Bloomberg
China’s “Thousand Talents†programme to tap into its citizens educated or employed in the US is a key part of multi-pronged efforts to transfer, replicate and eventually overtake US military and commercial technology, according to American intelligence officials.
The programme, begun in 2008, is far from secret. But its unadvertised goal is “to facilitate the legal and illicit transfer of US technology, intellectual property and know-how†to China, according to an unclassified analysis by the National Intelligence Council, the branch of US intelligence that assesses long-term trends.
The programme was highlighted to House Armed Services Committee members as Pentagon and intelligence officials outlined what they said was an aggressive, 10-part Chinese “toolkit for foreign technology acquisition.â€
The National Intelligence Council’s analysis, produced in April, described the Thousand Talents Plan as “China’s flagship talent programme and probably the largest in terms of funding.†The programme also was cited in a combative White House report posted titled “How China’s Economic Aggression Threatens the Technologies and Intellectual Property of the United States and the World.â€
Breakdown of Recruits
The assessment discussed numbered the current of pool Thousand Talents recruits at 2,629 — 44 percent of whom specialise in medicine, life or health sciences, 22 percent in applied industrial technologies, 8 percent in computer sciences and 6 percent each in aviation/aerospace and astronomy.
Smaller percentages possessed US-garnered expertise in economics, finance and mathematics.
American military and intelligence officials have long warned that China threatens the nation’s security as well as its economy.
The warnings have escalated under President Donald Trump, whose moves to impose tariffs on China and Beijing’s counter-moves have heightened fears of a trade war.
The US still is seeking a level of cooperation with China, including its help in maintaining sanctions to pressure North Korea to dismantle its nuclear weapons programme.
The Pentagon “is facing an unprecedented threat to its technological and industrial base,†as the US’s “open society†has “offered China and others access to the same technology and information that is crucial to the success of our future war-fighting capabilities,†Michael Griffin, under secretary for research and engineering, testified at a hearing.
“We have seen the Chinese target top talent in American universities and research labs of the private sector, including defense contractors and the US government,†he said.
The solution must include strengthening American counterintelligence capabilities and elevating the private sector’s focus on security, he added.
Tony Schinella, the national intelligence officer for military issues, testified that in addition to using the ‘Thousand Talents’ programme, “Beijing also has employed Western-trained returnees to implement important changes in its science, engineering, and math curricula that foster greater creativity and applied skills at China’s top-tier universities.â€
China’s aggregate investment in American technology over the past decade, from 2007 to 2017, totaled approximately $40 billion and was about $5.3 billion last year, he said.