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Chinese Communist Party data leak reveals thousands of members infiltrated US companies and universities - Washington Examiner
A Chinese Communist Party data leak of information about almost 2 million CCP members exposed nearly 80,000 who have infiltrated some of the world's largest Western companies and universities. “Communist Party branches have been set up inside Western companies, allowing the infiltration of those...

A Chinese Communist Party data leak of information about almost 2 million CCP members exposed nearly 80,000 who have infiltrated some of the world's largest Western companies and universities.
“Communist Party branches have been set up inside Western companies, allowing the infiltration of those companies by CCP members, who, if called on, are answerable directly to the Communist Party, to the chairman, the president himself,” Sky News host Sharri Markson said."It is also going to embarrass some global companies who appear to have no plan in place to protect their intellectual property from theft, from economic espionage.”
Companies infiltrated by CCP members include Boeing, Volkswagen, Pfizer, AstraZeneca, and banks such as ANZ and HSBC.
"It is believed to be the first leak of its kind in the world," said Markson. "What's amazing about this database is not just that it exposes people who are members of the Communist Party and who are now living and working all over the world, from Australia to the U.S. to the U.K., but it's amazing because it lifts the lid on how the party operates under President and Chairman Xi Jinping."
Data also showed that CCP members used a recruitment agency to infiltrate the British, Australian, and U.S. consulates in Shanghai.
Some CCP operatives were also employed at U.S. universities, which comes after the U.S. government uncovered a Chinese intelligence operation to steal U.S. scientific research over the summer.
The data was originally extracted from a Shanghai server by Chinese dissidents in 2016, who later leaked it to the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China and four media organizations.
The revelations come less than a week after an Axios report linked Rep. Eric Swalwell (D-CA) to a suspected Chinese spy early in his political career. According to the report, a Chinese national named Fang Gan, or Christine Fang, targeted Swalwell and other up-and-coming California politicians in a Chinese intelligence operation.
In 2015, investigators gave Swalwell a “defensive briefing” on their concerns over Fang, after which Swalwell said he cut all ties with her.
“I was shocked,” Swalwell said on CNN shortly after the story came out. “Just over six years ago, I was told about this individual, and then, I offered to help, and I did help, and I was thanked by the FBI for my help, and that person is no longer in the country, and I was a little surprised to read about my cooperation in that story because the story says that there was never a suspicion of wrongdoing on my part."
And marching orders to our media were already sent out by a Chinese Embassy spokeswoman in the UK, appealing to media to shed its “ideological bias and Cold War mentality.”
“We urge the media to abandon ideological bias and Cold War mentality and view China, the Communist Party of China and China’s development in a rational and impartial manner.”