加《国家邮报》:中国留学生窃情报(e)

加拿大总理马丁将于下月访问北京,该国右翼大报《国家邮报》报道,中国情报机关利用留学生及访问学者,窃取加拿大军用科技情报。不过,中国驻加拿大使馆人员已否认有关指控。

《国家邮报》十二月二十九日报道,加拿大情报局向国会提交的一份报告,就外国间谍刺探加拿大科技发展、军工机密资料的情况提出警告,指有关行动威胁加拿大的国家安全。报告特别引述一位没有透露姓名的高级情报人员称,中国积极刺探加拿大的科技情报。

《苹果日报》报导说,加国情报人员表示,中国利用在加拿大的中国留学生、科学家、商人以及到加拿大访问的中国代表团,搜集有利于中国公司及军工集团发展的工业秘密及高科技资料。报道指出,中国的窃密行动主要锁定加拿大的核能源、航天科技、生化科技、矿产及冶金、环保以及石油及天然气工业。

这位加拿大情报人员还指出,中国政府命令辖下单位、国营企业及情报机关,对加拿大进行经济间谍工作。报道并点名解放军总装备部的中国国防科学及技术信息中心,是搜集加拿大及外国科技情报的主要机关。

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China spying on us: CSIS
Visiting students, scientists steal Canadian technology

Robert Fife
CanWest News Service

Wednesday, December 29, 2004

OTTAWA – China’s intelligence services have systematically targeted Canada’s science and technology sectors and use Chinese students and visiting scientists to steal technology for military use and to enhance the country’s global economic competitiveness, a senior intelligence source says.

In its annual report to Parliament, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service warns foreign spies are seeking to acquire ”Canada’s scientific and technological developments, critical economic and information infrastructure, military and other classified information, putting at risk Canada’s national security.”

CSIS does not cite a specific country, but a high-level intelligence source identifies China as the ”most aggressive” in seeking to illegally acquire Canadian technology.

The official said CSIS was mainly referring to China in its 2003-04 report when the spy service discussed how ”certain foreign governments direct their departments, state-owned corporations and intelligence services to engage in economic espionage against Canada.”

China uses visiting students, scientists, business people and delegations to obtain industrial secrets and high-technology that will benefit Chinese companies and its military-industrial complex, said the source, who asked not to be identified for national security reasons.

Russian intelligence services have also sought to obtain Canadian technology, which led to the 1996 arrest of two of their agents.

However, the official said China has been the most enterprising in using clandestine or coercive activity to gain access to economic and military intelligence. China has targeted Canada’s nuclear, aerospace, biotechnology, mining and metallurgy, environmental and oil and gas sectors.

Beijing’s China Defence Science and Technology Information Centre is the key collector of Canadian and foreign technology, and is part of the Chinese military’s General Equipment Department (GED).

According to a 2003 Pentagon report, China’s GED oversees a ”complex web of factories, institutes and academies that are subordinate to China’s nuclear, aeronautics, electronics, ordnance, shipbuilding and astronautics industries.”

”Each of these institutions has an import/export corporation to facilitate the import of technology and knowledge,” the report added.

Wenxng Zuo of the Chinese embassy in Ottawa strenuously denied yesterday China has engaged in espionage in Canada to gain secrets for economic and military use.

”No, it’s not true,” she said.

Paul Martin is about to embark on a 10-day trip to Asia that includes stops in Beijing and Hong Kong. Jim Peterson, the International Trade Minister, will also lead a trade mission to China at the same time.

The Prime Minister, whose family’s shipping company has built ships at low-wage Chinese shipyards, is under pressure from the opposition and some Liberal backbench MPs to reject China’s takeover of Noranda, one of Canada’s biggest mining firms.

Noranda is in talks to be acquired by China Minmetals Corp, a metals producer controlled by the Chinese government, which wants to buy 100% of the $6.7-billion mining giant.

The United States has also accused China of carrying out economic espionage. The FBI claims China uses its nationals, who are sent to North America to study advanced technology, to infiltrate U.S. companies to gain access to sensitive information. They then return to China and set up their own companies or provide the information to the military.

A U.S. congressional committee concluded in 1999 that China obtained critical information about an array of U.S. warheads, including its modern strategic thermonuclear weapons program, through theft from U.S. nuclear weapons labs as well as meticulous scanning of publicly available information.

Paul Moore, a former FBI intelligence analyst who specialized in Beijing spying activities, told The Washington Times Chinese intelligence services do not usually pay for high-tech secrets and expect people friendly to the Communist government, many of whom are ethnic Chinese, to provide it free of charge.

According to a Chinese spying manual obtained by The Washington Times in 2000, more than 80% of all Chinese espionage focuses on open-source material obtained from government and private-sector information. The remaining 20% is gathered through illicit means from scientists at meetings, through documents supplied by agents or through electronic eavesdropping, bribes or computer hacking.

The manual, Sources and Methods of Obtaining National Defence Science and Technology Intelligence, said Beijing set up a database of ”famous scientists” overseas and describes how ”special methods” are used to obtain classified information through ”satellite surveillance, electronic bugging, special agent activities , etc.”

source:
http://www.canada.com/national/nationalpost/news/newsletter/story.html?id=37b387ac-9e56-4407-91b3-27897c92d103

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