What's new

Singapore man admits being Chinese spy in US

TruthSeeker

PDF THINK TANK: ANALYST
Joined
Nov 27, 2008
Messages
6,390
Reaction score
3
Country
United States
Location
United States
Singapore man admits being Chinese spy in US
25 July 2020
A Singaporean man has pleaded guilty in the US to working as an agent of China, the latest incident in a growing stand-off between Washington and Beijing.

Jun Wei Yeo was charged with using his political consultancy in America as a front to collect information for Chinese intelligence, US officials say.

Separately, the US said a Chinese researcher accused of hiding her ties to China's military was detained.

China earlier ordered the closure of the US consulate in Chengdu.

The move to shut down the diplomatic mission in the south-western city was in response to the US closing China's consulate in Houston.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the decision was taken because China was "stealing" intellectual property.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin responded by saying that the US move was based on "a hodgepodge of anti-Chinese lies".

_113640588_062618213.jpg
Image copyrightAFP
Image captionA US official guards the former Chinese consulate in Houston after doors were forced open on Friday afternoon
After a 72-hour deadline for Chinese diplomats to leave the Houston consulate expired on Friday at 16:00 (21:00 GMT) reporters saw men who appeared to be US officials force open a door to enter the premises. Uniformed staff from the US State Department's Bureau of Diplomatic Security took up position to guard the entrance.

Tensions have been rising between the two nuclear powers over several key issues.

President Donald Trump's administration has clashed repeatedly with Beijing over trade and the coronavirus pandemic, as well as China's imposition of a controversial new security law in Hong Kong.

What is known about the Singaporean national?
Jun Wei Yeo, also known as Dickson Yeo, on Friday pleaded guilty in a federal court to working as an illegal agent of the Chinese government in 2015-19, the US Department of Justice said in a statement.

He was earlier charged with using his political consultancy in the country as a front to collect valuable, non-public information for Chinese intelligence.

In his guilty plea, he admitted to scouting for Americans with high-level security clearance and getting them to write reports for fake clients. According to court documents he was recruited by Chinese intelligence in 2015 after giving a presentation in Beijing.

At the time he was a PhD student at a prestigious Singaporean university.

According to the guilty plea, Mr Yeo used a professional networking website - assumed to be LinkedIn - to contact potential targets likely to have access to sensitive information.

Mr Yeo was arrested as he flew in to the US in 2019.

And what about the arrested Chinese researcher?
The researcher was named by US officials as Juan Tang, aged 37.

She was among four Chinese nationals charged earlier this week with visa fraud for allegedly lying about serving in China's People's Liberation Army.

Juan Tang was the last of the four to be detained in California, after the US had accused the Chinese consulate in San Francisco of harbouring her.

It was not immediately clear how she was arrested.

FBI agents have found pictures of Juan Tang dressed in military uniform and reviewed articles in China identifying her military affiliation, the Associated Press reports.

It is quoting the University of California Davis as saying that she left her job as a visiting researcher in the Department of Radiation Oncology in June.

Why is there tension between China and the US?
There are a number of factors in play. US officials have blamed China for the global spread of Covid-19. More specifically, President Donald Trump has alleged, without presenting evidence, that the virus originated from a Chinese laboratory in Wuhan.

And, in unsubstantiated remarks, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman said in March that the US military might have brought the virus to Wuhan.

The US and China have also been locked in a tariff war since 2018.
Mr Trump has long accused China of unfair trading practices and intellectual property theft, but in Beijing there is a perception that the US is trying to curb its rise as a global economic power.

The US has also imposed sanctions on Chinese politicians who it says are responsible for human rights violations against Muslim minorities in Xinjiang. China is accused of mass detentions, religious persecution and forced sterilisation of Uighurs and others.

Beijing denies the allegations and has accused the US of "gross interference" in its domestic affairs.

What about Hong Kong?
China's imposition of a sweeping security law there is also a source of tension in relations with the US and the UK, which administered the territory until 1997.

In response, the US last week revoked Hong Kong's special trading status, which allowed it to avoid tariffs imposed on Chinese goods by the US.

The US and UK see the security law as a threat to the freedoms Hong Kong has enjoyed under a 1984 agreement between China and the UK - before sovereignty reverted to Beijing.

The UK has angered China by outlining a route to UK citizenship for nearly three million Hong Kong residents.

China responded by threatening to stop recognising a type of British passport - BNO - held by many of those living in Hong Kong.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53534941
 
.
Its good US continue the sinophobia and chase away all Chinese scientist in US including local ABC.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/09/technology/china-ai-research-education.html

New research shows scientists educated in China help American firms and schools dominate the cutting-edge field. Now industry leaders worry that worsening political tensions will blunt that edge.

More of China’s top A.I. talent ends up in the U.S. than anywhere else.
Of 128 researchers with undergraduate degrees from Chinese universities whose papers were presented at the A.I. conference, more than half now work in the U.S.

In China, only Chinese scientist work in Chinese project. But in US, Chinese scientist can contribute as much as 1/3 of US research. Imagine this number not working for US or worst, they return to help China.......
 
.
Its good US continue the sinophobia and chase away all Chinese scientist in US including local ABC.

In China, only Chinese scientist work in Chinese project. But in US, Chinese scientist can contribute as much as 1/3 of US research. Imagine this number not working for US or worst, they return to help China.......
I truly hope that sentiment in the USA will come to see PRC students as enemies and lead to their exclusion from the USA. Better not to have their contributions than to have enemies within.
 
.
I truly hope that sentiment in the USA will come to see PRC students as enemies and lead to their exclusion from the USA. Better not to have their contributions than to have enemies within.

That would actually be good, because they would be forced to return. Trump should definitely do this.
 
.
This psychologist explains why people confess to crimes they didn’t commit

Kassin explained that false confessions are not rare: More than a quarter of the 365 people exonerated in recent decades by the nonprofit Innocence Project had confessed to their alleged crime. Drawing on more than 30 years of research, Kassin told the legal team how standard interrogation techniques combine psychological pressures and escape hatches that can easily cause an innocent person to confess.


https://www.sciencemag.org/news/201...-why-people-confess-crimes-they-didn-t-commit

When they kidnap you and tell you, you are going to be kidnapped less time & less time being tortured if you confess, many take the less time and admit to something they are told to admit to. And what Communist agent would confess, is that not a punishment of death in China, giving even more credence that they forced a false confession out.

Kidnap a dog, torture it and see if it confesses to a crime it did not commit.
 
Last edited:
.
I truly hope that sentiment in the USA will come to see PRC students as enemies and lead to their exclusion from the USA. Better not to have their contributions than to have enemies within.
Indeed, all Chinese scientist will work for China only and US research will derived of massive Chinese student contribution while China even growth stronger with this pool of talent that supposed to contribute to US instead contribute to China :enjoy:
 
.
I truly hope that sentiment in the USA will come to see PRC students as enemies and lead to their exclusion from the USA. Better not to have their contributions than to have enemies within.
*Tsk, tsk* You claim to be a 74 year-old man; I thought wisdom came with age. You should be playing with your grandchildren, building that boat, drinking a glass of whiskey, and other stereotypical activities of the well-to-do elderly. What are you doing talking sh*t with us in this forum, gramps?

But while I have your attention, I'd like you to indulge me a little: think back to your teenage years. You would have been a teenager/young adult in the '60s and built your fondest memories of life when America was at the zenith of its power. When everything blossomed with boundless promise. Stay there for a while and enjoy your memories...

Now come back to the present. Take a look at what's happening to America now - take a look at the chaos, the decay, the despair, and the feral fury that have suffused it. Is this what you imagined leaving behind for the generations that come after you? How do you think they'll remember you?

And add to all that... China. You always accuse China of theft, but you never understood what China really took from you. What China "stole" from you wasn't technology, it was your future. China took your future, your grandchildren's birthright. But it was never a theft, because it is impossible to steal from a thief. What you had was never yours, it was always China's - China merely took back what was always its due.

You were nothing but a steward warming the king's throne. Now the king has returned.
 
.
Singapore is now in China's camp. When the timing is ripe, Beijing will give the signal and the Singaporean military will sink all the US Navy ships close to the Straits of Malacca.
 
.
*Tsk, tsk* You claim to be a 74 year-old man; I thought wisdom came with age. You should be playing with your grandchildren, building that boat, drinking a glass of whiskey, and other stereotypical activities of the well-to-do elderly. What are you doing talking sh*t with us in this forum, gramps?

But while I have your attention, I'd like you to indulge me a little: think back to your teenage years. You would have been a teenager/young adult in the '60s and built your fondest memories of life when America was at the zenith of its power. When everything blossomed with boundless promise. Stay there for a while and enjoy your memories...

Now come back to the present. Take a look at what's happening to America now - take a look at the chaos, the decay, the despair, and the feral fury that have suffused it. Is this what you imagined leaving behind for the generations that come after you? How do you think they'll remember you?

And add to all that... China. You always accuse China of theft, but you never understood what China really took from you. What China "stole" from you wasn't technology, it was your future. China took your future, your grandchildren's birthright. But it was never a theft, because it is impossible to steal from a thief. What you had was never yours, it was always China's - China merely took back what was always its due.

You were nothing but a steward warming the king's throne. Now the king has returned.
It's always amusing hearing Americans accusing China of stealing their technology for 40 years. Than I though if someone has been stealing from you for 40 years and you do nothing to provide tighter security of your high technology than America deserves it (assuming it's true) but I doubt.
I think the real truth is China is innovating more and more on technology that has already been created and making it better and more affordable for everyone.
 
Last edited:
.
This psychologist explains why people confess to crimes they didn’t commit

Kassin explained that false confessions are not rare: More than a quarter of the 365 people exonerated in recent decades by the nonprofit Innocence Project had confessed to their alleged crime. Drawing on more than 30 years of research, Kassin told the legal team how standard interrogation techniques combine psychological pressures and escape hatches that can easily cause an innocent person to confess.


https://www.sciencemag.org/news/201...-why-people-confess-crimes-they-didn-t-commit

When they kidnap you and tell you, you are going to be kidnapped less time & less time being tortured if you confess, many take the less time and admit to something they are told to admit to. And what Communist agent would confess, is that not a punishment of death in China, giving even more credence that they forced a false confession out.

Kidnap a dog, torture it and see if it confesses to a crime it did not commit.
People living in the United States or those familiar with the American judicial system know that American justice is very good at trapping people into jail and creating unjust cases. Refer to "American Trap".
All people detained in the United States will be taught by American lawyers and prosecutors to plead guilty. Anyone who pleads guilty can get a light sentence, but anyone who does not plead guilty faces the risk of indefinite detention.
Therefore, even if the detainee thinks he is not guilty, he is faced with two choices and can only choose to confess his guilt.
 
.
Hope this guy will be fine.

Unfortunately, he is not Guaido or Anson Chan.
 
. .
Singapore is now in China's camp. When the timing is ripe, Beijing will give the signal and the Singaporean military will sink all the US Navy ships close to the Straits of Malacca.
:laughcry::laughcry::laughcry:
 
. . .

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom