'Data Security Risk': In Northern Virginia, Drones From Sanctioned Chinese Company Fly Near National Security Sites, Sparking Bipartisan Concern

Police and other emergency services in Fairfax County, Va.—home to government leaders and major national security installations—are deploying drones made by a sanctioned Chinese company across the community, potentially allowing Beijing to spy on sensitive sites, a bipartisan pair of lawmakers warned.

The post 'Data Security Risk': In Northern Virginia, Drones From Sanctioned Chinese Company Fly Near National Security Sites, Sparking Bipartisan Concern appeared first on .

Federal Loopholes Allow China To Buy Land Near Sensitive Ports, Labs, and Coast Guard Facilities, Prompting Congressional Concern

China and other foreign adversaries are still permitted to purchase U.S. land near sensitive Coast Guard facilities, ports, and Energy Department labs, exposing national security gaps that lawmakers say enable hostile regimes to conduct espionage operations on American soil.

The post Federal Loopholes Allow China To Buy Land Near Sensitive Ports, Labs, and Coast Guard Facilities, Prompting Congressional Concern appeared first on .

Indictment Of Hochul Aide Shows Red China Is Far Greater Threat Than Kremlin Propaganda

Kathy Hochul joins a growing list of prominent Democrats plausibly compromised by the Chinese Communist Party, up to and including Joe Biden and Tim Walz.

Chinese Spying Facilities In Cuba Signal America’s New Cold War

China has likely upgraded and expanded its spying facilities in Cuba, posing potentially severe implications for the U.S.

Heritage report breaks down precisely how to hold China accountable for the COVID-19 cover-up, $18 trillion in damages



There have a been multiple efforts in recent years to hold the Chinese regime accountable in full or in part for the pandemic. For instance, Rep. Troy Nehls (R-Texas) introduced the China Lied, People Died Act last year, which would have prohibited "the availability of Federal funds for programs, projects, or activities in the People's Republic of China until amounts made available for COVID-19 relief in the United States have been reimbursed, and for other purposes."

Like Nehls' bill, most efforts to make Beijing pay for its maleficence have gone sideways or nowhere at all. According to the Heritage Foundation's Nonpartisan Commission on China and COVID-19, not all is hopeless.

The commission, chaired by former Director of National Intelligence and Texas Rep. John Ratcliffe (R), released a report Monday both assessing the cost of the pandemic and outlining ways that China can be made to answer for its role in maximizing the fallout of COVID-19.

The report noted that while other states, organizations, and individuals may have played contributing roles in the pandemic, "China has been in a league uniquely of its own in its active and aggressive opposition to honesty, transparency, and accountability regarding the virus and its spread."

"This behavior by the Chinese government, more than anything else, was the proximal origin of the COVID-19 pandemic, added the report."

Cover-up

The Heritage commission's report underscored both the intentionality and impact of the Chinese regime's cover-up of the spread of COVID-19.

"There were seven weeks during which Chinese officials could have shown good faith and honored their international commitments to try to prevent a domestic epidemic from becoming a global pandemic," said the report. "They consistently chose to do otherwise."

Blaze News previously detailed how Chinese authorities delayed warning the world about the emergency of COVID-19 and silenced those individuals who tried to raise the alarm.

While it appears the virus began spreading by the fall of 2019 at the latest, communist officials waited until Dec. 31, 2019, to alert the World Health Organization, then claimed, "The disease is preventable and controllable."

The Heritage commission's report noted that even when China finally got around to informing the WHO, it "withheld vital information," including the type of virus behind the illness, the actual number of infected persons, and insights into human-to-human transmission.

A Five Eyes intelligence dossier accused the Chinese regime in May 2020 of engaging in an "assault on international transparency" to the "endangerment of other countries," reported the New York Post.

The intelligence dossier indicated that Chinese officials had scrambled to bury evidence of the virus and its origins, "destroying" lab samples, censoring evidence of spread, and denying sample requests from other countries.

Extra to destroying lab evidence, the Heritage commission noted that Chinese authorities barred researchers and scientists, especially those linked to the Wuhan Institute of Virology, from sharing information about the virus their peers had likely engineered.

While lying to the world about the virus, the Department of Homeland Security intelligence service indicated that "the Chinese Government intentionally concealed the severity of COVID-19 from the international community in early January while it stockpiled medical supplies by both increasing imports and decreasing exports."

Not only did China deceive the world and exploit the deception, it locked down domestic travel while allowing infected Chinese citizens to travel internationally. According to the New York Times, 175,000 people left Wuhan on Jan. 1, 2020, alone. A total of 7 million people left Wuhan that month before travel was restricted, thousands of whom were infected.

The Heritage commission's report noted that there were 1,300 direct flights from Wuhan to 17 cities in the U.S. before the American government restricted travel on Jan. 31, 2021 — a move China and the WHO recommended against.

Costs

The commission noted that as of last month, over 1.1 million Americans were estimated to have been slain by the foreign-born virus. COVID-19 claimed the lives of roughly 28 million people worldwide.

Besides filling morgues and leaving empty chairs at dinner tables around the country, the report noted the pandemic drove roughly 97 million people worldwide into poverty; dropped the world's collective GDP by several points; sent unemployment skyrocketing; ejected billions of children out of classrooms, setting them back academically; and adversely impacted vulnerable persons' mental health.

'The Chinese government must be held accountable for its role in obfuscating the truth about the COVID-19 pandemic.'

The report emphasized that in the U.S., the pandemic left behind not only broken hearts and stunted children but also financial burdens.

The Heritage commission estimated that as of December 2023, the total cost of the pandemic in the U.S. had exceeded $18 trillion.

Deaths accounted for over $8.6 trillion of the total cost. Lost income alternatively accounted for $1.82 trillion of the total; chronic conditions for $6.02 trillion; mental health issues for $1.98 trillion; and educational losses for nearly a half-trillion dollars.

Comeuppance

The Heritage commission determined that "the Chinese government and its affiliates can be and should be held liable for damages to the United States and its people caused by Chinese negligence and malfeasance related to the COVID-19 pandemic."

To hold China accountable, however, the report noted that lawmakers must revise the U.S. Foreign Sovereign Immunity Act to remove "a foreign sovereign's immunity in the specific context of the extraordinary circumstances of global pandemics that lead to more than one million excess deaths of American citizens and residents and are caused by a foreign state."

With FSIA amended to no longer stand in the way of holding China liable for damages, the commission indicated there would be several possible causes of action, including negligence; strict liability for abnormally dangerous activities; public nuisance; anti-competitive behavior; fraudulent misrepresentation; and civil Racketeer and Corrupt Organization Act violations.

In addition to targeting China generally, the commission indicated that two Chinese airlines that have subjected themselves to U.S. jurisdiction — China Southern Airlines Company Ltd. and China Eastern Airlines Company Ltd. — could also be fair game, along with Chinese manufacturers of personal protective equipment and the Chinese National Pharmaceutical Group.

The commission made clear, however, that there are other ways to skin a cat.

The commission made multiple recommendations, including:

  • Congress should create a reparations task force to cover claims against China and explore ways to expand U.S. federal court jurisdiction such that Chinese individuals and agencies can be held liable for U.S. civil claims.
  • Congress should pass former Republican Wisconsin Rep. Mike Gallagher's BIOSECURE Act to "begin decoupling U.S. government and commercial supply chains from Chinese state-backed companies."
  • Congress should pass a law requiring an audit of all American funding for biomedical and other such research activities in China, where the working presumption is that all research should be canceled unless "relevant sponsors can demonstrate that their research projects are overwhelmingly in the public interest and entail extremely low risk of harm."
  • The president should impose sanctions on Chinese officials and organizations linked to the cover-up of the virus and its initial spread and get serious about the threat of gain-of-function research.
  • The president should block U.S. outbound investment in the Chinese biotechnology sector.
  • The president should lean on the WHO to hold China accountable for violating Articles 6 and 7 of the International Health Regulations.

A failure by American leaders to act would incentivize the CCP "to persist in its nontransparent, noncooperative, and even hostile behavior," said the report.

Ratcliffe said in a statement, "The Chinese government must be held accountable for its role in obfuscating the truth about the COVID-19 pandemic — a pandemic that caused more than 1 million American deaths and $18 trillion in economic damage in the United States."

"While most of our government and media have focused on legitimate concerns about the origins of the virus, we must also focus on how the [Chinese Communist Party's] lack of transparency and distortion of facts accelerated a global pandemic, regardless of how COVID-19 originated," added Ratcliffe.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

FBI director warns of Chinese hacking efforts to 'wreak havoc' on US critical infrastructure



FBI Director Christopher Wray told a congressional committee this week that hackers backed by the Chinese communist regime are preparing to "cripple" American infrastructure should Beijing decide "the time has come to strike."

Wray indicated in his statement to the Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party Wednesday that the intelligence community has assessed that "China is attempting to pre-position on U.S. critical infrastructure—setting up back doors to cripple vital assets and systems in the event China invades Taiwan and therefore, limiting our ability to assist Taiwan."

"China's hackers are positioning on American infrastructure in preparation to wreak havoc and cause real-world harm to American citizens and communities, if or when China decides the time has come to strike," Wray told lawmakers in his oral testimony.

In one example, the FBI director noted that hackers affiliated with the Chinese military gained access to the computer networks of a major American transportation hub. Gas pipelines, the electric grid, and water treatment plants have similarly been targeted.

FBI Director Wray opening statement before @committeeonccp : "The PRC has a bigger hacking program than that of every major nation combined."
— (@)

Chairman Mike Gallagher (R-Wisc.) said that "this is the cyberspace equivalent of placing bombs on American bridges, water treatment facilities and power plants," reported CNN.

"There is no economic benefit for these actions. There's no pure intelligence-gathering rationale," continued Gallagher. "The sole purpose is to be ready to destroy American infrastructure, which would inevitably result in chaos, confusion and potentially mass casualties."

The U.S. has long known of efforts by state-backed Chinese hackers to compromise American systems and exploit vulnerabilities.

These efforts in cyberspace to compromise American security come amidst similarly brazen aerial and ground operations. The regime has, for instance, sent spy craft over the mainland U.S.; operated illegal police stations on American soil; threatened diplomats; and dispatched agents to execute espionage and political destabilization missions.

China does not appear to be merely posturing. The communist regime, which has been building up its military and preparing for war at a time when the U.S. military has been assessed as "weak," has made expressly clear in recent months that it intends to take the island nation of Taiwan. In the face of significant demographic, economic, and social troubles at home, the communist regime may increasingly see such a military adventure as an opportunity to change its fate and fortune.

"[Communist China] represents the defining threat of this era," said Wray. "There is no country that presents a broader, more comprehensive threat to our ideas, our innovation, our economic security, and, ultimately, our national security."

Wray also expressed concerns about the use of Tiktok by the Chinese regime to "control data collection on millions of users, which can be used for all sorts of intelligence operations or influence operations."

Extra to collecting data on Americans and pushing influence operations, the FBI director indicated TikTok gives Beijing the ability "to control the software on millions of devices, which means the opportunity to technically compromise millions of devices."

— (@)

Gen. Paul Nakasone, the head of the National Security Agency, told lawmakers, "We need to have a vigilance that continues onward."

"This is not an episodic threat that we're going to face. This is persistent," added Nakasone.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

China's hundred-year marathon slows to a crawl amid economic woes and record-low birth rate



China's aspirations of seeing its hundred-year marathon through to displacing the U.S. and becoming global hegemon by 2049 are growing increasingly fantastical. The economic and social problems the Asian nation faced in the immediate aftermath of the pandemic have not gone away. Rather, things have continued to deteriorate.

Fallout of the one-child policy

China faces a worsening demographic crisis, due in part to the Chinese Communist Party's one-child policy as well as to other correlated factors such as a decrease in the number of women of childbearing age, higher suicide rates in women than in men, sex-selective abortion, and declining fertility.

The birth rate was over 20 births per 1,000 people in 1990, one decade after the implementation of the one-child policy. Over the next 25 years, the country saw a precipitous decline in the birth rate, which a two-child policy in 2016 was unable to arrest. The rate hit a record low of 7.5 births per 1,000 people in 2021.

Data released by China's National Bureau of Statistics Wednesday indicated the birth rate reached a new low in 2023 of 6.39 per 1,000 people, reported the BBC.

The country's annual population has in turn fallen for a second consecutive year, this time by an estimated 2.08 million people.

"It's not a surprise. They've got one of the lowest fertility rates in the world so this is just what happens - the population stops growing and starts to decline," Stuart Gietel-Basten, a population policy expert at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, told the BBC.

The country's fertility rate in 1950, the year after communists formally took power, was 5.29. The rate dropped to a record low of 1.16 in 2022. Blaze News previously noted that the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development regards 2.1 as the standard for a stable population.

Demographic stability has been further undermined by a sex-ratio imbalance. As of 2021, there were over 34.9 million more men than women in the country, reported Newsweek.

"It's kind of locked in now… this is just the next year in this new era of population stagnation or decline for China," added Gietel-Basten.

The demographic problem has been compounded by economic stress as many of those in China who want and can physically have children reportedly cannot afford to do so.

Economic woes

Data released this week revealed the Chinese economy had allegedly grown at one of the slowest rates in over 30 years. Reuters reported that China's GDP allegedly grew by 5.2% in the fourth quarter of 2023, disappointing many investors and analysts.

"Although the government met its 2023 GDP growth target of 'around 5.0%', achieving the same pace of expansion in 2024 will prove a lot more challenging," said Julian Evans-Pritchard, head of China Economics at Capital Economics.

The China Beige Book International's latest survey suggested, "Any true acceleration (this year) will require either a major global upside surprise or more active government policy."

Craig Singleton, senior China fellow at the non-partisan Foundation for Defense of Democracies, told Newsweek that the regime's latest claims about the country's GDP growth "are just not credible."

"Focusing on China's false GDP figures risks missing the forest for the tree," said Singleton. "The days of China's sky-high growth are over."

"There is no getting around the fact that China is in damage control mode, attempting to project a sense of stability to the international community while grappling with myriad domestic challenges. If ever the cliché 'investor beware' applied, it's now," added Singleton.

The country is struggling with high debt, a stock market in free fall, and a real estate crisis that continues to ravage the sector.

Reuters indicated that amid China's disputed recovery and in the face of concerns about renewed lockdowns, the jobless rate nationwide increased to 5.1% last month and unemployment among Chinese youths ages 16 to 24 also remains high.

The youth unemployment rate skyrocketed to 21.3% in June 2023, prompting the regime to suspend the release of monthly data. The rate allegedly sank to 14.1% in December, but is still high enough to create trouble for the regime, which has promised progressive increases in living standards in exchange for acceptance of its authoritarian rule.

In addition to a potentially restive, largely male youth population, China has to contend with its massive elderly population. The BBC indicated that the retiree population, placing increasing pressure on the health care and pension systems, is projected to increase by 60% to 400 million over the next 10 years.

The Guardian noted that 14% of China's population is over the age of 65 and is on track to have more geriatrics than the entire population of the United States.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Taiwan’s Election Results Humiliate Communist China’s Xi Jinping

[rebelmouse-proxy-image https://thefederalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Screenshot-2024-01-16-at-6.50.44 AM-1200x675.png crop_info="%7B%22image%22%3A%20%22https%3A//thefederalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Screenshot-2024-01-16-at-6.50.44%5Cu202fAM-1200x675.png%22%7D" expand=1]The Democratic Progressive Party won decisively, affirming that most Taiwanese want to maintain Taiwan’s separation from communist China.

US and Chinese military officials discuss Taiwan's fate ahead of island nation's presidential election



American and Chinese military officials met this week to discuss Taiwan's fate days ahead of the sovereign island nation's presidential election, which Chinese dictator Xi Jinping characterized as a choice between war and peace.

The candidates

Presidential candidate William Lai Ching-te of the Democratic Progressive Party was leading in the polls with 36% as of Jan. 3.

According to the Economist, a win for Lai — the former mayor of the southern city of Tainan, deemed a "complete troublemaker" by the communist Chinese regime — would likely prompt China to issue more threats and take additional steps to isolate Taiwan.

Lai has served as outgoing President Tsai Ing-wen's vice president. Tsai ruffled Chinese feathers during her tenure, having refused to appease the communists by publicly claiming Taiwan belonged to Beijing.

Lai, whom China refuses to speak with, appears keen to continue asserting Taiwan's independence from the mainland. He has stressed the island nation's right to self-rule, underscoring in a December debate that the communist regime poses a "threat to Taiwan and the international community."

Despite his independent mindset, the Economist indicated Lai's victory is far from assured as his party has an optics problem with young voters, who regard the DPP as establishmentarian.

Lai's top opponent with 31% is Hou You-yi, the leader of the conservative Kuomingtang. Hou is a former cop and mayor of New Taipei City who has reportedly rejected the notion of the sovereign island nation's independence from China as well as the "one country, two systems" model favored by Beijing.

Ko Wen-je of the Taiwan People's Party has been trailing third in the polls with 24% of the likely vote. Ko, a former surgeon, served as mayor of Taipei, the nation's capital, until 2022, then went on to found the TPP. Supportive of a possible coalition with the KMT, Ko appears keen on not rocking the boat in regard to China. He did, however, stress during the presidential debate that "Taiwan needs self-reliance."

The stakes

Chinese dictator Xi Jinping threatened once again in his New Year's address that China would "surely be reunified, and all Chinese on both sides of the Taiwan Strait should be bound by a common sense of purpose," reported the Associated Press.

Xi further suggested the Taiwanese presidential election amounted to a choice between war and peace.

Clarifying the regime's bias, Chen Binhua, a spokesman for China's Taiwan Affairs Office, called Lai a "destroyer of peace" and accused him of being an "instigator of a potential dangerous war in the Taiwan Strait."

U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska), who is leading a bipartisan Senate resolution this week praising democracy in Taiwan and supporting its self-defense, told Fox News over the weekend that Taiwan's eighth presidential election constitutes "a huge vulnerability to the premise of Xi Jinping's dictatorship."

"Xi Jinping fears his own people and he fears that people on the mainland are going to look across the Taiwan Strait and go, 'Wait a minute, how come we can't do that?'" said Sullivan. "Every one of these parties, even the KMT, they're all starting to move away from any kind of accommodation policy towards Beijing. Almost two-thirds of Taiwanese in recent polling now see themselves exclusively as Taiwanese. These are all things that I think Xi Jinping realizes. He's quite vulnerable."

Military discussions

U.S. and Chinese military officials met in Washington this week. While the talks were supposedly administrative in nature, policy concerns were nevertheless raised.

According to the Pentagon, Michael S. Chase, deputy assistant secretary of defense for China, Taiwan, and Mongolia, "highlighted the importance of maintaining open lines of military-to-military communication in order to prevent competition from veering into conflict."

Chase further "reaffirmed that the United States will continue to fly, sail, and operate safely and responsibly wherever international law allows," referencing the Taiwan Strait.

The Chinese delegation said, "China will not make any concession or compromise on the Taiwan question and demanded that the US side abide by the one-China principle, honor relevant commitments, stop arming Taiwan, and not support Taiwan independence," according to China's ministry of defense.

The U.S. does not have a formal defense treaty with Taiwan, but nevertheless provides it military gear under the Taiwan Relations Act, which authorizes America to "make available to Taiwan such defense articles and defense services in such quantity as may be necessary to enable Taiwan to maintain a sufficient self-defense capability" and to "maintain the capacity of the United States to resist any resort to force or other forms of coercion that would jeopardize the security, or the social or economic system, of the people on Taiwan."

The Chinese delegation, led by Major General Song Yanchao, further demanded that the U.S. "reduce military presence and provocation in the South China Sea and stop supporting provocative actions by certain country."

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

China Meddles In Taiwan’s Presidential Election With False Framing About ‘Peace And War’

Taiwan’s 22 million residents must recognize the harsh reality that a war is coming and choose a leader who is ready to navigate such a challenge.