Talking to a teacher recently, an ex barrister/solicitor type, who looked stunned when I mentioned Chinese espionage agents operating in Australia.
“Says who?” he asked, intimating I had totally lost the plot or worse, was into anti ALP conspiracies..
“Why on earth would they want to spy on us?” He asked as if I couldn’t see the Chinese were an amiable lot and only wanted the best for everybody.
Mmm…well let me count the ways. We are a favoured client of the US and thus have state of the art military hardware and software…we are good at software ourselves…..we trade with China and they look for any advantage…they are a communist state thus paranoid and the list goes on.
Here’s a
couple more articles on the Chinese spying in Australia
I didn’t feel up to having a long conversation with someone that naive so didn’t pursue the matter but it is an indication of a lack of worldliness amongst our academia.
In
Britain intelligence chiefs have warned that China might have gained the capability to shut down the country by crippling its telecommunications and utilities.
Intelligence officials have told ministers of their fear that equipment in a new communications network installed by Huawei, the Chinese telecom giant, for BT, the main British telco, could be used to halt critical services such as power, food and water supplies.
Huawei was allegedly founded with significant funding from the Chinese state. Its head is Ren Zhengfei, a former director of an arm of the three-million-strong People’s Liberation Army responsible for telecommunications research.
It could be something-nothing…it could be a real threat. The point is – don’t trust them. We should deal with them by all means, sell and buy, have deep and meaningful conversations with them but keep in the back of our minds where they come from and what they have done.
David Burchell opines on Rudd’s recent meeting with Australia’s new-found friend, the CPC’s chief censor, Li Changchun.
Who is this unknown Chinese bureaucrat to whom we have accorded so many of the trappings of a royal visit, and who our political and business leaders seem so eager to propitiate? Li, who formally speaking is nothing more than an ordinary politburo member, is routinely referred to as the propaganda head of the CPC. And yet this sells him short. For his helium-like ascent through the ranks of the CPC has had less to do with disseminating favourable stories than suppressing unwelcome ones. He is, in effect, the party’s chief censor. In particular his brief is to suppress what remains of the liberal-minded opposition within the CPC.
Li has talks with a number of influential Australians;
… with acting Governor-General Marie Bashir at Government House in Sydney, with Environment and Arts Minister Peter Garrett, with Seven Network owner Kerry Stokes, and with ABC chairman Maurice Newman and general manager Mark Scott, the last of whom was photographed, looking a little uneasy, conducting Li around the set of The Gruen Transfer.
According to the Xinhua report, Scott agreed to “provide a full range of views” about China for the ABC’s audience, a statement Chinese citizens were doubtless expected to interpret as a reference to Tibet.
and the Australian people are told nothing about the propaganda visit
Whitlam started this ALP love affair with the Chinese and went there in indecent haste as Chinese equipped North Vietnam divisions invaded the South. While the bodies of our battle dead lay in recent graves, most probably killed by bullets supplied by China, Whitlam dines with their leaders.
Matched, of course by his one time deputy Cairns visiting the USSR, the other supplier of weapons designed to kill Aussie diggers, while he was President of the Australia-USSR Society. Busy boy Jim – he was also involved in organizing the Moratoriums to show his moral support for North Vietnam as well arranging collections at Australian Universities to help fund them.
Is it any wonder I don’t like the Left.