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CIA pulled officers from China after govt hack: Report

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The United States withdrew several CIA officers from its embassy in Beijing to protect them from being uncovered through a hack of US federal employee records, The Washington Post has reported.

Two cyberthefts targeting the US Office of Personnel Management this year have been widely blamed on China. Beijing has denied all involvement.

The Washington Post said senior US officials have described the intrusions as spying aimed at identifying agents, potential recruits for espionage or people who could be blackmailed to obtain information.

OPM records include background checks of State Department employees, such as embassy staffers.

The Chinese could thus compare those records against the names of the people working at the US embassy in Beijing, and conclude that anyone working at the embassy but not showing up in the OPM records is in fact a spy, the Post said late Tuesday, quoting US officials.

The Central Intelligence Agency acted to protect CIA officers at the embassy from being discovered, the Post said.

During a visit to Washington last week by Chinese President Xi Jinping, the United States and China promised not to spy on each other's companies for commercial gain.

The US Director of National Intelligence, James Clapper, told a congressional panel Tuesday the OPM hack was not so much an attack as a form of espionage, the Post said.

He said that "both nations engage in this."

The United States withdrew several CIA officers from its embassy in Beijing to protect them from being uncovered through a hack of US federal employee records, The Washington Post has reported.

Two cyberthefts targeting the US Office of Personnel Management this year have been widely blamed on China. Beijing has denied all involvement.

The Washington Post said senior US officials have described the intrusions as spying aimed at identifying agents, potential recruits for espionage or people who could be blackmailed to obtain information.

OPM records include background checks of State Department employees, such as embassy staffers.

The Chinese could thus compare those records against the names of the people working at the US embassy in Beijing, and conclude that anyone working at the embassy but not showing up in the OPM records is in fact a spy, the Post said late Tuesday, quoting US officials.

The Central Intelligence Agency acted to protect CIA officers at the embassy from being discovered, the Post said.

During a visit to Washington last week by Chinese President Xi Jinping, the United States and China promised not to spy on each other’s companies for commercial gain.

The US Director of National Intelligence, James Clapper, told a congressional panel Tuesday the OPM hack was not so much an attack as a form of espionage, the Post said.

He said that “both nations engage in this.”

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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