U.S. targets spying threat on campus with
proposed research clampdown
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[May 21, 2016]
By Julia Edwards
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Leading U.S.
universities are pushing back against a proposed State Department rule
that would bar foreign students from more research projects and classes
involving information seen as vital to national security.
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A sign marks the Rogers Building at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S., May 13, 2016.
REUTERS/Brian Snyder |
The proposal by the administration of President Barack Obama
reflects growing worries in Washington over a rise in intellectual
property theft from foreign adversaries such as China.
Research related to defense technology such as munitions, nuclear
engineering and satellite technology would be particularly affected
by the rule, which is still in the proposal process and has not been
widely reported.
Defense contractors such as Northrop Grumman <NOC.N>, Boeing <BA.N>
and Lockheed Martin <LMT.N> regularly sponsor university research,
but did not respond to requests for comment.
The new rule, which largely applies to company-sponsored research,
threatens to shrink the pool of research opportunities available for
U.S. colleges, which have grown strongly in popularity among
high-paying foreign students in recent years.
Some top U.S. schools do not accept any research grants that
restrict participation by foreign citizens because it runs counter
to their policies of academic freedom and non-discrimination.
In a letter to the State Department, Stanford University said it
joined The Association of American Universities (AAU), Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT) and the University of Pennsylvania in
criticizing the rule, citing "disastrous consequences." The AAU
represents 62 leading research institutions, including Harvard, Duke
University, and the University of Chicago.
The universities say the rule would tip the balance too far in favor
of national security against academic freedom.
"We wouldn't be able to perform the same basic foundational research
that we do," said Stanford's director of export compliance Steve
Eisner. "Stanford has a policy of conducting research openly
regardless of citizenship. We're not going to tell our Chinese
students that they can't participate."
No current cases of industrial espionage involve university
research, though government officials told Reuters they suspect
university faculty are violating loosely defined research rules.
A 2011 FBI report said "foreign adversaries and competitors take
advantage" of the openness of information on college campuses and a
small percentage of students, researchers and foreign professors are
"working at the behest of another government."
There were just under 1 million foreign students at U.S. colleges in
the 2014-2015 school year, 31 percent of whom were Chinese,
according to the Institute of International Education. That has
grown from fewer than 100,000 in the 1960s when the United States
began regulating their access to research.
In 2015, the number of intellectual property cases investigated by
the FBI rose 53 percent from the previous year.
The FBI says China is the main culprit. It has accused Chinese
nationals of attempting to export technology from the United States,
including genetically modified corn seed and sensitive military
information stored on Boeing computers.
The Department of Justice said in a statement that "we know that
some foreign spies and criminals target students and faculty alike
to steal valuable technology and intellectual property." It added it
was working with universities and laboratories to raise awareness of
the threat.
A spokesman for China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Hong Lei, said
the United States should be improving cooperation with China instead
of adding restrictions on foreign students.
"China's scientific and technological developments have been
achieved through the hard struggle of the Chinese people," Lei said
at a ministry briefing on Thursday.
SHRINKING RESEARCH CHOICES The proposed rule comes as universities
face shrinking federal funding for research, forcing many to rely
more on industry-sponsored projects.
State Department officials told Reuters they are aware of
universities' opposition to the rule, but have received no
complaints or advice from companies that sponsor university
research.
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Experts in counterterrorism and counter nuclear proliferation told
the State Department tighter restrictions on research access are
necessary because universities are "a soft target," said Tony
Dearth, director of defense trade controls licensing at the State
Department.
In the first case of its kind, University of Tennessee electrical
engineering professor John Reese Roth was convicted in 2008 of
exporting "defense articles" without a license, and of wire fraud
and conspiracy and sentenced to four years.
Roth used foreign students in research on plasma-based
flight-control devices for drone aircraft under a U.S. Air Force
contract. He let two foreign students illegally gain access to
sensitive information and export it to China, said the FBI.
The proposed rule would expand the definition of research classified
as "technical" to any project that undergoes a pre-publication
review by a private sponsor.
Unlike less-sensitive "fundamental" research, technical research is
regulated in a variety of ways including a requirement that foreign
students must apply for a license. Students from China, Iran and
North Korea are usually denied licenses, said university officials.
The State Department argues that if a company wants to take a second
look at research because it may be sensitive to its economic
interests, foreign student involvement should be regulated.
Stanford told the State Department in a public letter that the new
rule would affect a broad portion of industry-backed research
because universities "routinely" allow sponsors to review results
for up to 90 days.
Colleges that object to the government's foreign-student
restrictions have long avoided technical research and focused solely
on projects classed as fundamental. The new rule would force them to
either loosen their policies or give up defense-related research.
Schools with fundamental research-only policies are already in the
minority. A Reuters survey of the top 35 research universities,
ranked by R&D expenditures, found only 11 were still adhering to
such a position.
Federal funding for research still dwarfs business funding, but the
two are trending in opposite directions.
Over 2011-2014, federal funds for university research fell to $37.9
billion from $40.8 billion, according to the National Science
Foundation. Over the same period, industry-sponsored university
research grew to $5.9 billion from $4.9 billion.
"As federal funds have become scarcer and the competition has
increased, I think we see a lot of universities expanding their
partnerships with industry," said Bob Hardy, director of
intellectual property management at the Council on Government
Relations, an association of research universities.
(Reporting by Julia Edwards; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Stuart
Grudgings)
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