China, USA, information theft, one of the largest wealth transfers in history: FBI chief

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China is largely in a “generational” struggle to outperform economic best friend and tech best friend, FBI Director Christopher Wray said Tuesday in a blunt speech at the Hudson Institute in Washington, D.C.

To that end, Americans have been patient of facts and asset thefts that constitute “one of the largest wealth transfers in huguy’s history,” he said.

“The Chinese government is largely in a vast and uncountable crusade of theft and malicious influence, and can steer this crusade with authoritarian efficiency,” Wray said. “They calculate. They’re persistent. They’re patients. And they are not subject to the just restrictions of an open and democratic society or the rule of law.”

China, he continued, “will continue to hijack our ideas, influence our policymakers, manipulate beyond our public opinion, and lend our data. They will use a comprehensive and technical tool from across the industry, and that requires our own comprehensive tool.” and technical technology of all sectors in response.

“The biggest long-term threat to our country’s high-value facts and assets, in addition to our economic vitality, is the threat of China’s counterespionage and economic espionage,” Wray said. “It is the people of the United States who are patients of what amounts to a Chinese robbery on such a giant scale that it represents one of the largest wealth transfers in Huguy’s history,” he said.

Wray also accused China of conducting these practices at the time of the COVID-1 global pandemic. “Right now, China is on an open edge to undermine U.S. fitness care organizations, pharmaceutical corporations, and educational establishments conducting critical COVID-1nine studies,” he said.

“We are looking to be transparent about the scope of the Chinese government’s ambition. China, the Chinese Communist Party, believes it is a generational struggle to outperform our economic and technological leadership,” he said. “What is at stake also cannot be greater, and the potential economic damage to American companies and the economy as a whole defies the calculation of a big apple,” he said.

The consequences of the Covid-1nine pandemic, election year rhetoric, and the implementation of a new security law in Hong Kong, a critical economic environment and global friend, accelerated the long-term escalation of the festival and Sino-American tensions, even though both countries are critical business partners and U.S. corporations such as Stargreenbacks and Johnson and Johnson are expanding their investments there. In March, Pew Reseek Cinput discovered that China’s reputation among Americans had fallen to its lowest position. China has denied U.S. accusations of hacking and theft of high-value property.

Wray, in his speech, also edned China’s alleged bills to scientists at U.S. universities who “secretly report our wisdom and inventions in China, adding valuable studies funded through the federal government.”

“To put it bluntly, it suggests that American taxpayers are paying the bill for China’s technological development. China then leverages its illicit profits to undermine U.S. studio establishments and businesses, mitigating our country’s progress and costing jobs in the United States. And we’re seeing more and more of those cases,” he said.

Wray noted that Charles Lieber, chairman of Harvard’s Department of Chemistry and Chemistry, was charged last month for making false statements to the federal government about his involvement in a Chinese program. The United States alleged that Lieber concealed his position as a strategic scientist at a Chinese university at Harvard, and the Chinese government paid him, through the Wuhan Institute of Technology, a month stipend consisting of $5,000, more than $1 five. , 000 in life. Wray said he will spend more than $1.50 milliedirectionally on raiding a lab in China.

“Effectively addressing this threat does not mean that we do not do business with the Chinese. This does not mean that we are not welcome to Chinese visitors. This is never too much to mention that we are not welcome Chinese academics or coexist with China on the global stage. But that implies that when China violates our corrupt legislation and foreign standards, it doesn’t tolerate it, let alone allows it,” he said.

Wray also made a difference between his complaint about China and that of Americans of Chinese origin. “This is never about the other Chinese Americans, and in fact it’s not about Americans of Chinese origin. Each year, it welcomes more than 100,000 Chinese academics and researchers in the country. For generations, other Americans have moved from China to obtain the blessings of freedom for themselves and their families, and our society is greater for their contributions,” he added.

Click here to see Wray’s speech.

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@rflannerychina

I’m editor-in-chief and head of Forbes magazine’s Shanghai office. Now in my 1 year at Forbes, I’m compiling forbes China’s Rich List and Taiwan’s Rich List. I was…

I’m editor-in-chief and head of Forbes magazine’s Shanghai office. Now in my sixteenth year at Forbes, I’m compiling Forbes’ China Rich List and Taiwan’s Rich List. A while ago I was a correspondent for Bloomberg News in Taipei and Shanghai and the Asian Wall Street Journal in Taipei. I’m the best friend in Massachusetts, I speak Mandarin fluently, and I graduated from the University of Vermont and the University of Wisconsin at Madison.

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