Chinese
President Xi Jinping took office in 2012 (Nicolas Asfouri/AP)
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The Chinese government
“systematically dismantled” CIA spying operations in China starting in late
2010 and killed or imprisoned at least a dozen CIA sources over the next two
years, The New York Times has reported.
The
newspaper cited 10 current and former US officials, who described the
intelligence breach as one of the worst in decades.
The
report said US intelligence and law enforcement agencies scrambled to stem the
damage, but were bitterly divided over the cause of the breach.
Some
investigators were convinced there was a mole within the CIA, while others
believed the Chinese had hacked the covert system the CIA used to communicate
with its foreign sources. The debate remains unresolved, the paper said.
The
number of CIA assets lost in China rivalled those lost in the Soviet Union and
Russia as a result of the betrayals by both CIA officer Aldrich Ames and FBI
agent Robert Hanssen, who were arrested in 1994 and 2001, respectively, the
report said.
As
many as 20 CIA sources were killed or imprisoned in China over a two-year
period, the Times said, citing two former senior US officials.
Investigators
suspected a former CIA operative of being a mole, but failed to gather enough
evidence to arrest him and he is now living in another Asian country, the
report said. Those who rejected the mole theory attributed the losses to sloppy
American tradecraft in China.
By 2013, the FBI and CIA concluded that China no longer had the ability to identify American agents, the Times said.
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