U.S. Energy Department warns staff to
avoid foreign recruitment programs
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[February 02, 2019]
By Timothy Gardner
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Energy
Department on Friday told staff they are banned from taking part in
foreign recruitment programs as the agency seeks to stop China and other
countries from illegally acquiring sensitive research in supercomputing
and other technologies.
Dan Brouillette, the Energy Department's deputy secretary, said in a
memo the agency that recruitment programs sponsored by certain countries
"threaten the United States' economic base by facilitating the
unauthorized transfer of technology and intellectual property to foreign
governments."
Potential recruits are offered prestigious positions at foreign research
institutes, labs and universities, it said.
Employees will have to leave the department if they participate in
recruitment programs from countries it determines to be "sensitive," the
memo said.
The Energy Department oversees a network of 17 national labs that work
on sensitive issues including advanced nuclear energy, nuclear weapons
and supercomputing, some of which is classified.
The memo, first reported by the Wall Street Journal, did not name
specific countries, but successive U.S. administrations, including that
of President Donald Trump, have been concerned about China obtaining
U.S. intellectual property.
A Department of Energy official said on condition of anonymity that the
administration was not specifically targeting China, and that the
initiative could help the agency learn more about which foreign programs
have been seeking to recruit department employees.
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Deputy Secretary of the U.S. Department of Energy Dan Brouillette
attends a meeting in Chile, September 7, 2017 REUTERS/Rodrigo
Garrido/File Photo
"It gives employees a chance to disclose that information," the
official said. "It's basically giving them the chance to say, 'OK I
want to be paid by DOE or I want to be paid by this outside,
state-funded initiative'."
Some foreign government-sponsored talent recruitment programs "have
taken advantage of America's openness to collaboration to infiltrate
our labs, steal our technology and use our own resources against
us," a DOE press official said.
The Chinese embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a
request for comment.
(Reporting by Timothy Gardner; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
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