IndianMascot
Core Member
It's the year and the definition of a cold war has remarkably changed. If we talk of spies in the modern day and age, the mastermind of the most notorious spy ring would be a Chinese sitting somewhere in Mainland China.
China has been operating spy rings like never before, and in its web are people from all professions -- journalists, political leaders, policy makers, and researchers.
You name it and you will find them on the Chinese payroll.
An Australian MP is currently being investigated. His name is Shaoquette Moselmane.
This man is extremely pro-China, and he is very vocal about it. In the recent months, he has even lauded the Chinese response to the novel coronavirus.
That move itself is enough to get alarm bells ringing.
Another thing to be kept in consideration is agents these days no longer keep a low-profile or roam around in hoodies.
China does not anyway need spies to evesdrop. It has technologies like Huawei or Zoom for that job. The task for its human agents is to influence policies.
Since the Commmunist Party can only control the circus at home, it needs agents abroad to generously dish out the party's propaganda and influence affairs in its favour.
And who better to do this job than a legislator?
Shaoquette is not a lone wolf. There are several others working with him -- supposedly working for China. While some are influencing policies, others are stealing information and critical research.
They are placed in some of the world's top research labs, and they are being paid in millions to smuggle information to the dragon's nest.
There is Charles Lieber also -- a professor at the Harvard University. Only earlier this year, US authorities found out that Lieber was working closely with China.
China had paid him $1 million.
Here's how China's spy racket is bigger than the cold war!
China has been operating spy rings like never before, and in its web are people from all professions -- journalists, political leaders, policy makers, and researchers.
You name it and you will find them on the Chinese payroll.
An Australian MP is currently being investigated. His name is Shaoquette Moselmane.
This man is extremely pro-China, and he is very vocal about it. In the recent months, he has even lauded the Chinese response to the novel coronavirus.
That move itself is enough to get alarm bells ringing.
Another thing to be kept in consideration is agents these days no longer keep a low-profile or roam around in hoodies.
China does not anyway need spies to evesdrop. It has technologies like Huawei or Zoom for that job. The task for its human agents is to influence policies.
Since the Commmunist Party can only control the circus at home, it needs agents abroad to generously dish out the party's propaganda and influence affairs in its favour.
And who better to do this job than a legislator?
Shaoquette is not a lone wolf. There are several others working with him -- supposedly working for China. While some are influencing policies, others are stealing information and critical research.
They are placed in some of the world's top research labs, and they are being paid in millions to smuggle information to the dragon's nest.
There is Charles Lieber also -- a professor at the Harvard University. Only earlier this year, US authorities found out that Lieber was working closely with China.
China had paid him $1 million.
Here's how China's spy racket is bigger than the cold war!