Taiwan's spy agency says China is working with gangs, shell companies to 
		gain intelligence on Taiwan
		
		 
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		 [January 13, 2025]  
		By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN 
		
		TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — Taiwan's intelligence bureau says China’s main spy 
		agency is working with criminal gangs, shell companies and other dubious 
		partners to gain intelligence on Taiwan’s defenses, resulting in a major 
		rise in those arrested for alleged espionage on the island. 
		 
		Current and retired Taiwanese military personnel are a special concern, 
		accounting for around half of the 64 alleged spies put on trial last 
		year, it said. That number is up from 16 in 2021 and 10 in 2022. 
		 
		The arrests are in line with China's stepped-up campaign of military 
		intimidation, economic coercion and “gray area” tactics such as 
		utilizing the internet to promote unification and providing 
		all-expense-paid trips to China to low-level government officials. 
		 
		According to a report released over the weekend by Taiwan’s National 
		Security Bureau, Chinese agents have sought to use the Taiwanese 
		underworld to channel funds to those with information to sell. Gangs, 
		many with origins dating to before the 1949 split between the two sides, 
		are sought out, along with loan sharks, shell companies that can be used 
		to launder funds, religious sects that sometimes engage in illegal 
		activity, and non-profit groups, the report said. 
		 
		Some payments are made in cryptocurrency, while old-fashioned methods 
		are also used such as sexual seduction to trap unsuspecting targets and 
		pressure them to reveal secrets. That was the case of a one-star 
		general, Lo Hsien-che, who was caught in such a scheme while stationed 
		in Thailand, the bureau said. 
		
		
		  
		
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            Deck crew of Taiwanese navy stand by on a Taiwan's domestically made 
			Tuo Chiang patrol ship during a simulated attack drill off Kaohsiung 
			City, southern Taiwan, Thursday, Jan. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Chiang 
			Ying-ying) 
            
			
			  
            Among those arrested last year were 23 people working together in a 
			spy ring, one of whom was sentenced to 20 years in prison, it said. 
			 
			China's main spy agency, the State Security Ministry, runs programs 
			relying on traditional spy craft and cyberattacks, along with 
			military intelligence, while the party's United Front division runs 
			propaganda campaigns. 
			 
			China's ruling Communist Party, which refuses most contact with 
			Taiwan's governing pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party, 
			has frequent contacts with the main opposition Nationalist Party. 
			Chinese tactics may have had some effect on local elections, but the 
			DPP appears to be firmly in control and the vast majority of 
			Taiwanese still favor maintaining their de facto independence, 
			backed by strong support from the U.S. 
			 
			China's recruitment of retired military personnel has been 
			facilitated by many having been born in mainland China and backing 
			unification between Taiwan and the mainland. Taiwan's government has 
			enacted time limits on when retired senior officers can visit the 
			mainland and under what circumstances in an attempt to prevent their 
			recruitment. 
			
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