That kind of attack might be used for information collection, he said.
Eftimiades said the monitoring work would help them to observe which way the elections are going to go, which candidates have advantages, and what each party’s strategies are.
“So that they can better prepare for it, so they can shape the international environment for which they’re gonna have to deal,” he said.
In his opinion, this approach is just a portion of a broader plan being pushed by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
Covert Influence Operations
“And then there’s a whole covert dynamic of this, where China will try and influence political leaders, business leaders, the Chinese diaspora to not vote for certain candidates, for example, to assume certain positions on China,” Eftimiades said.The covert operations are coordinated by various bodies of the regime, including the China friendship associations, the United Front Work Department, and the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, he said.
“They are all geared toward shifting opinion or controlling or directing foreign opinion on China,” Eftimiades said.
Encirclement Strategy
“One of the more interesting aspects of China’s strategy in this regard is encirclement,” Eftimiades said.With this strategy, the regime tends to exert influence on individuals around the targeted politician, rather than directly on the person, according to the expert.
They can take aim at “the academics that will be supporting that person; the cyber operations to understand who has pro-China views and who doesn’t; to a business person, to whom they will say, ‘Look, if you really want to do business in China, you need to go back with this message.’”
Self-Censorship
The regime has used material interest as a tool to trap American individuals into facilitating its infiltration, he said.“There was greed, greed on the part of government officials, on the part of corporate officials, and on the part of universities who don’t want to give up the money that they’re making, even if it means violating their own personal beliefs on freedom and academic freedom and freedom of speech,” Eftimiades said.
Those who are lured into dealing with the regime have to play by China’s rules, which means “your liberty, your freedom as an American or in liberal democratic societies globally, is restricted ... by China,” he said.
For anyone who breaks the rules, China will cut that person’s access to dealings in China, according to Eftimiades.
“They‘ll cut business deals for business persons the same way they’ll cut Hollywood, from showing films in the world’s largest market in China, if there’s anything that they find offensive,” he said. “It’s an often imposed form of self-censorship.”