Australia is that China’s willingness to use coercion to achieve its dream of renewed greatness is becoming a defining feature of its foreign policy,” wrote Alan Dupont, founder of the Cognoscenti Group consultancy, in the newspaper the Australian. “With the U.S. in self-declared retreat from its global leadership role and lacking a coherent Asia policy under Donald Trump, there are diminishing external constraints on Chinese behavior and ambitions.”

    Brady, the New Zealand academic, argued that what is taking root has less to do with Beijing's particular agenda than the complacency of democracies. “It'd be the same if it was any country,” she told the New Zealand Herald. “It's not about China, but it's our country and our democracy where we value freedom of speech and association. It's our right to choose our government.”

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  6. China's 'long arm' of influence stretches ever further

    “We have a lot of discussion of Russian interference in our elections, but the Chinese efforts to influence our public policy and our basic freedoms are much more widespread than most people realize,” Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) told.
    Sen. Rubio convened a hearing on the “Long Arm of China,” focusing on China's capacity to launch influence operations abroad to gain leverage over democratic rivals.
    In the longer term, U.S. strategists may be less worried about the influence of Moscow abroad than that of Beijing...

    https://s2.washingtonpost.com/camp-rw/?e=dmVyY2xhcm8uam1AZ21haWwuY29t&s=5a3212f7fe1ff6194e5cd4e5

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  7. Washington: Do “Inimigo Principal”...

    Washington começa a perceber que se tem andado a enganar na identificação do “inimigo principal”... Têm de ler (ou reler) os “Escritos Militares” do Mao e estudar o jogo de Go (que é um pouco mais complexo que o póker).

    China's 'long arm' of influence stretches ever further

    The specter of Kremlin collusion has darkened U.S.-Russia diplomatic relations; the proliferation of Russian "bots” on social-media platforms such Facebook and Twitter has led to difficult reckonings within U.S. tech and social media companies.
    But, in the longer term, U.S. strategists may be less worried about the influence of Moscow abroad than that of Beijing. On Wednesday, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) convened a hearing on the “Long Arm of China”...

    https://s2.washingtonpost.com/camp-rw/?e=dmVyY2xhcm8uam1AZ21haWwuY29t&s=5a3212f7fe1ff6194e5cd4e5

    ResponderEliminar
  8. China usa LinkedIn para espiar políticos alemães

    Os serviços secretos chineses estão, alegadamente, a utilizar o LinkedIn para recrutar, pelo menos, dez mil informadores. Em 2016, a Alemanha terá detetado um “agressivo aumento de ações de ciberespionagem”...

    http://www.jornaleconomico.sapo.pt/noticias/china-usa-linkedin-para-espiar-politicos-alemaes-243038

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  9. Australia and New Zealand Face China's Influence


    Joshua Kurlantzick
    Over the past year, both the Australian and New Zealand governments have faced reports that China has stepped up efforts to gain influence in foreign political systems. Read the Expert Brief »


    https://geopoliticalfutures.us11.list-manage.com/track/click?u=781d962e0d3dfabcf455f7eff&id=7f754a2ee6&e=5f06a27b6a

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