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US-China relations
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2 Chinese arrested in US for espionage for allegedly spying on naval base

Yuance Chen and Liren Lai are accused of photographing a naval base and seeking to recruit members of the US Navy as intelligence assets

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Yuance Chen (second from left) was photographed on the deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln in January 2025, the criminal complaint says. Photo: US District Court for the Northern District of California
Associated Press

Two Chinese nationals have been charged with spying inside the US on behalf of Beijing, including by taking photographs of a naval base, coordinating a cash dead drop and by taking part in efforts to recruit members of the military who they thought might be open to working for Chinese intelligence.

The case, filed in federal court in San Francisco and unsealed on Monday, is the latest US Justice Department prosecution to target what officials say are active efforts by the Chinese government to secretly collect intelligence about American military capabilities – a practice laid bare in startling fashion two years ago with China’s launching of a surveillance balloon that US officials ultimately shot down over the coast of South Carolina.

“This case underscores the Chinese government’s sustained and aggressive effort to infiltrate our military and undermine our national security from within,” Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a statement announcing the case.

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“The Justice Department will not stand by while hostile nations embed spies in our country – we will expose foreign operatives, hold their agents to account, and protect the American people from covert threats to our national security.”

Officials identified the defendants as Yuance Chen, 38, who arrived in the US on a visa in 2015 and later became a lawful permanent resident, and Liren “Ryan” Lai, 39, who prosecutors say lives in China but came to Texas this past spring as part of an effort to supervise clandestine espionage operations on behalf of China’s Ministry of State Security or MSS.

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The two were arrested on charges of secretly doing China’s bidding without registering as foreign agents with the Justice Department, as required by law. It was not immediately clear if they had lawyers.

Liu Pengyu, a spokesman for the Chinese embassy in Washington, said he had no information about the specific case but asserted that allegations against China “have no facts or evidence” and that “the US has never stopped its espionage activities against China”.

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