In the late 1950s and early 1960s there was an American TV series called “The Naked City”, set in NYC. The opening for each episode began with the intoned words, “There are eight million stories in the Naked City. This is one of them.” Well, there are probably 8 million American spy stories that have taken place in China during the past few decades. Here are two of them.
Introduction
Several years ago it was reported that the Pentagon was building
an international spy network that might become even larger than that of the
CIA, planning to have at least 1,600 “collectors of information” spread around
the world. In addition to military attaches and others who do not work
undercover, more clandestine operatives would be trained by the CIA and
deployed overseas to undertake tasks the CIA was unwilling to pursue. It was
duly confirmed that China was among the Pentagon’s top intelligence priorities,
reflecting the American affinity for espionage and covert action, evidence of
which we no longer need. Americans are frequently conscripted by the CIA or the
US military into espionage service in China, operating with the assistance of the
US State Department.
Foreign individuals in China, ostensibly acting independently, are
regularly apprehended by Chinese authorities for carrying out illegal surveys
and mapping, marking the location of key military and other facilities. Almost
40 illegal surveying and mapping cases were detected in China in the past
several years alone, mostly surrounding some of China’s military bases and
installations, and in sensitive border areas such as Xinjiang and Tibet, the
data almost certainly used in planning the foreign-sponsored unrest that
occurred in those provinces.
In one recent case, an American citizen was found using two
professional surveying and mapping GPS receivers on which he had recorded more
than 90,000 coordinates, 50,000 of those near military installations. He
travelled to XinJiang on a pretext of registering a travel agency to offer
outdoor tours to foreigners in Urumqi, and clearly was there on assignment from
the US government when he was caught. This is the reason Google’s mapping service
was killed in China. Google was busy collecting high-resolution intelligence
for the CIA, again images of sensitive military areas.
It is widely-known in China that literally thousands of the staff
of the US Embassy in Beijing and its various Consulates are engaged in
activities which are clearly espionage. This was the reason the Chinese
government selected the closure of the US Consulate in Chengdu. Chinese
authorities had repeatedly objected to the US Embassy and the US Government
that the staff in Chengdu were engaged in activities “not commensurate with
their diplomatic designations”. That’s Chinese understatement.
The American media are fond of accusing the Chinese of “seeing a
conspiracy around every corner”, but these events are sufficient in number to
justify China’s concern, these same media neglecting to note that anyone
collecting hundreds of thousands of GPS coordinates near American military
bases, would have a very short future.
Coca-Cola
The Coca-Cola Company has always been involved in espionage for
the US military and the State Department.[1] Oddly,
neither the Coca-Cola company website nor Google have any knowledge of this,
and the State Department had no one available to discuss this with me. Since at
least the 1940s, when the company established bottling plants in a new country,
OSS or CIA spies were automatically sent in as part of the staff. It wasn’t
even much of a secret: when the US Senate held their famous Iran-Contra
hearings in 1987, the link between the CIA and Coca-Cola was fully exposed.
And it isn’t only Coca-Cola, but let’s look at this company first.
In March of 2013, Laurie Burkitt of the WSJ wrote a pleasantly uninformed
article[2] about
Coca-Cola having been charged with espionage in Western China, her curious but
typically American media spin being that this highlighted “the perils of doing
business in China”. Let’s look at the facts.
On 21 separate occasions, 21 different Coca-Cola trucks were
apprehended while conducting what the Western media called ‘surveying’ or
‘mapping’ of some of China’s more politically-sensitive areas that included
borders and military bases. The first question coming to mind is why drivers of
Coca-Cola delivery trucks would be conducting “mapping operations” or
“surveying” anywhere in the world, much less in Yunnan and other
politically-sensitive areas of China, and especially of border areas and those
surrounding military bases. Even more to the point, why would Coca-Cola drivers
doing this ‘mapping’ be as much as 600 kilometers off their normal delivery
routes?
Coca-Cola said the GPS units its employees used were “digital map
and customer logistic systems commercially available in China”, a claim that
was an outright lie. It is true that many truck fleets around the world install
GPS devices in their vehicles to help track locations and improve their
logistics efficiency, but these GPS units are permanently mounted and are
generally ‘dumb’ units able to do no more than record and transmit their
location to a central source, and indeed that is their only use. But in the
case of the Coca-Cola trucks, the GPS devices were not mounted but were
hand-held units of military grade and were so sophisticated in their
programming that Chinese military officials at first had considerable
difficulty in precisely determining all their functions. Many of those units
contained nearly 90,000 coordinates of military bases and other sensitive
areas. In her article, Burkitt ignored all of this with the foolish claim that
the GPS units were “only being used to improve fuel efficiency and customer
service”, her claim immediately picked up by the US media to paint Coca-Cola as
the victim and portray China as sensitive to the point of paranoia.[3]
An official government statement was as follows:
“What we can say for now is that many subsidiaries of Coca-Cola
are involved and this happens in many provinces. Due to the sheer scale of the
case, the complexity of the technology involved and the implication to our
national security, we are working with the Ministry of State Security on this.”
If the Ministry of State Security is involved, you can be sure
this is a damned serious matter, and it was due to the use of what were called
“devices with ultra high sensitivity” and GPS units containing “mapping
technology with military-level algorithms” that got them involved.[4] The
reason of course is that such geographical data is primarily used by cruise
missiles directed against sensitive military facilities. These data must be
obtained on the ground because, while observation satellites can provide very
high resolution, their photos have no frame of reference and cannot provide
sufficiently accurate location targeting data – no matter what the New York
Times tells you. At the time, Han Qixiang, director of the administration’s law
enforcement department, claimed that Coca-Cola was doing more than just
improving its supply chain, and was using mapping technology so sophisticated
that the administration had difficulty adequately analysing the company’s
system. And, while it wasn’t widely reported at the time, these same “Coca-Cola
drivers” were simultaneously conducting aerial photography of military bases
with drones.
No further information was released, but it was clear from
government statements that this Coca-Cola espionage event was much more serious
than portrayed in the Western media. And, with due apologies to Laurie Burkitt,
none of this was about “the perils of doing business in China”.
Another item may provide some insight into Coca-Cola’s
involvement. One is that the Chinese media published stories at around the same
time that appeared unconnected but that were almost certainly part of this same
process. The stories involved Coca-Cola employees who had been arrested for
accepting bribes. One such individual surnamed Zhu who worked in Coca-Cola’s
Shenmei marketing department had apparently accepted more than 10 million RMB,
about US$1.5 million, with several others having been accused and detained for
the same offense.[5][6] It
is true that employees of Coca-Cola and other American firms in China often
demand bribes, but these are usually small-scale extortion attempts from
company suppliers where the individual has authority to grant business
contracts, and the police are generally uninterested in these matters unless
the company itself requests a police investigation. But these payments were two
orders of magnitude above the commercial extortion level, leaving the more
logical conclusion that these additional Coca-Cola employees had received their
payments from the same source as the truck drivers performing the GPS
‘mapping’, in other words, from some agency of the US government, with the
money dispensed in cash through the Coca-Cola company from the US Embassy, but
were caught before they could execute their espionage duties.
This is a good place to note that in a typical year (at least
until recently) the American consulates in China were receiving about 800,000
visa applications per year from Chinese citizens, mostly for studying or
tourism. The US Embassy and consulates charged a fee of 1,000 RMB for each
application, with a stipulation that the fee be paid only in cash. To save you
the math, that’s about 800 million RMB per year, or about US$130 million that
by-passed the banking system and was available for black ops. A more recent but
undated website page claims application fees can be paid by Visa or Master
Card, American Express, Discover and Diners Club, of course every Chinese
citizen carrying these American credit cards to the same extent that every
American carries Bank of China credit cards.
The
Interesting Case of Xue Feng
In 2010, a Chinese Court charged Chinese-American geologist Xue
Feng with attempting to obtain and traffic in state secrets and sentenced him
to eight years in prison with a 200,000 RMB fine, for his attempts at purchasing
data on the Chinese oil industry. Naturally, the US government reacted with
“dismay and puzzlement” at the prison sentence imposed and, just as naturally,
the American media presented a distorted description of the surrounding events
while withholding most of the crucial information. Let’s look at the facts.
From various sources, Feng had collected documents and proprietary
data on the geological conditions of China’s on-shore oil wells, as well as a
database providing the GPS co-ordinates of more than 30,000 oil and gas wells
belonging to CNOOC and PetroChina. The information was then sold (or about to
be sold) to US-based IHS Energy for US$350,000.
The primary issue is that without oil, a country has no military
capability. Without a consistent supply of oil, ships cannot sail, aircraft
cannot fly, tanks cannot move, and troops cannot be transported. The US, being
one of only two nations in the world always looking for yet another war, is the
only country that amasses data on the petroleum supply capability of all other
nations. It does so because, in the event of an armed conflict, it wants to
know the enemy’s military fuel capacity. This includes not only tanker supply
routes but the production capability of all producing wells, the duration of maximum
production and, perhaps most importantly, the precise GPS coordinates for
launching missiles to destroy this capability. This is why information on
China’s oil wells is of great interest to the US military, and of course why
the information is considered by the Chinese government to be sensitive and
confidential. It could be crucial to China’s survival.
Let’s look at Feng’s supposed employer, the mysterious IHS Energy,
identified in the US media as an “information-services company” providing data
on worldwide petroleum production to customers around the world. Not quite
true. IHS is a secretive company primarily engaged full-time in espionage for
the US military, and in fact IHS was born in the US military although neither
Google nor Bing seem aware of this. This company was originally created to
serve the US aerospace weapons manufacturing industry and to coordinate
purchases from weapons contractors. The company publishes many books and
military trade magazines that are used by Western governments as a prime source
of military intelligence and information on defense and warfare. One company
owned by IHS is Jane’s Information Group[7][8],
perhaps the prime source of global aerospace and defense industry information
and intelligence to all Western government agencies. IHS also owns a company
named Cambridge Energy Research Associates[9],
which is a military intelligence-gathering firm that advises the US and other
Western governments on military strategy and what we might call ‘geopolitics’,
related to the energy availability of foreign militaries, certainly including
China.
More to the point is that one of IHS’s most critical assets is a
massive database that contains all the production and technical information on
the vast majority of oil and gas wells in the entire world[10],
an asset collected exclusively for use by the US military, the CIA and the
State Department. This information is a critical part of American war-planning
since a prime objective in an armed conflict would be to neutralise or destroy
an opponent’s energy supplies. And, since the US has for years been planning
war scenarios involving China, this is why IHS was so interested in obtaining
all that information.
From this, you can understand why IHS had Feng collecting
information on such an enormous and detailed scale. For its war planning, the
US military needs to know the precise production capacity of all China’s oil
wells and whether their yields are increasing or declining, in order to
estimate the ability of China’s military to function during a conflict if the
US navy cuts off imported supplies of tanker petroleum to China through the
South China Sea. IHS was tasked with obtaining this information, including the
precise GPS coordinates of all producing wells of any consequence so the US
military could target and destroy them with cruise missiles. And that’s why the
information was worth $350,000 to IHS; they would have re-worked and resold it
for millions to various departments of the US military and other government
agencies.
Feng was not an employee of IHS. He was a freelancer who had been
hired and trained by the CIA in espionage and data collection in China, then
turned over to IHS under contract to collect the necessary information. The WSJ
made a coy statement that Feng “had switched jobs shortly before he was
detained for his work for IHS.” This was the reason.[11] Feng
was not doing ‘research’ in any sense in which we use that word, nor was he
collecting information that was already in the public domain as the Western
media tried to portray him. Instead, he was engaged in an important program of
espionage for the US military in an area crucial to China’s defense, and should
have been executed for his actions. I cannot understand why he was not.
The information Feng attempted to collect was neither commercially
available nor in ‘the public domain’ as the Western media suggested. Other
media reports stated this information is publicly available in the US, a claim
that may be true, but irrelevant. The US is not in danger of military attack
and nobody is collecting GPS coordinates on American oil wells so as to direct
cruise missiles in their direction. In any case, I could hardly escape arrest
or imprisonment in the US by claiming that my ‘market research’ on their
military assets was legal in some other country and therefore the US had no right
to detain me, though Feng attempted this defense in the Chinese courts.
In one of its articles on this issue, the WSJ made this
observation: “Mr. Xue was born in China, a reminder that ethnic Chinese may be
more vulnerable to pitfalls of the country’s legal system than other
foreigners. Like IHS, many multinationals have come to rely on people like Xue
to run their China operations.” IHS had no “China operations” nor any presence
in China, but the above comment is true in the sense that in such circumstances
the Chinese authorities have tended to be more lenient with foreigners than
with ethnic Chinese whom they deem traitors to their homeland.
The US invests considerable effort to locate and indoctrinate
Chinese-born Americans who can be sufficiently “turned” to betray their own
country. Feng was undoubtedly one of these, his attraction to the CIA based on
the assumption that, being ethnic Chinese, he would attract less attention than
other foreigners and might better understand how to fit into the cultural
environment without drawing attention to himself.
The US government took a very strong interest in Feng’s case, and
mounted a prolonged diplomatic campaign to have him released on “humanitarian”
grounds. Former US ambassador Jon Huntsman visited Feng in prison, and even
President Obama met with China’s President to beg for Feng’s release, while
many other US government officials raised the issue privately. Just so you
know, when the US government exhibits such keen interest in the fate of one
such individual, it is only because those same officials were actively involved
in placing the person in that situation, and feel some responsibility to save
their “asset”. It was interesting that this case must have involved more than
merely oil well production and location data because anyone from the US
government was barred from the hearing[12],
which would indicate there were additional and serious classified matters
involved.
For your reading entertainment, here are some of the Western
distortions:
The UK Independent carried a headline screaming, “US geologist
jailed for eight years in China for oil research”[13],
in a case that “highlights the government’s use of vague secrets laws to
restrict business information”. The Wall Street Journal told us that “Mr. Xue’s
case is the latest to highlight stark questions about the legality in China of
conducting market research”, claiming “Mr. Xue’s case stems purely from his
attempt to purchase commercially available data on the oil industry”. Notice
the choice of words. Feng was imprisoned for conducting ‘market research’, in
which capacity he attempted to purchase ‘commercially available data’, leaving
an impression that was quite different from the facts. The UK Guardian[14] and
the Telegraph[15] chimed
in as well, and Fox News told us that “Chinese officials have wide authority to
classify information as state secrets.” Unlike the Americans.[16] The
US government played its part in the media circus, claiming Feng simply
“received” information that “should be in the public domain”, and “was just
doing his job”.
More amusingly, the WSJ claimed that China’s court announcing its
verdict during an American holiday weekend, “appeared to be a calculated act of
defiance” against the US[17],
meaning that China should conduct its internal affairs with one eye on a
calendar of US holidays to ensure Americans are properly informed. A
Jewish-American law professor in New York, Jerome A. Cohen, who purports to be
“an authority on China’s legal system”, claimed that this was a case of China’s
“thumbing its nose at the US government” – apparently an unforgivable act of
defiance against the Imperial Master. And the act of sending Feng to conduct
espionage in China would be the US government’s ‘thumbing their nose’ at whom?
Notes
[1] https://cocacolaunited.com/blog/2012/11/12/supporting-u-s-military-and-veterans-since-1941/
[2]https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424127887323826704578357131413767460
[3] https://www.cbsnews.com/news/china-accuses-coca-cola-of-misusing-gps-equipment/
[4] http://www.3snews.net/startup/246000023519.html
[5] https://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/14/business/global/14coke.html
[6] http://www.china.org.cn/china/news/2009-09/17/content_18543520.htm
[8] https://www.janes.com/defence-equipment-intelligence/
[9] https://www.bloomberg.com/profile/company/376925Z:US
[10] https://ihsmarkit.com/products/international-well-data.html
[11]https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748704594804575649722313164714
[12] https://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/01/world/asia/01beijing.html
[13] https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/us-geologist-jailed-for-eight-years-in-china-for-oil-research-2019192.html
[14] https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/jul/05/us-geologist-china-prison
[15]https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/7871740/American-geologist-Xue-Feng-jailed-in-China-for-eight-years.html
[16] https://www.foxnews.com/world/chinese-court-sentences-us-geologist-abused-by-state-security-agents-to-8-years-in-jail
[17]https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB100014240527487047384045753479012
https://www.unz.com/lromanoff/if-you-do-it-its-spying-if-i-do-it-its-research/