Trump launched CIA covert influence operation against China
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[March 14, 2024]
WASHINGTON - Two years into office, President Donald Trump
authorized the Central Intelligence Agency to launch a clandestine
campaign on Chinese social media aimed at turning public opinion in
China against its government, according to former U.S. officials with
direct knowledge of the highly classified operation.
Three former officials told Reuters that the CIA created a small team of
operatives who used bogus internet identities to spread negative
narratives about Xi Jinping’s government while leaking disparaging
intelligence to overseas news outlets. The effort, which began in 2019,
has not been previously reported.
During the past decade, China has rapidly expanded its global footprint,
forging military pacts, trade deals, and business partnerships with
developing nations.
The CIA team promoted allegations that members of the ruling Communist
Party were hiding ill-gotten money overseas and slammed as corrupt and
wasteful China’s Belt and Road Initiative, which provides financing for
infrastructure projects in the developing world, the sources told
Reuters.
Although the U.S. officials declined to provide specific details of
these operations, they said the disparaging narratives were based in
fact despite being secretly released by intelligence operatives under
false cover. The efforts within China were intended to foment paranoia
among top leaders there, forcing its government to expend resources
chasing intrusions into Beijing’s tightly controlled internet, two
former officials said. “We wanted them chasing ghosts,” one of these
former officials said.
Chelsea Robinson, a CIA spokesperson, declined to comment on the
existence of the influence program, its goals or impacts.
A spokesperson for China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said news of the
CIA initiative shows the U.S. government uses the “public opinion space
and media platforms as weapons to spread false information and
manipulate international public opinion.”
The CIA operation came in response to years of aggressive covert efforts
by China aimed at increasing its global influence, the sources said.
During his presidency, Trump pushed a tougher response to China than had
his predecessors. The CIA’s campaign signaled a return to methods that
marked Washington’s struggle with the former Soviet Union. “The Cold War
is back,” said Tim Weiner, author of a book on the history of political
warfare.
Reuters was unable to determine the impact of the secret operations or
whether the administration of President Joe Biden has maintained the CIA
program. Kate Waters, a spokesperson for the Biden administration’s
National Security Council, declined to comment on the program’s
existence or whether it remains active. Two intelligence historians told
Reuters that when the White House grants the CIA covert action
authority, through an order known as a presidential finding, it often
remains in place across administrations.
Trump, now the Republican frontrunner for president, has suggested he
will take an even tougher approach toward China if re-elected president
in November. Spokespeople for Trump and his former national security
advisers, John Bolton and Robert O’Brien, who both served the year the
covert action order was signed, declined to comment.
The operation against Beijing came with significant risk of escalating
tensions with the United States, given the power of China's economy and
its ability to retaliate through trade, said Paul Heer, a former senior
CIA analyst on East Asia who learned of the presidential authorization
from Reuters. For example, after Australia called for an investigation
inside China probing the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020,
Beijing blocked billions of dollars in Australian trade through
agricultural tariffs.
Trump’s 2019 order came after years of warnings from the U.S.
intelligence community, and media reports, about how China was using
bribery and threats to obtain support from developing countries in
geopolitical disputes as it attempted to sow division in the United
States through front groups.
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Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. President Donald
Trump hosts a campaign rally at the Forum River Center in Rome,
Georgia, U.S. March 9, 2024. REUTERS/Alyssa Pointer/File Photo
China’s Foreign Ministry said Beijing follows a “principle of
non-interference in the internal affairs of other countries and does
not interfere in the domestic affairs of the United States.”
A year earlier, Trump gave the CIA greater powers to launch
offensive cyber operations against U.S. adversaries after numerous
Russian and Chinese cyber attacks against American organizations,
Yahoo News reported. Reuters could not independently confirm the
existence of the earlier order.
Sources described the 2019 authorization uncovered by Reuters as a
more ambitious operation. It enabled the CIA to take action not only
in China but also in countries around the world where the United
States and China are competing for influence. Four former officials
said the operation targeted public opinion in Southeast Asia, Africa
and the South Pacific.
“The feeling was China was coming at us with steel baseball bats and
we were fighting back with wooden ones,” said a former national
security official with direct knowledge of the finding.
Matt Pottinger, a senior National Security Council official at the
time, crafted the authorization, three former officials said. It
cited Beijing’s alleged use of malign influence, allegations of
intellectual property theft and military expansion as threats to
U.S. national security, one of those former officials said.
Pottinger told Reuters he would not comment on the “accuracy or
inaccuracy of allegations about U.S. intelligence activities,”
adding that “it would be incorrect to assume that I would have had
knowledge of specific U.S. intelligence operations.”
Covert messaging allows the United States to implant ideas in
countries where censorship might prevent that information from
coming to light, or in areas where audiences wouldn’t give much
credence to U.S. government statements, said Loch Johnson, a
University of Georgia political scientist who studies the use of
such tactics.
Covert propaganda campaigns were common during the Cold War, when
the CIA planted 80 to 90 articles a day in an effort to undermine
the Soviet Union, Johnson said. In the 1950s, for example, the CIA
created an astrological magazine in East Germany to publish
foreboding predictions about communist leaders, according to
declassified records.
The covert propaganda campaign against Beijing could backfire, said
Heer, the former CIA analyst. China could use evidence of a CIA
influence program to bolster its decades-old accusations of shadowy
Western subversion, helping Beijing “proselytize” in a developing
world already deeply suspicious of Washington.
The message would be: “‘Look at the United States intervening in the
internal affairs of other countries and rejecting the principles of
peaceful coexistence,’” Heer said. “And there are places in the
world where that is going to be a resonant message.”
U.S. influence operations also risk endangering dissidents,
opposition groups critical of China and independent journalists, who
could be falsely painted as CIA assets, said Thomas Rid, a professor
at Johns Hopkins University who wrote a book on the history of
political warfare.
(Schectman and Bing reported from Washington. Additional reporting
by Liz Lee in Beijing. Editing by Don Durfee and Blake Morrison.)
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