US and UK intelligence chiefs call for vigilance on China’s industrial spies

FBI director warns of Beijing’s ‘elaborate shell games’ in unprecedented joint appearance with head of MI5

MI5 director general Ken McCallum (left) and FBI director Christopher Wray at a joint press conference at MI5 headquarters, in central London. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA
MI5 director general Ken McCallum (left) and FBI director Christopher Wray at a joint press conference at MI5 headquarters, in central London. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA

The heads of the FBI and MI5 have warned that China’s industrial espionage poses a growing threat to western groups, including through special purpose acquisition companies (Spacs).

In a joint appearance in London, the chiefs of the US and British intelligence agencies called on companies to be much more vigilant about China.

FBI director Christopher Wray said Beijing was using “elaborate shell games” to disguise its spying and was even taking advantage of Spacs.

“The Chinese government poses an even more serious threat to western businesses than even many sophisticated businesspeople realise,” Mr Wray told business leaders at an event with his MI5 counterpart, Ken McCallum. “I want to encourage you to take the long view as you gauge the threat.”

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In a reference to the Ministry of State Security and the People’s Liberation Army, Mr Wray added: “When you deal with a Chinese company, know you’re also dealing with the Chinese government — that is the MSS and the PLA — too, almost like silent partners”.

The intelligence chiefs were holding the first public event between the two agencies, in a move Mr Wray said underscored the need to tackle the expanding espionage challenge from Beijing.

Mr McCallum said MI5 had seen a sevenfold increase in China-related investigations since 2018, had doubled its capacity to deal with them over the past three years, and would probably double capacity again over the next “handful of years”.

Mr Wray said FBI field offices across the US opened one investigation into Chinese espionage on average every 12 hours.

“We’re not crying wolf,” Mr McCallum said. “China is the most game-changing of all the threats in the sense that it pervades so many aspects of our national life.”

Mr Wray said Beijing was using “every tool” at its disposal to steal western technology in an effort to eventually undercut non-Chinese businesses and dominate their markets — even stealing genetically modified seeds from US farmland.

He added that the Ministry of State Security, which oversees Chinese overseas espionage, was homing in on western companies that it wanted to “ransack” to help obtain corporate secrets. Meanwhile, assessing the risks from Chinese counterparts was becoming more difficult because Beijing was restricting access to the data needed for due diligence, he said.

Both chiefs stressed China often employed people who were not directly connected to its intelligence services to target western companies — a group Mr Wray called “co-optees”.

They said companies had to be more attuned to the fact that their dealings with Chinese companies might have connections to Beijing’s intelligence, which Mr McCallum described as “hidden manipulation”.

They urged companies to step up co-operation with the FBI and MI5, singling out China’s ability to conduct espionage at scale, across a huge breadth of activities, and to take the long view — to the extent it courts politicians just starting out on their careers.

Mr McCallum and Mr Wray insisted they wanted companies to be more vigilant, not to disengage with China.

“The aim here is not to cut off from China. We want a UK which is both connected and resilient,” Mr McCallum said.

He cited the presence of 150,000 Chinese students studying at UK universities as being “good for them and good for us”. But he said vetting had led to 50 of them with military links leaving.

Mr Wray also said business should think more about the implications of China’s threat to Taiwan in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, underlining that western companies had been caught in sanctions against Moscow and economic disruption.

“There were a lot of western companies that had their fingers still in that door when it slammed shut,” he said. “If China does invade Taiwan, we could see the same thing again, at a much larger scale. Just as in Russia, western investments built over years could become hostages.”

The Chinese embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment. — Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2022