Exclusive: A suspected Chinese intelligence operative bundled donations for Eric Swalwell’s 2014 re-election campaign.

The operation targeted politicians in California & across the country.

Read Axios' year-long investigation, by me and @zachsdorfman:

axios.com/china-spy-cali…
The suspected operative, a Chinese national named Christine Fang, enrolled as a student at Cal State East Bay in 2011.

Fang’s friends and acquaintances said she was in her late 20s or early 30s, though she looked younger and blended in well with the undergraduate population.
She was the president of the Chinese Student Association and the campus chapter of APAPA, an Asian American civic organization. She was really, really good at running these clubs, and held a flurry of events that raised their profile -- and hers.
While she was a student at CSU East Bay, Christine Fang also had regular contact with a suspected MSS officer under diplomatic cover in the San Francisco consulate, though U.S. intelligence officials believe her main handlers were based in China.
Christine used her position as president of these two campus organizations to branch out into local off-campus politics. Between 2013 and 2015, she experienced an almost meteoric rise in Bay Area politics, becoming a ubiquitous presence at fundraisers and other political events.
Christine Fang was "everywhere," to quote several people who knew her. She appears in photos with Eric Swalwell, Ro Khanna, Judy Chu, and Mike Honda, and numerous mayors, state assembly members, town council members, staffers, and other prominent politicos.
Through campaign fundraising, extensive networking, personal charisma, and romantic or sexual relationships, Fang was able to gain proximity to political power.
Christine Fang engaged in sexual or romantic relationships with at least two mayors of Midwestern cities over a period of about three years, according to one U.S. intelligence official and one former elected official.
At least two separate sexual interactions with elected officials, including one of these Midwestern mayors, were caught on FBI electronic surveillance of Fang. One of these encounters occurred in a car with a mayor from Ohio.
The alleged operation offers a rare window into how Beijing has tried to gain access to and influence U.S. political circles. The Chinese Communist Party knows that today’s mayors and city council members are tomorrow’s governors and members of Congress.
Close relationships between a U.S. elected official and a covert Chinese intelligence operative can provide the Chinese government with opportunities to sway the opinion of key decision-makers.
Beijing may aim to influence foreign policy issues directly related to China, or issues closer to home, such as partnering with Chinese companies for local investment — an issue particularly salient among local-level officials such as mayors and city council members.
Chinese Americans find themselves in a difficult position in 2020, being squeezed both by influence campaigns from the Chinese government and a rise in anti-Chinese racism in the United States.
"We want to fight against racism, we want to call it out," Gilbert Wong, the former mayor of Cupertino who had interacted with Christine Fang on several occasions, told Axios. "How do we address this issue without infringing on Chinese American rights?"
Rep. Ro Khanna, who also interacted with Christine Fang, expressed concern about the potential "chilling effect" of surveillance on Chinese American political participation.
"While I respect the need for law enforcement to protect our nation from espionage, we need strict guardrails to make sure the FBI’s investigations do not have collateral damage to the privacy of American citizens or to the legitimacy of Asian Americans," said Khanna.
This story took an immense amount of reporting. We spoke with 4 current and former U.S. intelligence officials, as well as 22 current and former elected officials, organizers, activists, and former students who knew Christine Fang personally while she was in the U.S.
This story would not have been possible without the editing and support provided by @alisonmsnyder @sarakgoo @AxiosNick @scottros and others
For more scoops and exclusives on China, sign up for my once-weekly newsletter Axios China here:

axios.com/newsletters
A statement from Swalwell's office: "Rep. Swalwell, long ago, provided information about this person—whom he met more than 8 years ago, and whom he hasn’t seen in nearly 6 years—to the FBI. To protect information that might be classified, he will not participate in your story."
After Rep. Swalwell received a defensive briefing from US intel officials, he immediately cut off all ties to Christine Fang. Swalwell was never accused of any wrongdoing.
The worst (and most inaccurate) possible lesson to take away from the story of Christine Fang is that Chinese students on campus are a threat. The extraordinary and unique nature of her case indicates the exact opposite—that it is vanishingly rare for the MSS to students as cover

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with B. Allen-Ebrahimian

B. Allen-Ebrahimian Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @BethanyAllenEbr

24 Nov
As Americans were distracted by the election, 3 Chinese-American activists found themselves literally under siege on U.S. soil by masked protesters who claimed to support exiled Chinese billionaire Guo Wengui.

With Axios' @shawnarchen.

axios.com/chinese-activi…
This is one of the most bizarre (and alarming) stories I've written about in a long time. Bob Fu, a well-known Chinese-American Christian pastor in Midland, Texas, had to go into protective custody with his family as Chinese protesters surrounded his house for weeks.
Wu Jianmin, now living in California, was threatened by a man wielding a toilet plunger, and another man punched him and kicked him in the face multiple times as he crouched on the ground to protect himself.
Read 5 tweets
20 Oct
Right-wing outlets and commentators have recently spread a false claim linking the Chinese Communist Party to the Black Lives Matter movement.

This tweet thread will debunk that claim. For a summary, read my article for Axios:

axios.com/right-wing-med…
First, the non-factual claims: The Heritage Foundation published an article claiming that a Chinese-American organization, the Chinese Progressive Association of San Francisco, was working to "push the agenda of China’s communist government here in the United States."
The article's author, Heritage Foundation senior fellow Mike Gonzalez, also said that CPASF espouses a "desire for world communism."
Read 30 tweets
23 Sep
I remember when I was 12 feeling so helpless that i wasn’t legally allowed to work. My family had no money and I would daydream about working at a fast food restaurant, and how relieved my parents would be.
I spent summers working on our land and selling produce at the farmers market. I remember one year we had a bumper crop of onions and our stand became known as the place to buy the big onions good for onion rings.

Those onions paid for our house note one month.
In high school I participated in a summer vocational program for low income students. They had speakers come and talk about their jobs as construction workers and truck drivers. There was a summer job placement program but I wasn’t interested in what they offered...
Read 25 tweets
14 Sep
For all the opining about Disney not understanding the China market, I believe Disney failed even more dramatically at understanding the AMERICAN market.

How—HOW—could Disney have overlooked the deep revulsion, embedded in post-WWII western society, to concentration camps?
We have tended to take stock in the CCP's self-orientalizing statements that foreigners don't understand China, while believing that Chinese leaders have an excellent grasp of American government and society.
But it is painfully obvious that top CCP leaders had absolutely NO IDEA what kind of reaction that Uyghur concentration camps would engender in the west. I doubt if they even realized that we would view what they are doing to Uyghurs as of the same ilk as what Nazis did to Jews.
Read 4 tweets
8 Sep
Chinese audiences prefer lighter-skinned actors. Hollywood complied.

An academic study has found that since 2012, when China began allowing more foreign films into the country, Hollywood movies have cast more light-skinned actors in starring roles.

axios.com/hollywood-cast…
The researchers concluded U.S. film studios were casting to fulfill the aesthetic preferences of Chinese movie-goers, in a culture that places a premium on light skin — a phenomenon known as colorism.
The study examined more than 3,000 films from between 2009 and 2015 and found that films made after 2012 demonstrated an 8% increase in the number of "very light-skinned" actors in starring roles.

The co-authors called this a "light-skin shift."
Read 8 tweets
3 Sep
Really recommend this great read by @jessicacweiss and @Ali_Wyne: It's the most constructive critique I've seen so far of the current admin's China strategy -- it acknowledges the severity of the challenge while offering concrete alternatives.

nytimes.com/2020/09/02/opi…
The authors' suggestion of an asymmetric approach is helpful for areas in which direct reciprocity damages the US commitment to its own values.
I do disagree with the point about Hong Kong. Hong Kong's special economic status is a technical matter. With the loss of Hong Kong's independence, the administration was correct to revoke it. Any resulting economic harm is explicitly and only the fault of the CCP.
Read 5 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!