U.S. to Expel Chinese Graduate Students With Ties to China’s Military Schools
作者:Edward Wong and Julian E. Barnes 来源:New York Times
美国政府正在考虑取消来自中国与军方有关院校的研究生的签证;这些学校包括西北工业大学、哈尔滨工程大学、北京理工大学、哈尔滨科技大学、北京航天航空大学和南京航天航空大学。涉及的人数估计在3000。(Northwestern Polytechnical University, Harbin Engineering University, Beijing Institute of Technology, Harbin Institute of Technology, Beihang University, Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, and Nanjing University of Science and Technology. )
The move is the latest in the Trump administration’s efforts to impose limits
on Chinese students. But many university officials say the government is
paranoid, and that the United States will lose out.
WASHINGTON
— The Trump administration plans to cancel the visas of thousands of Chinese
graduate students and researchers in the United States who have direct ties to
universities affiliated with the People’s Liberation Army, according to
American officials with knowledge of the discussions.
The plan would be the first designed to bar the access of a category of Chinese
students, who, over all, form the single largest foreign student population in
the United States.
It portends possible further educational restrictions, and the Chinese
government could retaliate by imposing its own visa or educational bans on
Americans. The two nations have already engaged in rounds of retribution over
policies involving trade, technology and media access, and relations are at their
worst point in decades.
American officials are discussing ways to punish China for its passage of a new
national security law intended to enable crackdowns in Hong Kong, but the plans
to cancel student visas were under consideration before the crisis over the
law, which was announced last week by Chinese officials. Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo discussed the visa plans with President Trump on Tuesday in a White
House meeting.
American universities are expected to push back against the administration’s
move. While international educational exchange is prized for its intellectual
value, many schools also rely on full tuition payments from foreign students to
help cover costs, especially the large group of students from China.
Administrators and teachers have been briefed in recent years by the F.B.I. and
the Justice Department on potential national security threats posed by Chinese
students, especially ones working in the sciences. But the university employees
are wary of a possible new “red scare” that targets students of a specific
national background and that could contribute to anti-Asian racism.
Many of them argue that they have effective security protocols in place, and
that having Chinese students be exposed to the liberalizing effects of Western
institutions outweighs the risks. Moreover, they say, the Chinese students are
experts in their subject fields and bolster American research efforts.
Chinese students and researchers say growing scrutiny from the American
government and new official limits on visas would create biases against them,
including when they apply for jobs or grants.
The visa cancellation could affect at least 3,000 students, according to some
official estimates. That is a tiny percentage of the approximately 360,000
Chinese students in the United States. But some of those affected might be
working on important research projects.
The move is certain to ignite public debate. Officials acknowledged there was
no direct evidence that pointed to wrongdoing by the students who are about to
lose their visas. Instead, suspicions by American officials center on the
Chinese universities at which the students trained as undergraduates.
“In China, much more of society is government-controlled or
government-affiliated,” said Frank Wu, a law professor who is the incoming
president of Queens College. “You can’t function there or have partners from
there if you aren’t comfortable with how the system is set up.”
“Targeting only some potential professors, scholars, students and visitors from
China is a lower level of stereotyping than banning all,” he added. “But it is
still selective, based on national origin.”
The State Department and the National Security Council both declined to
comment.
American officials who defend the visa cancellation said the ties to the
Chinese military at those schools go far deeper than mere campus recruiting.
Instead, in many cases, the Chinese government plays a role in selecting which
students from the schools with ties to the military can study abroad, one
official said. In some cases, students who are allowed to go overseas are
expected to collect information as a condition of having their tuition paid,
the official said, declining to reveal specific intelligence on the matter.
Officials did not provide the list of affected schools, but the People’s
Liberation Army has ties to military institutions and defense research schools,
as well as to seven more traditional universities, many of them prestigious
colleges in China with well-funded science and technology programs.
The F.B.I. and the Justice Department have long viewed the military-affiliated
schools as a particular problem, believing military officials train some of the
graduates in basic espionage techniques and compel them to gather and transmit
information to Chinese officers.
While some government officials emphasize the intelligence threat posed by
students from military-affiliated universities, others see those Chinese
citizens as potential recruits for American spy agencies. Preventing the
students from coming to the United States may make it more difficult for the
agencies to recruit assets inside the Chinese military.
After completing their graduate work, some students land jobs at prominent
technology companies in the United States. That has made some current and
former American officials wary that the employees could engage in industrial
espionage.
Last year, Senator Richard M. Burr, Republican of North Carolina, who was then
the chairman of the Intelligence Committee, predicted the administration would
cut the number of visas going to Chinese students, citing the threat of
technology theft.
Senator Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida, who now leads the committee, has
sent letters to universities in his state warning about ties to the Chinese
government.
Mr. Rubio has been pushing schools to cut relations with China’s Thousand
Talents program, which has provided funding for American researchers —
including Charles M. Lieber, the chairman of Harvard University’s chemistry and
chemical biology department, who was arrested by the F.B.I. in January on
charges of concealing his financial relationship with the Chinese government.
Asked about the Trump administration’s move to cancel the visas of some Chinese
students studying in the United States, Mr. Rubio said he supported “a targeted
approach” to make it more difficult for the Chinese Communist Party to exploit
the openness of American schools to advance their own military and intelligence
abilities.
“The Chinese government too often entraps its own people into service” to the
Communist Party and its objectives “in exchange for an education in the U.S.,”
Mr. Rubio said, adding that “higher education institutions in America need to
be fully aware of this counterintelligence threat.”
Other Republican lawmakers proposed legislation on Wednesday to bar any Chinese
citizen from getting a visa for graduate or postgraduate study in science or
technology.
Trump administration officials have discussed restricting Chinese student visas
over the past three years, current and former officials said.
In 2018, the State Department began limiting the length of visas to one year,
with an option for renewal, for Chinese graduate students working in fields
deemed sensitive. An official said targeting graduates of the military-linked
schools gathered steam after the F.B.I. announced in January that it was
seeking a Boston University student who had hid her affiliation with the
People’s Liberation Army when applying for a visa.
F.B.I. officials said the student, Yanqing Ye, had studied at the National
University of Defense Technology in China and was commissioned as a lieutenant
before enrolling in Boston University’s department of physics, chemistry and
biomedical engineering from October 2017 to April 2019.
While in Boston, Lieutenant Ye continued to get assignments from the Chinese
military, including “conducting research, assessing United States military
websites and sending United States documents and information to China,”
according to the F.B.I. wanted poster.
The Justice Department charged Lieutenant Ye, who is believed to be in China,
with acting as a foreign agent, visa fraud and false statements.
The vigorous interagency debate over the move to cancel visas has lasted about
six months, with science and technology officials generally opposing the action
and national security officials supporting it.
The Australian Strategic Policy Institute, a think tank, has researched the
Chinese military-affiliated universities, and that has influenced thinking in
the American government. A 2018 report called “Picking Flowers, Making Honey”
said China was sending students from those universities to Western universities
to try to build up its own military technology.
The study suggested that the graduates were targeting the so-called Five Eyes
countries that share intelligence: the United States, Canada, Britain, New
Zealand and Australia. In many cases, the report said, students hid their
military affiliations while seeking work in fields with defense applications,
like hypersonics.
Under the current Chinese government, Beijing has aggressively tried to combine
military and civilian work on important technology, said American officials and
outside researchers. That often includes tapping the expertise of civilian
companies and universities.
“To some degree, U.S. concerns are driven by the assessment that Chinese
companies and universities seem unlikely to refuse outright or could be
compelled to work with the military, whereas their American counterparts often
appear more resistant to working on military research,” Elsa B. Kania, an
adjunct senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security, wrote in a
report last August.
“It is also striking at the same time that some of China’s leading technology
companies appear to be less directly engaged in supporting defense initiatives
than might be expected relative to their American counterparts,” she added.
United States officials said the fusion policy also entailed sending
military-trained students to American universities to try to gain access to
technological know-how that would be valuable to China and its defense
industry.
The Chinese military has strong ties to a number of schools with an overt
military bent, according to the Australian think tank.
Less obvious to the casual observer are the more traditional universities with
longstanding ties to the military.
According to the policy institute and American officials, those are
Northwestern Polytechnical University, Harbin Engineering University, Beijing
Institute of Technology, Harbin Institute of Technology, Beihang University,
Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, and Nanjing University of
Science and Technology.
来源时间:2020/5/28 发布时间:2020/5/28
旧文章ID:21814