Inside China’s latest intelligence plot to steal secrets | Politics | News

Xi Jinping’s spies are ramping up operations in the UK (Image: Getty)
MI5 has issued an unprecedented warning China is trying to steal military secrets by using job recruitment websites.
Beijingโs spooks are using an โaggressive online recruitment strategyโ to hoodwink military and security personnel, academics, journalists, freelance writers, think tank employees, โor anyone with links to defence, security, policy and economic sectorsโ.
They are posing as employees of private consultancies, think tanks or human resources (HR) firms, and place online job advertisements for foreign policy and defence analysts, MI5 warned, alongside its Five Eyes partners.
Lifting the veil of secrecy on the Chinese military intelligence operations, MI5 warned spies will post fake roles on job sites such as LinkedIn, Indeed and Upwork.
Applicants will then be ranked on how likely they are to be able to obtain โsensitiveโ information.
During โinterviewsโ, the intelligence officers will then ask about access to Government contracts.
Members of the military could also be asked about their roles, what their units do, their capabilities and where they are based.
Candidates will then be told to write a โtrialโ report on geo-political topics, such as โas Chinaโs bilateral relations, the Indo-Pacific region and related defence issues, or international trade.โ
Beijing will then begin to turn the screw by demanding โmore privileged informationโ.
Recruits will be paid โanywhere from a few hundred to several thousand dollars per report, and may be offered more money in return for increasingly sensitive information.โ
MI5, the FBI, Australian Security Intelligence Organisation, New Zealand Security Intelligence Service and the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, warn: โWhile applicants often have no direct access to classified information, even unclassified information on government policy, or on military strategy, capabilities and installations, can be collected and combined with more sensitive reporting to form a comprehensive operational picture.
โCertain types of data can place the lives of frontline military or other personnel at risk, can weaken our economic prosperity, and enable interference in our democratic processes.โ
Security Minister Dan Jarvis said: โThis alert demonstrates the strength of our Five Eyes partnership and the work of our security services to keep our people safe.
โI urge all government and military personnel to follow the National Protective Security Authorityโs advice to spot signs of online targeting and avoid inadvertently compromising our security.

Ken McCallum has warned of the growing threat from China (Image: Getty)
โWe have taken robust action to defend our country and will continue to tackle hostile actions from a range of states including China.
โA number of recent cases show the strength of the powers we have to bring to justice those that undertake acts on behalf of a foreign state.
โWeโve been clear that it is in the national interest to engage with China – not least because it enables us to directly challenge behaviour which we will not tolerate, such as this activity exposed by MI5 and our partners, while engaging on areas with clear benefits for the UK.โ
