A century of espionage activities of the Chinese Communist Party: from the founding of the party to the competition for international power, an analysis of the history and organization of the Chinese Communist Party’s intelligence system
A century of espionage activities of the Chinese Communist Party: from the founding of the party to the competition for international power, an analysis of the history and organization of the Chinese Communist Party’s intelligence system
Regular price
MOP$160.00
Regular price
Sale price
MOP$160.00
Unit price
per
"If there were no espionage activities, how much military and economic rise would China be able to achieve today?"
★ From Mao Zedong to Xi Jinping,
A detailed history and current analysis of the CCP’s espionage activities in the past century ★
★ From Mao Zedong to Xi Jinping,
A detailed history and current analysis of the CCP’s espionage activities in the past century ★
※"Washington Times", "Wall Street Journal", "Military Review", "The Economist", "Foreign Policy", "Asian Affairs", "US Defense News Weekly", "East West Notes", Sankei Shimbun Highly recommended by major international media such as the "JAPAN Forward" website and the American news website "Townhall.com"!
China's overall intelligence capabilities cannot be ignored or underestimated. In particular, China today has demonstrated the use of innovative methods to collect intelligence abroad and block possible threats within its borders. From "Project Rainstorm" in 2003, which targeted U.S. military and corporate networks for a series of disruptive intrusions, to "Operation Aurora" in 2010, which was a large-scale collection of intelligence information and theft of intellectual property. The "Operation Dark Rat" that attacked defense contractors and corporate organizations around the world in 2006 all contained traces of China's attempt to use hackers to control other countries' intelligence. China's use of "surveillance" to achieve preparedness and defense can be seen everywhere, such as strict control of the Xinjiang Uyghurs and Tibet Autonomous Region, information surveillance, and the comprehensive implementation of the famous "social credit system."
The use of the Internet has changed everything in China's intelligence work, including civilian intelligence and military intelligence.
Still, traditional espionage has not gone away, and it never will.
One morning in the winter of 2011, in the atrium of a government ministry in Beijing, a party member who was revealed to be a CIA informant and his pregnant wife were brutally murdered. The execution was broadcast on closed-circuit television, and the ministry was ordered to Everyone will watch the whole thing. However, this was only one of more than a dozen fatal warnings issued by the Chinese government between late 2010 and December 2012.
Why is the Chinese government so cruel and ruthless in dealing with its own traitors compared to the prison terms imposed by other regimes in similar cases? This is because the Chinese Communist Party has long realized the "value of intelligence to the party's security and military operations" and will never tolerate betrayal by those who hold secrets and are trusted. In April 1927, Chiang Kai-shek ordered the purge of the party, and Gu Shunzhang's rebellion four years later caused the Communist Party of China, which had only been founded a few years ago, to be nearly annihilated and suffer heavy losses. Therefore, since 1927, the Communist Party of China has regarded intelligence as a professional activity that requires dedicated organizations to manage. The division of labor between the party, the state, and military intelligence units also changed in the 1949 People's Republic of China After its establishment, it became increasingly clear that after entering the 21st century, it emerged as a global intelligence power.
The intelligence services are the Chinese Communist Party’s main bastion of trust. For those who want to understand how China affects the world diplomatically, militarily, economically, and technologically, this book undoubtedly provides a bridge, revealing the transformation and reform of the CCP’s intelligence organization, internal contradictions and conflicts, and the leadership of the intelligence agency. , famous intelligence personnel and important operations, and how active and comprehensive China's espionage activities are in other countries.
"You will find that (China) is not that mysterious.
As you become more and more familiar with it, China will no longer be as mysterious as it used to be. "
SKU:9786263100572
View full details