The Chinese regime “struck paydirt” when one of its alleged spies got close to U.S. Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-Calif.), said Bill Gertz, who is the national security correspondent for The Washington Times and author of the book “Deceiving the Sky: Inside Communist China’s Drive for Global Supremacy.”
Swalwell was a councilman for the city of Dublin in California from 2010 until 2012, before he was elected to the House of Representatives, representing California’s 15th District in 2013. The congressman, who is in his fifth term and serves on the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, briefly sought the Democratic nomination in the 2020 presidential race before bowing out in July 2019.
Gertz said in a recent interview with The Epoch Times’ “American Thought Leaders” program that Fang’s activities were a classic example of how foreign agents “compromise” an official, in what counterintelligence experts call a “farming operation.”
Swalwell, who has denied wrongdoing in his ties with Fang, said that he cut off relations with her in 2015 after being warned by the FBI about her alleged activities.
That day, Swalwell stated it was false for the U.S. intelligence community to say there was “equivalence between what Russia and China are doing” in terms of how the two states influenced the 2020 U.S. presidential election, suggesting that Russia was doing more to influence President Donald Trump.
Gertz said, “This is the kind of influence that needs to be investigated, to see how ... a politician’s views [were] influenced by having a Chinese agent close to him.”
Fang’s case was a U.S. “counterintelligence failure” for the FBI, Gertz said, since the law enforcement agency should have “at least tried to turn [Fang] into a double agent, confronted her, or at the very least interrogated her to find out more details about her activities and her network.”
Gertz recommended that the U.S. government set up a separate counterintelligence service to counter Beijing’s espionage efforts.
“We really need to improve our ability to not just identify and stop these spies but to penetrate their operations, turn them against them,” he said.
“I think it’s important to understand that membership in the Chinese Communist Party makes those people devoted not to the nation of China, or to the people of China, but to the political party of the CCP,” Gertz said.
“And they are definitely going to be tasked to do any task that the party wants, whether that’s collecting intelligence, suborning foreign officials, gathering information that could be useful for government and party agencies.”
China currently has a population of about 1.4 billion and more than 91 million CCP members as of the end of 2019, according to China’s state-run media.
Gertz warned that Beijing could put together pieces of information collected from individual CCP members and use them to its benefit, or to the benefit of certain Chinese companies, while harming the communist regime’s adversaries.
Gertz said the list likely contained only a fraction of all the CCP members based at international companies and entities.
However, he said, “I think what’s significant is that it will allow people, researchers, investigative reporters like myself, to begin to trace some of the patterns of employment and penetrations by these places that then can be used to go and analyze how other sectors that we don’t have lists for are penetrated by Chinese officials.”