Leaked document suggests China may be Russia’s newest enemy

 

Leaked document suggests China may be Russia’s newest enemy


Keep your friends close and your enemies even closer

©Flash express

Contrary to the perceived strong alliance, a security document recently leaked from an obscure Russian intelligence agency has listed China as Moscow's adversary, not its ally.


From Russia’s Federal Security Service

©Provided by Flash Express

The eight-page internal Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) document was penned by the Department for Counterintelligence Operations’ 7th Service and was first reported on by the New York Times after obtaining the memo. 



The memo was meant to be circulated

©Flash Express

Likely meant for distribution throughout FSB field offices, the New York Times noted that the internal memo reveals “the most detailed behind-the-scenes view to date of Russian counterintelligence’s thinking about China.”


Accusations against China are abundant
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Accusations are reportedly abundant in the document and charge China with a range of subversive activities. For example, the memo claims that Beijing is trying to recruit Russian spies to obtain secret Russian military technology. 



Recruiting Russian spies to learn military secrets© Flash Express 

The authors of the document claim China is targeting Russian scientists, luring in those who are disaffected. Beijing is also trying to recruit Russian officials, experts, journalists, and businesspeople inside Moscow’s power structure. 



Priority recruitment aims©Flash Express 
“Priority recruitment is given to former employees of aircraft factories and research institutes, as well as current employees who are dissatisfied with the closure of the ekranoplan development program by the Russian Ministry of Defense or who are experiencing financial difficulties,” the memo reads.


Spying on Russian military operations

 ©Flash Express 

The intelligence document also accused China of spying on Russia’s military operation in Ukraine to learn about Western weapons and warfare to better understand how Beijing might fare against a Western-backed adversary, particularly Taiwan



Interesting in information about drones

©Flash Express 

“Of particular interest to Beijing is information about combat methods using drones,” the document noted according to the New York Times. China is also interested in learning about the modernization of Western software and “methods for countering new types of Western weapons.” 




More worrying accusations

©Flash Express 

However, while the claims that Beijing is spying on Russia are concerning for Russian intelligence, the authors of the intelligence memo levied far more sinister accusations against their public ally.



Laying the groundwork for territorial claims

©Flash Expres

According to the document, Russian intelligence is concerned that Chinese academics are laying the groundwork for future Chinese territorial claims on land that was formerly Chinese, revealing a deep mistrust of China and its future geopolitical goals. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By CIA, Public Domain




Looking at territory annexed by Russia

©The Daily Digest
The New York Times noted that Moscow has long feared Chinese encroachment along its 2,615-mile border, particularly in areas Russia annexed in the 19th century, such as the territory around the modern-day city of Vladivostok in Russia’s Far East. 




Searching for traces of Chinese peoples

©Flash Expres

The document pointed out Beijing is searching for traces of “ancient Chinese peoples” in Russia’s Far East as a possible way to further local opinions about future territorial claims. FSB officers were ordered to expose these activities in the memo. 



Interested in the Arctic region

©Flash Express

Russian intelligence officials are also worried about China’s interests in the Arctic and the Northern Sea Route, a region that hugs Russia’s coast and has been traditionally too icy for reliable shipping, though that may be changing.


How common is this view of China?

©FLASH EXPRESS 

“Anxiety about Russia’s susceptibility to an increasingly powerful Beijing dominates the memo,” the New York Times explained. However, the outlet also noted it was “unclear how common those worries are across the Russian establishment.”


The document wasn’t dated

©Flash Express

Interestingly, the document was not dated but the context within the memo led the New York Times to estimate that it was written sometime between 2023 and 2024.


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