China, in response to CIA videos, warns of measures against ‘infiltration, sabotage’

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Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian attends a press conference in Beijing, China April 10, 2025. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File Photo

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian called the videos a “damning confession” of the CIA’s efforts in “stealing” other countries’ secrets.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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BEIJING – China warned on May 6 it would take necessary measures to crack down on “infiltration and sabotage activities of foreign anti-China forces”, days after the

CIA released videos aimed at enticing Chinese officials to leak secrets

to the US.

The US intelligence agency last week posted two short Chinese-language videos to its social media accounts depicting fictional scenes in which a senior Chinese official and a more junior government worker with access to classified information become disillusioned with China’s system and approach the CIA.

A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman called the videos a “damning confession” of the CIA’s efforts in “stealing” other countries’ secrets.

“The US not only maliciously smears and attacks China, but also blatantly deceives and lures Chinese personnel to turn to its side, and even directly targets Chinese government officials,” spokesman Lin Jian told a regular press briefing when asked about the videos.

“This is a serious violation of China’s national interests and a naked political provocation.”

Beijing’s warning came as the two countries vow to step up counterintelligence efforts amid mutual accusations of espionage.

In April, China’s state security ministry publicised the case of a government employee selling state secrets, secretly recording internal meetings and stealing confidential files, after reaching out to a foreign spy agency via email.

The employee was caught before she could leave the country, the ministry said in a video posted to its social media account. It did not name the foreign intelligence agency.

In October, the CIA launched a drive to recruit new informants in China, Iran and North Korea by posting instructions online on how to securely contact the agency, following what it said was successful efforts to enlist Russians.

Russia, China, Iran and North Korea are known within the US intelligence community as “hard targets” – countries whose governments are difficult to penetrate. REUTERS

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