EDITORIAL :New era of
Chinese spying dawns
Lamentable though it may be, news last week that Central Police University
associate professor Wu Chang-yu (§d¹ü¸Î) had been taken in on suspicion of passing
information about dissidents to China was not shocking. However, this incident
did bring into sharp contrast the dawn of a new era of Chinese ¡§espionage¡¨ in
Taiwan.
There is nothing new to espionage operations by China targeting the Taiwanese
military, security apparatus, political parties and high-tech sector. Over the
years, a number of Taiwanese have been caught spying for Beijing. The arrest and
sentencing this year of General Lo Hsien-che (ù½åõ) for providing military
secrets to China is but the latest and most prominent case in a long series of
spy operations.
While it is difficult to gauge the severity of Chinese spy activity targeting
Taiwan, as we only know of the cases where an agent was caught, it is safe to
assume it is serious.
What is now changing ¡X and Wu¡¦s arrest could be the opening shot ¡X is the
context in which Chinese espionage is occurring. From 1949 until the beginning
of the 21st century, China had limited opportunities to conduct human
intelligence gathering on Taiwan.
This was mainly the result of policies by Taipei that substantially constrained
opportunities for contact in Taiwan. As such, recruitment usually occurred in a
third country. As Taiwan slowly opened to Chinese visitors and investment from
the 1990s on, the opportunities for contact increased commensurately.
Following his entry into the Presidential Office in May 2008, President Ma Ying-jeou
(°¨^¤E) forced the gates open and allowed an unprecedented number of Chinese, from
tourists to senior Chinese Communist Party officials, to visit Taiwan, while
quickly intensifying contact between almost every sector of government, society
and business. So sudden was the shift that Taiwan¡¦s national security apparatus
did not have the wherewithal to address the new challenges created by this
policy. As a result, not only did the opportunities for Chinese intelligence
officers to conduct espionage in Taiwan grow exponentially, the sheer number of
potential acts of espionage made most of them impossible to detect by a
counterintelligence apparatus that remains configured to deal with a threat
matrix that no longer exists.
We should also note, as author David Wise shows us in his book Tiger Trap, that
Chinese espionage differs substantially from how it is understood in the West.
The Chinese intelligence apparatus rarely pays for information and its approach
to data gathering is much more subtle. Rather than have one agent collect
information on a target, China will send 1,000 individuals and ask each to pick
up a grain of salt, to refer to the analogy often used to describe Chinese
espionage. Each grain is then added to the others and analyzed after it is
returned to China.
More often than not, ¡§sources¡¨ are not even aware they are providing Beijing
with sensitive information, given that a large share of Chinese intelligence
collection takes place in a business or academic context. China, furthermore, is
very patient in collecting information and adopts a strategy of gradualism with
its ¡§sources,¡¨ taking them a little deeper one seemingly innocuous question at a
time.
Defending his actions, Wu told prosecutors that the information he passed on to
his handlers was not confidential. However, the ¡§common¡¨ information he gave the
Chinese was likely only a small component of a target picture Chinese
intelligence was drawing of its targets.
As more Chinese visit, invest and study in Taiwan, China¡¦s ability to penetrate
Taiwanese society and gather intelligence will only rise. How a nation detects
espionage when it doesn¡¦t even look like espionage is a challenge Taiwanese will
have to learn to deal with. Alarmingly, this is a challenge that very few
countries have succeeded in addressing successfully.
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