Posted on 05/01/2020 4:50:22 AM PDT by Kaslin
Earlier this week, I suggested that the United States restrict Chinese nationals from studying advanced scientific and technological subjects in our country. My suggestion prompted a torrent of abuse from the media.
Its hard to know what triggered Cottons rant, Catherine Rampell complained in The Washington Post, resorting to ad hominem cries of xenophobia while ignoring the crux of the matter. Not until the final paragraph did she even acknowledge the risk of Chinese espionage, blithely suggesting that we simply prosecute such crimes. I suppose Rampell has missed years of FBI warnings about Chinese espionage, so let me add some context.
Around 370,000 Chinese nationals are studying in the United States. Nearly half are studying in scientific and technological fields. According to a White House report, the Chinese government pressures some of these students into becoming non-traditional information collectors that serve Beijings military and strategic ambitionsput less politely, spies.
The scale of Chinas espionage is a huge challenge. The FBI is investigating a thousand cases related to Chinas theft of intellectual property across the country. The Chinese military has sent at least 500 military researchers to the United States, often under false identities.
For example, last year federal officers stopped a Chinese student named Yanqing Ye at Bostons Logan International Airport. Ye studied at Boston Universitys Department of Physics, Chemistry, and Biomedical Engineering, but her interests werent strictly academic. She admitted under questioning that she was a lieutenant in Chinas military, the Peoples Liberation Army. During Yes two-year stint in our country, she allegedly researched U.S. military projects and compiled dossiers on U.S. scientists at the direction of a PLA colonel.
I have a bill to crack down on Chinese espionage by denying visas to individuals employed or sponsored by institutions associated with the PLA. But more is needed, specifically, a broader reexamination of academic exchange between our two countries, especially for STEM students at the graduate and postgraduate levels.
If Chinese nationals wish to study subjects that can improve China or the United States without strengthening the Communist Party, we ought to welcome them. But of course, the last thing Chinese communists want their people studying and bringing home is The Federalist Papers. As is more common, though, if Chinese nationals wish to study advanced scientific and technological fields with military applications, we should no longer admit these students.
China apologists and globalists may object, but their arguments dont hold up under scrutiny. Some argue that brain drain isnt a serious problem, citing studies that most Chinese PhD graduates stay here for years after finishing their degree instead of returning to China. But other reports suggest that nearly all Chinese graduate students in scientific and technological fields return home. Whatever the actual numbers, the hard fact of Chinas espionage and technology theft remains. And how many of those researchers who stay do so to steal our research and advanced technology?
Others argue that we cant restrict Chinese nationals because there arent enough trained Americans to staff our laboratories. If so, its a national embarrassment that we depend on our chief enemy for scientists and engineers, not a justification for continued dependence. It should spur efforts to train more American students in these fields. As a last resort, if we face a shortage of highly skilled talent, we should welcome the citizens of our allies, not our enemy. No doubt India, Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan would welcome the opportunity.
Finally, others argue that restricting what Chinese nationals can study violates the spirit of openness and collaboration that characterizes our higher-education system. To which I can only say: dont be naïve. Like a turtle on a fencepost, a Chinese national doesnt get into our most advanced labs by accident. Besides, this argument comes mostly from colleges and universities that have allowed themselves to become financially dependent on full-freight tuition payments from Chinese studentswho in turn are subsidized by the Chinese government.
But this objection, while wrong, gets at the crux of the problem. We want to protect our free research system from an unfree adversary that exploits our openness for military and industrial advantage. The United States has responded to similar threats in the past by restricting what students from such nations can study. Scientific exchange between the Soviet Union and the United States was highly restricted; even then, there was vigorous debate about whether this exchange posed an unacceptable risk to the United States. More recently, President Obama signed legislation barring Iranian students from studying fields related to nuclear weapons. I dont recall accusations of xenophobia and racism directed at him.
China is our enemy. The Chinese Communist Party aims to displace the United States as the worlds preeminent economic and military power. We ought not to aid that ambition. Yet thats exactly what were doing when we open our most advanced labs and fields of studies to Chinese nationals. Lets not be the proverbial capitalists who would sell the rope the communists will use to hang us.
I read an article about the Chinese buying two factories in Kentucky and in a very short time closed both of them.
For example I can make a case that our & the UK’s training of 3rd worlders in nuclear physics aided & abetted nuclear proliferation problems. Something we in the West hyperventilated about from the 1960s & are still doing it. The Pakistani, Indian & now defunct Iraqi programs are good examples. The Indian program is probably the only responsible one. That probably occurred more by luck then anything. Agree that the Chinese students & profs need to be sent home, particularly to punish the current regime. An evaluation particularly for state colleges & universities needs to be as to how many foreign students & profs we really need. There are two huge problems we need to overcome the gross mismanagement of taxpayer funds at these state universities that make foreign money & students necessary & a cultural problem of producing too many slackers from our public schools.
Please consider restricting/ending flight training at United States Airports to chinese students as well. One suspects that many are, or will be, members of their military.
One observed his happening at Castle Airport in California a few years back (a former USAF Strategic Air Command Base, no less.), and presumably communist chinese are taking flight training at other airports around our fine Country,
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The Chinese buyers took all the technology know how from those 2 factories and will set up manufacturing in China.
They did that back in 1990 with the outfit I worked for at the time. They paid owner of company $3.5 million to obtain blue prints and engineering handbooks detailing design procedures of the machines the outfit manufactured.
Another mystery! In 2017 - 2018 there were 12,000 Iranian students at US colleges & universities. Why? I am sure the 2018 - now numbers aren’t much different. Again why?
An implacable Anti-USA terrorist regime and we’re training their next generation of scientists & engineers! I guarantee they’re not majority liberal arts & humanities majors!
So why are they here?
370,000 Chinese spys.
Americans are blocked from school so communists can take their place.
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