Spy report claiming China killed or jailed 18-20 CIA sources ‘won’t harm Sino-US ties’
Informants can face death penalty but ‘unimaginable without trial’
A New York Times report that Beijing “systematically dismantled” Central Intelligence Agency spy operations in China would not undermine Sino-US ties and could reflect political tensions in Washington, according to some Chinese analysts.
The report, citing unidentified sources, said the Chinese government killed or jailed 18 to 20 CIA sources from late 2010 to the end of 2012.
One informant “was shot in front of his colleagues in the courtyard of a government building”, the report said.
None of victims were identified in the report.
China killed or jailed up to 20 US spies in 2010 to 2012, report says
It said a joint counter-intelligence operation between the CIA and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, code-named “Honey Badger”, failed to determine how the agents were compromised.
Hui Ching, research director at the Hong Kong Zhi Ming Institute, an independent think tank, said the report would not undermine Sino-US ties.