Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Chinese mole. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Chinese mole. Afficher tous les articles

mercredi 11 septembre 2019

Australia's Chinese Fifth Column

Labor targets Sino-Australian Liberal MP Gladys Liu's links to Chinese Communist party
Scott Morrison pressed on whether Liu is a ‘fit and proper’ person to be sitting in federal parliament

By Sarah Martin

Gladys Liu in parliament on Wednesday. Liu did not answer directly about Chinese activities in the South China Sea.

Labor has targeted Scott Morrison over the credentials of Chinese-born MP Gladys Liu, asking what steps he had taken to ensure she was a “fit and proper” person to sit in parliament.
In question time on Wednesday, the shadow attorney general, Mark Dreyfus, led the attack on the government over Liu’s links to the Chinese communist party, but most of the opposition’s questions on the MP’s background were ruled out of order.
Morrison defended remarks made by Liu in a widely condemned interview with Andrew Bolt on Tuesday night, saying her position on the South China Sea could not be compared to remarks made by the former Labor senator Sam Dastyari.
“Not only was he a … shadow minister … in the executive of the opposition at that time, he seems to forget the fact that money changed hands between the then senator Sam Dastyari – money changed hands, and his position was bought by that,” Morrison said.
“He was caught in his own web of corruption, Mr Speaker. He should have resigned, and he did.”
Asked several times on Tuesday night if she believed China’s actions in the South China Sea amounted to theft and were unlawful, Liu said it was “a matter for the foreign minister”.
“I definitely put – I would put Australia’s interests first, and that’s exactly what I have been doing,” she said.
“My understanding is a lot of countries is trying to claim ownership sovereignty of the South China Sea because of various reasons, and my position is with the Australian government."
The foreign minister, Marise Payne, was also asked in the Senate if she was satisfied that Liu was “fit and proper” for the seat.
“Any suggestion that that is not the case is offensive,” Payne said.
In a statement issued on Wednesday, Liu said she “should have chosen her words better” in the interview that canvassed her views on China and in which she repeatedly refused to criticise the regime of Xi Jinping.
Liu, the first Chinese-born Australian MP, said she had cut ties with various Chinese institutions with links to the Communist party, and was conducting an audit to make sure no organisations had made her an honorary member without her knowledge.
A political storm has erupted over Liu’s links to the Chinese Communist party after the ABC reported that a Chinese government online record listed her name as a council member of the Guangdong provincial chapter of the China Overseas Exchange Association between 2003 and 2015.
The association was an arm of the Chinese government’s central political and administrative body, and has since been merged with the Communist party’s propaganda arm, the United Front Work Department.
In a Sky News interview with Andrew Bolt on Tuesday night aimed at hosing down the allegations, Liu said she could not recall if she was a member of the group and struggled to answer a series of questions about China’s activities in the South China Sea.
Defending the interview on Wednesday, Liu said she was a new member of parliament and would be “learning from this experience”.
“Australia’s longstanding position on the South China Sea is consistent and clear,” Liu said. 
“We do not take sides on competing territorial claims but we call on all claimants to resolve disputes peacefully and in accordance with international law.
“Our relationship with China is one of mutual benefit and underpinned by our Comprehensive Strategic Partnership. China is not a democracy and is run under an authoritarian system. We have always been and will continue to be clear-eyed about our political differences, but do so based on mutual respect, as two sovereign nations.”
In an attempt to clarify her membership of various Chinese organisations, Liu said she had been honorary president of the United Chinese Commerce Association of Australia, honorary president of the Australian Jiangmen General Commercial Association in 2016, and an honorary member of the Guangdong Overseas Exchange Association in 2011.
She said she no longer had links with the organisation, and pointed to similar links held by Jennifer Yang, the candidate preselected by Labor to run against her in Chisholm.
“I have resigned from many organisations and I am in the process of auditing any organisations who may have added me as a member without my knowledge or consent,” Liu said.
“Unfortunately some Chinese associations appoint people to honorary positions without their knowledge or permission. I do not wish my name to be used in any of these associations and I ask them to stop using my name.”
Labor was expected to target the government over Liu’s interview in parliament, comparing her remarks on the South China Sea to those made by the Labor senator Sam Dastyari, which ultimately led to his resignation from parliament.
Penny Wong, the party’s shadow foreign minister, said Liu’s suitability as an MP was now a “test for Scott Morrison”.
“There have been questions raised for some time about whether Liu is a fit and proper person to be in the Australian parliament,” Wong said.
“This is a test for Scott Morrison. He needs to come to the parliament, make a statement and assure the Australian parliament and through them the Australian people that Gladys Liu is a fit and proper person to be in the Australian parliament.
“I can recall the Liberal party making Sam Dastyari a test of Bill Shorten’s leadership; well, this is Scott Morrison’s test.”
Dastyari also weighed into the controversy, saying it was clear Liu needed to answer “some serious questions”.
“Her statement is shocking,” the former NSW senator said on Twitter
“She should be held to the same standard that I was – a standard the PM set. I resigned. I took responsibility. That was the right decision in my circumstances.”

mardi 4 juin 2019

A Chinese mole right inside the Trump Cabinet

Elaine Chao family’s shipping company has deep ties to the Chinese elite and benefits from industrial policies in China that are roiling the Trump administration.
By Michael Forsythe, Eric Lipton, Keith Bradsher and Sui-Lee Wee




The mole: Elaine Chao, the transportation secretary, oversees the American maritime industry. Her family’s shipping company, Foremost Group, has deep ties to the Chinese government.

The email arrived in Washington before dawn.
An official at the American Embassy in Beijing was urgently seeking advice from the State Department about an “ethics question.”
“I am writing you because Mission China is in the midst of preparing for a visit from Department of Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao,” the official wrote in October 2017.
Chao’s office had made a series of unorthodox requests related to her first scheduled visit to China as a Trump cabinet member, according to people with knowledge of the email.
Among them: asking federal officials to help coordinate travel arrangements for at least one family member and include relatives in meetings with government officials.
A redacted email about a trip Chao was planning to take to China. A request to include family members at events raised ethical concerns.

In China, the Chaos are no ordinary family.
They run an American shipping company with deep ties to the economic and political elite in China, where most of the company’s business is centered. 
The trip was abruptly canceled by Chao after the ethics question was referred to officials in the State and Transportation Departments and, separately, after The New York Times and others made inquiries about her itinerary and companions.
“She had these relatives who were fairly wealthy and connected to the shipping industry,” said a State Department official who was involved in deliberations over the visit.
“Their business interests were affected by meetings.”
The move to notify Washington was unusual and a sign of how concerned members of the State Department were, said the official, who was not authorized to speak on behalf of the agency.
[The Chao family has deep ties to China. Here are five takeaways.]
David H. Rank, another State Department official, learned of the matter after he stepped down as deputy chief of mission in Beijing earlier in 2017.
“This was alarmingly inappropriate,” he said of the requests.
The Transportation Department did not provide a reason for the trip’s cancellation, though a spokesman later cited a cabinet meeting Trump had called at the time.
The spokesman said that there was "no link" between Chao’s actions as secretary and her family’s business interests in China.
Chao has no formal affiliation or stake in her family’s shipping business, Foremost Group.
But she and her husband, Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, have received millions of dollars in gifts from her father, James, who ran the company until last year. 
And McConnell’s re-election campaigns have received more than $1 million in contributions from Chao’s family, including from her father and her sister Angela, now Foremost’s chief executive, who were both subjects of the State Department’s ethics question.

Chao with her husband, Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader; her father, James, a founder of Foremost; and her sister Angela, its chief executive.

Over the years, Chao has repeatedly used her connections and celebrity status in China to boost the profile of the company, which benefits handsomely from the expansive industrial policies in Beijing that are at the heart of diplomatic tensions with the United States.
Now, Chao is the top Trump official overseeing the American shipping industry, which is in steep decline and overshadowed by its Chinese competitors.
Her efforts on behalf of the family business — appearing at promotional events, joining her father in interviews with Chinese-language media — have come as Foremost has interacted with the Chinese state to a remarkable degree for an American company.
Foremost has received hundreds of millions of dollars in loan commitments from a bank run by the Chinese government, whose policies have been labeled by the Trump administration as threats to American security. 
The company’s primary business — delivering China’s iron ore and coal — is intertwined with industries caught up in a trade war with the United States. 
That dispute stems in part from the White House’s complaints that China is flooding the world with subsidized steel, undermining American producers.
Foremost, though a relatively small company in its sector, is responsible for a large portion of orders at one of China’s biggest state-funded shipyards, and has secured long-term charters with a Chinese state-owned steel maker as well as global commodity companies that guarantee it steady revenues.
In a rarity for foreigners, Angela and James Chao have served on the board of the holding company for China State Shipbuilding, a state-owned enterprise that makes ships for the Chinese military, along with Foremost and other customers.
Angela Chao is also on the board at the Bank of China, a top lender to the shipbuilder, and a former vice chairman of the Council of China’s Foreign Trade, a promotional group created by the Chinese government.
James Chao was not made available for an interview; a representative of the company received written questions from The Times two weeks ago, and the company responded with a fact sheet on Friday.
Though Foremost worked in the late 1960s on American government contracts to ship rice to Vietnam, according to James Chao’s biography, it has almost no footprint left in the United States, save for a modest corporate headquarters in Midtown Manhattan.
It registers its ships in Liberia and Hong Kong and owns them through companies in the Marshall Islands.
Since Elaine Chao became transportation secretary, records show, the agency budget has repeatedly called to cut programs intended to stabilize the financially troubled maritime industry in the United States, moving to cut new funding for federal grants to small commercial shipyards and federal loan guarantees to domestic shipbuilders.
Her agency’s budget has also tried to slash spending for a grant program that helps keep 60 American-flagged ships in service, and has tried to scale back plans to buy new ships that would train Americans as crew members. (In China, Chao’s family has paid for scholarships and a ship simulator to train Chinese seamen.)

The Chao family has provided funding for a ship simulator at Shanghai Maritime University and backed scholarships for training programs.

Congress, in bipartisan votes, has rejected the budget cuts, some of which have been offered up again for next year.
One opponent of the cuts has been Representative Alan Lowenthal, a California Democrat whose district includes one of the nation’s largest cargo ports.
“The Chinese government is massively engaged in maritime expansion as we have walked away from it,” he said in an interview.
“There is going to come a crisis, and we are going to call upon the U.S. maritime industry, and it is not going to be around.”
Elaine Chao declined to be interviewed.
The department spokesman said The Times’s reporting wove “together a web of innuendos and baseless inferences” in linking Chao’s work at Transportation to her family’s business operations.
Agency officials said the department under Chao had been a champion of the American maritime industry, adding that several proposed cuts had been made by previous administrations and that the Trump administration had since moved to bolster funding.
Chao, 66, was born in Taiwan to parents who had fled mainland China in the late 1940s and later settled in the United States when she was a schoolgirl.
She worked at Foremost in the 1970s but has had no formal role there in decades.
As her political stature has grown — she has served in the cabinet twice and has been married to McConnell for 26 years — Beijing has sought to flatter her family.
A government-owned publisher recently printed authorized biographies of her parents, releasing them at ceremonies attended by high-ranking members of the Communist Party.
On a visit last year to Beijing, Chao was presented with hand-drawn portraits of her parents from her counterpart in the transportation ministry.

On an official trip to Beijing last year, Chao received portraits of her parents from the Chinese transport minister, Li Xiaopeng, center left.

The Chao family’s ties to China have drawn some attention over the years. 
In 2001, The New Republic examined them in the context of the Republican Party’s softening tone toward the country.
When Chao was nominated as transportation secretary, ProPublica and others highlighted the intersection of her new responsibilities with her family’s business.
And in a book published last year, the author Peter Schweizer suggested the Chaos gave Beijing undue influence.
The Times found that the Chaos had an extraordinary proximity to power in China for an American family, marked not only by board memberships in state companies, but also by multiple meetings with the country’s former top leader, including one at his villa. 
That makes the Chaos stand out on both sides of the Pacific, with sterling political connections going to the pinnacle of power in the world’s two biggest economies.
Chao’s father, a founder of Foremost in 1964, has for decades cultivated a close relationship with Jiang Zemin, a schoolmate from Shanghai who rose to become China’s president. 
As the schoolmates crossed paths again in the 1980s, the Chaos reaped dividends from a radar company linked to Jiang that targeted sales to the Chinese military, documents filed with the Chinese government show.
Though Chao’s financial disclosure statements indicate she receives no income from Foremost, she made at least four trips to China with the company in the eight years between her job as labor secretary during the George W. Bush administration and her confirmation as transportation secretary in January 2017. 
And her father accompanied her on at least one trip that she took as labor secretary, in 2008, sitting in on meetings, including with China’s premier, one of the country’s top officials.
Public records show that she has benefited from the company’s success.
A gift to Chao and McConnell from her father in 2008 helped make McConnell, the Republican majority leader, one of the richest members of the Senate. 
And three decades worth of political donations have made the extended family a top contributor to the Republican Party of Kentucky, a wellspring of McConnell’s power.
This is a family with financial ties to a foreign government that is a strategic rival,” said Kathleen Clark, an anti-corruption expert at Washington University in St. Louis.
“It raises a question about whether those familial and financial ties affect Chao when she exercises judgment or gives advice on foreign and national security policy matters that involve China.”

A Family Business on the Rise


Elaine Chao, the transportation secretary, has been a steadfast booster of her family’s shipping business, which transports raw materials to fuel China’s heavy industries. 
In January 2017, as the Senate voted to confirm Chao, a bulk carrier ship sailed from Canada with a shipment of iron ore.
The ship, the Bao May, is owned by her family’s business, Foremost Group.
Its destination: an iron ore transfer terminal on Liangtan Island, south of Shanghai.
Two weeks later, after unloading its cargo in China, the Bao May set sail for Brazil to collect another shipment of iron ore, weaving through the Strait of Malacca and crossing the Indian Ocean.
The size of three football fields, the Bao May is too big to pass through the Suez or Panama Canals, so it must sail around the southern tip of Africa on its voyages to Atlantic Ocean destinations.
For the last two years, the Bao May has repeatedly made the round-tip journey between China and ports in Brazil and Canada.
On this trip, it arrived in Brazil in May 2017, docking at the Ponta da Madeira Maritime Terminal in São Luís, where ships load up with iron ore from Brazil's interior.
The Bao May was built in a Chinese shipyard and financed with loans from the Export-Import Bank of China, owned by the Chinese government. 
At the launch ceremony in Shanghai in 2010, the guest of honor was Chao. 
For years, the ship has been chartered by a state-owned Chinese steelmaker, giving Foremost a steady supply of revenue.
It is one of 19 ships owned by Foremost, which was founded by Chao’s father, James S.C. Chao, and is now run by her sister Angela.
While Foremost has its headquarters in Midtown Manhattan, its fleet is overwhelmingly focused on China. 
About 72 percent of the raw materials it has shipped since the beginning of 2018 has gone to China, according to figures from VesselsValue, a London-based firm that analyzes global shipping data.
Each year, Foremost ships transport hundreds of millions of tons of iron ore, coal and bauxite to China from ports around the globe. 
The shipments feed China’s industrial engine, especially its steel mills, whose products are part of an escalating trade dispute between China and the United States.

Four enormous gantry cranes rise on the banks of the Yangtze River near the East China Sea.
In their shadow thousands of workers assemble cargo ships, each about as long as three football fields.
It is here, at the Shanghai Waigaoqiao shipyard, that Foremost Group’s newest ship, the Xin May, was built. 
Six similar ships are set to be built in the next several years, all part of an order by Foremost announced in December 2017 at the Harvard Club in New York.
Foremost first placed an order with the state-owned company in 1988 and over the decades has been its biggest North American customer, according to the shipbuilder. 
The relationship is so tight that Foremost’s offices in Shanghai are in the shipbuilder’s 25-story tower.
We are committed to continuing to build ships in China,” Angela Chao said at the Harvard Club announcement, which was attended by the top official in China’s New York consulate.
“My father was a pioneer in internationalizing the Chinese shipbuilding market, and it has been over 30 years that he has continuously ordered ships in China.”

The newest addition to the Foremost fleet, the Xin May, is one of multiple ships the company has ordered from the Shanghai Waigaoqiao shipyard.

Foremost has relied on the Export-Import Bank of China, or China EximBank, to finance at least four ships in the past decade. 
Its loans often come with lower interest rates and more generous repayment schedules than those made through some commercial lenders.
As of 2015, the bank had made at least $300 million available to Foremost, it said at the time.
Angela Chao, in the interview with The Times, said that 2015 was the last year the company borrowed from the lender, describing its terms as less attractive than those of non-Chinese banks.
She said the company never borrowed — “not even close” — $300 million, a figure she had not previously heard.
“They are not a big part of our financing,” she said.
The Chao family’s connections run deep with the Chinese leadership, documents in China show.
As civil war raged across the country in the 1940s, Mr. Chao attended Jiao Tong University in Shanghai.
A schoolmate was Jiang Zemin, who stayed in China after the Communist victory and ultimately became president.
Chao went with the defeated Nationalists to Taiwan, where he became the youngest person to qualify as a ship’s captain, according to his biography.
Chao left for the United States in 1958, but a thaw in relations sparked by Richard M. Nixon drew him back to his homeland in 1972, the first of a flurry of trips that established him as a successful member of the Chinese diaspora.
Chao got exceptional access.
In 1984 he was invited to Beijing to celebrate the 35th anniversary of the People’s Republic and meet with the country’s top leader, Deng Xiaoping, according to materials at a museum in Shanghai dedicated to Chao’s wife, Ruth Mulan Chu Chao, who died in 2007.
Also in 1984, as China emerged from decades of political and economic turmoil, Ruth Chao bought a stake in a Chinese company that manufactured marine equipment, including radars, in partnership with Raytheon, the American defense contractor, according to Chinese corporate documents.

In 1984, the Chao family took a stake in a marine electronic equipment company that targeted the Chinese military for sales. The venture was linked to Jiang Zemin, James Chao’s former schoolmate and a future president of China.

The investment, not previously reported, was held by a Panamanian company.
The Chinese company, documents show, praised the “support for the construction of the nation” shown by Ruth Chao, identifying her as James’s wife and both of them as American citizens.
The now-defunct company targeted the Chinese military for sales of some of its gear, and a principal partner was a state-owned factory under the Ministry of Electronics Industry, which was led at the time by Jiang, according to corporate documents and a former employee.
The employee, Zheng Chaoman, recalled the involvement of “the father of Elaine Chao.”
Within months, it generated enough revenue for Chao to donate profits to a foundation he had established in Shanghai, according to an announcement by the local government. 
The foundation sponsors training scholarships for merchant seamen, his wife’s biography said.
In the aftermath of the deadly suppression of pro-democracy demonstrations on Tiananmen Square in June 1989, the Chaos asked to divest their 25 percent stake in the company.
Two months earlier, Elaine Chao had been confirmed by the Senate to a senior political appointment, as deputy transportation secretary under George H. W. Bush.

Chinese AmnesiaThe Transportation Department spokesman said Chao did not know anything about the venture. Angela Chao, in the interview, said her father did not “remember any ownership, and we can’t find anything on it.”
The family’s other business ties in China remained, including work that year by China State Shipbuilding on two new cargo ships for Foremost.

Chao in 1989, when she was deputy transportation secretary under George H.W. Bush. She would also serve in the cabinet of George W. Bush, as labor secretary.

That August, Chao met with Jiang, who had been named general secretary of the Chinese Communist Party, the country’s most powerful position.
Their hourlong meeting inside the leadership compound adjacent to the Forbidden City, together with the head of the state shipbuilding company, was described as “friendly” in the official People’s Daily newspaper.
The two former schoolmates would meet at least five more times during Jiang’s tenure as general secretary, according to a review of publicly available documents.

A Celebrity Face for the Company
As the first Chinese-American to serve as a cabinet secretary — eight years as labor secretary — Elaine Chao became an instant celebrity in China during the George W. Bush administration.
Her family was a beneficiary of her newfound fame.
During a trip to China in August 2008 to represent the United States at the closing of the Olympic Games, Chao took her father to several official meetings with Chinese leaders, including one with the country’s premier, Wen Jiabao, according to diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks.
At the time, Chao was chairman of Foremost and a board member of China State Shipbuilding.
When she left government during the Obama years, she continued to put her celebrity status to use on behalf of the family business.

Chao at a 2009 interview in Wuhan, where she was appointed an international adviser.

In 2010, she traveled to Shanghai with her father for the delivery ceremony of a cargo ship, the Bao May. 
The ship soon became a workhorse for Foremost, hauling raw materials to China from around the world under a seven-year charter with a subsidiary of a state-owned steel maker. 
Foremost paid for the Bao May and another ship with up to $89.6 million in loans from China EximBank, corporate records in Hong Kong show.
The next year, Chao was back in Shanghai for the launch of another ship, and in 2013, she traveled to Beijing with her father and her sister Angela for a meeting with the chairman of China State Shipbuilding, according to a company announcement.
Chao joined her family two years later at the signing of a loan for Foremost at China EximBank’s grand hall in Beijing.
The loan, for $75 million, was made jointly with a Taiwanese lender to build two cargo ships.

China EximBank’s website celebrates a 2015 loan signing with Foremost. The event was attended by Chao and members of her family.

The Transportation Department spokesman said it was “probably appropriate” for Chao to take her father to meetings in 2008 as her “plus-one,” and said her visits were done as a private citizen.
Angela Chao said her sister attended Foremost events “as a family member.”
“Foremost was founded in 1964; the company is 55 years old,” she added.
“We were around and we were well respected well before Elaine was in anything. We predate her; she doesn’t predate us.”
The flurry of visits coincided with Foremost’s growing contributions to China’s globalized steel and shipping industries.
Today, Foremost’s fleet primarily serves the Chinese market, hauling bulk cargo such as iron ore, coal and bauxite. 
Of the 152 voyages made by its ships between Jan. 1, 2018, and April 12, 2019, 91 have been to or from China, accounting for 72 percent of Foremost’s total tonnage during that period, according to figures compiled by VesselsValue, a company that tracks shipping data.
Angela Chao said that Foremost did not “control where the ships go, so we’re like a taxicab.”
During her eight years out of government, Elaine Chao extended her connections in China, according to a review of Chinese websites and other public materials.
For example, she was appointed in 2009 to an advisory group in Wuhan, where the steel maker with the Foremost charter is based.
Such appointments are sought after for the access they provide to local leaders.
That same year, she was granted an honorary professorship at Fudan University, and in 2010, she was awarded an honorary doctorate from Jiao Tong University.
With Trump’s election, Chao was asked to join the administration.
During her confirmation hearing she did not discuss her family’s extensive ties to the Chinese maritime industry, and she did not disclose the various Chinese accolades she had received. 
The Senate’s written questionnaire requires nominees to list all honorary positions.

Destroying American Shipbuilding IndustryChao has spoken repeatedly about her commitment to the American maritime industry, including during her confirmation hearing in 2017.
“I’m of an age where I have seen two wars in pivotal areas of the world,” she told the Senate Commerce Committee, with her father seated behind her.
“If we did not have the merchant marine assets to assist the gray hulls on these campaigns, the military naval campaigns, our country would not have been able to supply our troops, bring the necessary equipment.”
But without Congress putting up roadblocks, the Trump administration’s budgetary actions proposed during her tenure would have reduced federal funding for programs that support the shipbuilding industry and ships that operate under American flags.

Chao at the White House after Trump signed an executive order on the transition of service members into the Merchant Marine.

Plans drafted during the Obama administration had called for building up to five new, state-of-the-art ships big enough to train 600 cadets each to help the American military move equipment and supplies worldwide, especially during wartime.
But after Chao became secretary, the agency’s budget proposed buying old cargo ships instead and renovating them.
Congress balked at the cost-cutting measure — one Democratic lawmaker mocked the agency’s plan to “buy a bunch of rusty old hulks” — and restored the funding.
More recently, the agency budget pushed to shrink the size of one of the new ships, again provoking bipartisan protests from Congress.
“Given the administration’s strong commitment to American manufacturing and to being sure that we can adequately control the seas, the targeting of programs that help the maritime industry remain strong doesn’t make sense to me,” said Senator Susan Collins of Maine, the Republican who leads the panel overseeing the Transportation Department budget.
“It is inconsistent with the administration’s overall goals.”
The agency budget in 2017 and 2018 also proposed reducing annual grants for the Maritime Security Program, which help American ships pay crews and cover the cost of meeting safety and training requirements.
It also moved in the last three years to eliminate new funding for a grant program that helps small shipyards stay in business, as well as a program that provides loan guarantees for the construction or reconstruction of American-flagged vessels.
Agency officials noted that many of the cuts were forced on the department by the White House, and that some of the same programs had been previously targeted, only to see the money restored by Congress, as happened with the Trump cuts.
But objections continue, including questions about why, despite repeated promises, Chao has not issued a detailed strategic plan for stabilizing the United States’ shrinking fleet.
Fair Kim, a retired Coast Guard deputy commander who works at an association that promotes the American shipping industry, said Chao had a disappointing maritime record.
“If you preach America first, why not promote the U.S.-flagged fleet at the expense of foreign-flagged ships?” he asked.
“This administration should be very friendly to us.”

A China-Friendly Approach
The Trump administration has made the rivalry with China a core tenet of American foreign policy, concluding that decades of accommodation has reinforced the country’s authoritarian rule and undermined the interests of the United States.
“Beijing is employing a whole-of-government approach, using political, economic and military tools, as well as propaganda, to advance its influence and benefit its interests in the United States,” Vice President Mike Pence said during a speech in October.
None of that, however, has kept Chao from maintaining China-friendly relations, including engaging with the Chinese media about her family’s shipping business and multiple other subjects. 
During a televised interview, one prominent Chinese reporter, Tian Wei, described Chao as “a bridge” between Beijing and the Trump administration.
Chao’s official calendar, obtained by The Times through a public records request, shows at least 21 interviews or meetings with Chinese-language news organizations in her first year as transportation secretary.
In November 2017, she met for lunch at her office with Ma Jing, then the top official in the United States for CGTN, the China state television network.
The network has been under growing pressure from the Justice Department to detail its ties to the Chinese state as part of a stepped-up enforcement of foreign influence laws, and in March, Ma and a dozen other CGTN employees in Washington were reported to have been recalled to China.
In an interview in April 2017, Chao was photographed with her father next to a Transportation Department flag.
Her father told the reporter how he had traveled on Air Force One and discussed “business” with the president.
He also took the opportunity to talk up his daughter’s new role in the administration.
“It’s an honor for us Chinese,” Chao said to The China Press, a publication in the United States.
【Interviewed With Elaine Chao & James Chao】美国交通部长赵小兰与父亲赵锡成专访CreditCreditVideo by 侨报 The China Press
The interview was first highlighted by Politico, which noted that Chao had made multiple media appearances with her father.
Chao’s schedule also shows that she attended an August 2017 event in New York celebrating the signing of a Foremost deal with Sumitomo Group, a Japanese company with mass transit projects in the United States, including California and Illinois, that fall under her oversight. 
The spokesman said she attended in a "personal" capacity and did not discuss agency business.
Marilyn L. Glynn, a former general counsel at the Office of Government Ethics, questioned Chao’s proximity to Foremost, saying she should recuse herself from decisions that broadly impacted the shipping industry.
“She might be tempted to make sure her family company is not adversely affected in any policy choices, or it might even just appear that way,” Ms. Glynn said.
Chao’s first trip to China as transportation secretary was made last April amid an escalating trade war, six months later than originally planned.

Chao meeting with Li, the Chinese transport minister, in Beijing last year.

The original trip had been described by the department as a “bilateral meeting” with Chao’s Chinese counterpart to discuss disaster response, infrastructure and related subjects.
Eight days before the planned start of the October 2017 trip, when contacted by The Times, Chao’s office said it could not provide a list of who would accompany her.
But the embassy in Beijing had received requests to accommodate Ms. Chao’s family members, according to interviews with State Department officials involved in the planning, as well as a redacted email obtained by The Times through a public records lawsuit.
Angela Chao said in the interview that she was already planning to be in Beijing to attend a Bank of China board meeting, and that her husband, the investor Jim Breyer, also had business in the Chinese capital.
But she said she was unaware of her sister’s travel plans.
Angela Chao was among the family members mentioned in the State Department discussions about the visit, according to a United States official.
The email, with the subject “ethics question,” had come from Evan T. Felsing, a senior economic officer for the State Department in Shanghai.
Mr. Felsing, now based in India, declined to comment.
Other correspondence also signaled unease among American diplomats over whom Elaine Chao intended to take on the trip and the topics they would discuss with Chinese officials. 
Emails indicate that ethics lawyers in both the State and Transportation Departments weighed in.
“They would not have raised a question like this about a cabinet secretary unless it was something really serious,” said Mr. Rank, the former deputy chief of mission in Beijing.
The agency spokesman confirmed a request on behalf of Chao’s relatives, but did not say in his written response to questions whether they were scheduled to attend official government events.
When Chao finally traveled to China last April, no relatives were present.
She met with top leaders, including the premier, Li Keqiang.
While there, she sought to soothe hard feelings between China and the Trump administration in an interview with a government-run broadcaster.
She suggested some of the tensions resulted from cultural differences.
“America is a very young country — it’s very dynamic — it doesn’t have a long period of history,” she said in an interview with CGTN.
“So there are not so many rules and regulations in terms of behavior, whereas some other countries that have long histories, it may be a little bit more different. We have to understand the Chinese and how they see things, and I think the Chinese need to understand how America sees things.”
Even this trip did not proceed entirely by the book.
Chao broke with the standard practice for government employees and flew on a Chinese state airline instead of an American carrier.
Chao’s economy-class round-trip ticket with Air China cost $6,784, according to information obtained through a public records request.
The flight was booked through a code-share arrangement with United Airlines.
A less expensive ticket was available on a nonstop United flight, according to an airline official.
The agency spokesman would not say what class Chao flew in, only that the ticket was booked in economy.

A Windfall for Mitch McConnell
When a delegation of local Chinese Communist Party leaders visited Washington in 2017, Chao’s office arranged for them to be photographed with Chao and her father.
Her aides pulled another string.
“U.S. Capitol Tour for VIP Guests,” read the subject line of an email sent by Chao’s aides to the staff of her husband, McConnell.
The senator’s staff obliged, arranging an “off limits” tour for Chao’s guests, who were visiting from the home region of her mother.
“The delegation was thrilled to get the VIP treatment by your office and were particularly excited to hear that the leader’s office was normally off limits to normal guests,” an aide to Chao later wrote to McConnell’s staff.
It was a small favor, but one that reflected the political partnership at the center of the marriage between Chao and McConnell.

The Chao family has been a wellspring of support for McConnell over the years, contributing over $1 million to him and to political action committees associated with him.

In 1989, shortly after their first date (at the Saudi ambassador’s home near Washington), McConnell was preparing for a re-election campaign.
Greetings from Chao came in classic Washington fashion: a string of campaign donations, totaling $10,000, from Chao, her father, her mother, her sister May and May’s husband, Jeffrey Hwang, according to Federal Election Commission records.
Over the next 30 years, the extended Chao family would be an important source of political cash for McConnell, himself one of the most formidable Republican fund-raisers in American politics.
The extended Chao family is among the top donors to the Republican Party of Kentucky, giving a combined $525,000 over two decades.
One of Chao’s sisters, Christine, the general counsel at Foremost, was the second-biggest contributor to the super PAC Kentuckians for Strong Leadership in 2014.
She gave $400,000 to the organization, which identified McConnell’s re-election as its highest priority that year.
In all, from 1989 through 2018, 13 members of the extended Chao family gave a combined $1.66 million to Republican candidates and committees, including $1.1 million to McConnell and political action committees tied to him, according to F.E.C. records.
“I’m proud to have had the support of my family over the years,” McConnell said in a statement.

Chao and Mr. McConnell in 2014 at the Harvard Club in New York, where Foremost celebrated its 50th anniversary and signed a contract with a Japanese shipbuilder.

The family’s wealth has also benefited McConnell personally.
In 2008, Chao’s father gave the couple a gift valued between $5 million and $25 million, according to federal disclosures.
McConnell, never a wealthy man, vaulted up the moneyed rankings in the Senate; as of 2018 he was the 10th wealthiest senator, according to Roll Call, the Capitol Hill newspaper.
David Popp, a spokesman for McConnell, said the gift from Chao was in honor of Elaine Chao’s mother.
Over the years, McConnell has also participated in Chao family events and trips related to the family’s business and charitable giving.
In 1993, he and Chao traveled with her father to Beijing at the invitation of China State Shipbuilding and met top officials.
He celebrated Foremost’s 50th anniversary in 2014 at the Harvard Club in Manhattan, witnessing the signing of a contract with a Japanese shipbuilder.

Pillows with the seal of the United States Senate at Foremost’s headquarters in Manhattan.

And he attended the dedication in 2016 of a building at the Harvard Business School named after Chao’s mother.
Chao and three of her sisters had attended the school.
McConnell’s connection to the family was hard to miss when a reporter recently visited the Foremost headquarters in Manhattan.
There, in the reception area, were two gray pillows emblazoned with the seal of the United States Senate.

mercredi 23 mai 2018

Australia's Chinese Mole Chau Chak Wing

In Australia, Fears of Chinese Meddling Rise on U.N. Bribery Case Revelation
By Emily Baumgaertner and Jacqueline Williams
Chau Chak Wing, center right, in 2015 at the opening of a University of Technology Sydney building that bears his name. Chau is accused of bribing a United Nations diplomat.

A billionaire businessman, previously accused of meddling in Australia’s politics on behalf of China, conspired to bribe a prominent United Nations diplomat, an Australian politician said on Tuesday, raising new concerns about China’s efforts to interfere in democracies worldwide.
Andrew Hastie, chairman of the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security, identified the businessman, Chau Chak Wing, as the person in a 2015 bribery case previously called only Co-conspirator No. 3.
CC-3 is Dr. Chau Chak Wing,” Mr. Hastie said in a speech in the Australian Parliament’s Federation Chamber, adding, “The same man who co-conspired to bribe the U.N. president of the General Assembly, John Ashe.”
He continued, “The same man with extensive contacts in the Chinese Communist Party, including the United Front.”
In a criminal complaint filed in 2015, American prosecutors said several conspirators had paid John W. Ashe, an Antiguan diplomat and former president of the United Nations General Assembly, more than $1 million in luxury goods and cash from sources in China to assist with business deals.
Several people accused in the complaint were named, and the Australian news media had suggested in the past that Co-conspirator No. 3 was Chau. 
But his identity as the co-conspirator was confirmed only Tuesday.
Chau, a well-connected political donor in Australia, has also sued news organizations that he says have wrongly linked him to the bribery case. 
Mr. Hastie said he sought to issue a broader warning about China’s interference in Australian politics and the press.
“In Australia, it is clear that the Chinese Communist Party is working to covertly interfere with our media, our universities and also influence our political processes and public debates,” Mr. Hastie said.
Mr. Hastie’s speech is likely to fuel a global debate about China’s efforts to shape opinions and policy in the world’s democracies and democratic institutions.
Several Australian politicians have accused China of meddling in its politics. 
Australia’s intelligence chief identified Chau, an Australian citizen, in June as an agent of the Chinese government.
Duncan Lewis, the director of the Australian Security Intelligence Organization, warned politicians against accepting contributions from Chau and another man of Chinese descent because of their ties to China’s government.
Chau, a billionaire property developer who immigrated to Australia decades ago, has said his campaign contributions are benign and unrelated to the Chinese government. 
He could not be reached for comment on Tuesday.
Chau is chairman of the Kingold Group, a business conglomerate based in Guangzhou, China, that has expanded to Australia. 
His name graces the modernist Chau Chak Wing Building at the University of Technology Sydney, to which he donated $15 million. 
Chau also owns New Express Daily, an Australian newspaper.
Chau filed a defamation suit last year aimed at two Australian news media companies: the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, the national broadcaster, and Fairfax Media, a newspaper publisher. 
He has sought damages from them for a news report that the suit says damaged his personal and professional reputation.
In his speech, Mr. Hastie argued that Chau was trying to silence the press.
“My concern is that defamation cases can have a chilling effect on our free press,” Mr. Hastie said. “Any attempt to silence our media from telling the truth — provided it is the truth — through a defamation claim cannot stand.”
In the speech, Mr. Hastie said Australians “deserve the truth.”
Since the accusations of political meddling, Australia has taken steps to curb foreign interference. 
A series of bills introduced in December would strengthen the country’s espionage laws, outlaw foreign political donations and criminalize efforts to interfere in Australian democracy.
Senator Sam Dastyari, a member of the opposition Labor Party, resigned in December amid accusations that he pushed China’s foreign policy interests after taking money from Chinese-born political donors.
He had been widely criticized by opponents as a symbol of China’s efforts to compromise Australia’s democracy.
But the accusations leveled against  Chau on Tuesday extend the reach of concern, suggesting that China’s efforts to meddle span national borders.
The 2015 bribery case, U.S. v. John W. Ashe et al, was considered the worst financial scandal at the United Nations in decades. 
That complaint was filed in the Southern District of New York.
The court did not respond to a request for comment.
The corruption case accused Ashe, the Antiguan diplomat, of accepting Rolex watches, bespoke suits and a private basketball court in exchange for official actions that benefited Chinese interests.
In particular, Ashe accepted $200,000 in exchange for his attendance at the Global Summit of Small and Medium Enterprise Leaders in November 2013 in Guangzhou. 
The meeting was organized by Chau’s Kingold Group at the lavish Imperial Springs resort, according to the complaint.
Ashe died in an accident in June 2016 while awaiting trial. 
Several other defendants in the case were convicted and either got prison time or were awaiting sentencing. 
Co-conspirator No. 3 was never indicted, but it is not known why.