Chinese man convicted for stealing aviation trade secrets
A Chinese intelligence officer has been convicted by a US
jury of plotting to steal secrets from aviation companies, according to the US
justice department.
Xu Yanjun was found guilty of five counts relating to
economic espionage and trade secret theft.
He faces up to 60 years in prison and fines of more than $5m
(£3.7m).
Xu was first arrested in Belgium in 2018 and is possibly the
first Chinese operative to be extradited to the US for trial.
Chinese authorities have not commented publicly on Friday's
verdict. Beijing has previously dismissed the accusations, saying there was no
basis to the charges.
According to a statement by the US justice department, Xu is
a senior member of the Jiangsu branch of China's Ministry of State Security -
an agency responsible for counter-intelligence, foreign intelligence and
internal security.
Xu was accused of targeting employees at several companies
based in the US, among other countries since at least 2013.
In one instance, he arranged for a GE Aviation employee to
travel to China in 2017 to give a presentation at a university - paying for
their travel expenses and a stipend.
The following year, Xu asked the expert for "system
specification, design process" information. With co-operation from the
company - which was working with the FBI - the employee emailed Xu a two-page
document labelled as having sensitive information.
Xu later asked the employee to send a copy of the file
directory for his work-issued computer.
He also tried to arrange to meet the employee in Belgium,
leading to his eventual arrest.
"For those who doubt the real goals of [China], this
should be a wakeup call," said FBI Assistant Director Alan Kohler.
"They are stealing American technology to benefit their economy and
military."
The charges come at a time of raised tension between the two
countries - with China recently testing a new form of hypersonic missile, and
US President Joe Biden pledging to protect Taiwan from any Chinese military
incursion.
According to CNN, CIA Director Bill Burns described China as
the greatest technological threat to the US. Last month he said the spy agency
would boost its efforts towards China.
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