The UK Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament in the UK has published its report on China. A summary is provided below, but in essence the report accepts that communist China has infiltrated every aspect of UK society. It has, for example exerted strong influence upon the UK universities, so that criticism of the CCP is carefully controlled. As well, using its vast financial resources it has bought up strategic assets, in education and industry.

Beyond all this though, China has intelligence capacities far beyond the UK, having, as a communist society a “whole of state’ approach. “In practice, this means that Chinese state-owned and non-state-owned companies, as well as academic and cultural establishments and ordinary Chinese citizens, are liable to be (willingly or unwillingly) co-opted into espionage and interference operations overseas: much of the impact that China has on national security is overt – through its economic might, its takeovers and mergers, its interaction with Academia and Industry – as opposed to covert activity carried out by its intelligence officers.”

 

Overall, the same assessment can be made for most nations in the West, especially Australia and New Zealand, who have allowed their once sense of national unity and homogeneity to be crippled by multiculturalism, and defence weakened by the philosophy of woke and diversity.

 

https://nakedemperor.substack.com/p/chinas-whole-of-state-threat

“Today, the Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament in the UK published its report on China. This considers the overall intelligence threat from China to the UK and the Government’s response to that threat. The report says that it is clear that China has taken advantage of the policy of successive British Governments to boost economic ties between the UK and China, which has enabled it to advance its commercial, science and technology, and industrial goals in order to gain a strategic advantage.

It is a long 222 page document so I will just post a few interesting snippets here but I recommend opening it up to have a more thorough read.

The ‘whole-of-state’ threat

Threat and Response

Case Studies