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Caught…red handed.

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According to the FBI: foreign spying remains a serious threat in the post-Cold War world and now another conspiracy has been cracked. The case has all the elements of a classic espionage operation: a foreign government focused on accessing our military secrets; foreign operatives who effectively use stealth and guile to gain that access; and an American government official who is willing to betray both his oath of public office and the duty of loyalty we rightly demand from every American citizen. Such espionage networks pose a grave danger to our national security, and we should all thank the investigators and prosecutors on this case for effectively penetrating and dismantling this network before more sensitive information was compromised.

HERE’s THE PRESS RELEASES:

Tai Shen Kuo, age 58, and Yu Xin Kang, age 33, both of New Orleans, Louisiana, and Gregg William Bergersen, age 51, of Alexandria, Virginia, were arrested today on espionage charges related to the passage of classified U.S. government documents and information to the government of the Peopleâ€TMs Republic of China (PRC).

Both Kuo and Kang were charged by criminal complaint with conspiracy to disclose national defense information to a foreign government, in violation of 18 U.S.C., Section 794(a) and (c). Bergersen was charged in a separate complaint with conspiracy to disclose national defense information to persons not entitled to receive it, in violation of 18 U.S.C., Section 793(d) and (g).

Kenneth L. Wainstein, Assistant Attorney General for National Security; U.S. Attorney Chuck Rosenberg of the Eastern District of Virginia; and Arthur M. Cummings, II, Executive Assistant Director of the FBIâ€TMs National Security Branch, made the announcement today. Bergersen and Kuo are scheduled to make their initial appearances in federal court in Alexandria today. Kang will make her initial appearance in federal court in New Orleans.

U.S. Attorney Rosenberg stated: “Those who compromise classified national security information betray the enormous responsibility and trust placed in them by our government and the American people.”

According to court documents, the criminal conduct spanned a two-year period from January 2006 to February 2008. Kuo, a naturalized U.S. citizen and New Orleans businessman, gathered national defense information on behalf of the government of the PRC.

Working under the direction of an individual identified in the complaint affidavit only as PRC Official. Kuo cultivated friendships with Bergersen and others within the U.S. government and obtained from them — for ultimate passage to the PRC — sensitive U.S. government information, including classified national defense information. Much of the information pertained to U.S. military sales to Taiwan.

Bergersen, a Weapons Systems Policy Analyst at the Arlington, Va.-based Defense Security Cooperation Agency, an agency within the Department of Defense, was charged with being the source of the classified information collected by Kuo. Kang, a citizen of the PRC and a Lawful Permanent Resident of the United States, served as a conduit of information between PRC Official A and Kuo.

Meetings between Kuo and Bergersen took place at various locations in Northern Virginia, Charleston, South Carolina, and Las Vegas. On some occasions, Bergersen received undetermined cash payments from Kuo in exchange for information and documents he provided.

Kuo and Kang each face up to life in prison if convicted of conspiracy to disclose national defense information to a foreign government. Bergersen faces up to ten years in prison if convicted of conspiracy to disclose national defense information to persons not entitled to receive it.

The investigation was conducted by the FBI. The Air Force Office of Special Investigations (OSI) provided substantial assistance and cooperation throughout the course of the investigation.

The prosecution is being handled by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Neil Hammerstrom and Aaron Zebley from the U.S. Attorneyâ€TMs Office for the Eastern District of Virginia, and Trial Attorney Ryan Fayhee from the Counterespionage Section of the Justice Departmentâ€TMs National Security Division.

Criminal complaints are only charges and not evidence of guilt. A defendant is presumed to be innocent until and unless proven guilty.
A former Boeing engineer was arrested this morning after being indicted last week on charges of economic espionage and acting as an unregistered foreign agent of the Peopleâ€TMs Republic of China (PRC), for whom the engineer stole Boeing trade secrets related to several aerospace programs, including the Space Shuttle.

Dongfan “Greg” Chung, 72, of Orange, Calif., who was employed by Rockwell International from 1973 until its defense and space unit was acquired by Boeing in 1996, was arrested without incident at his residence by special agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and investigators with NASA. Chung, who is expected to make his initial court appearance here this afternoon, was named in an indictment returned last Wednesday by a federal grand jury.

The indictment accuses Chung of eight counts of economic espionage, one count of conspiracy to commit economic espionage, one count of acting as an unregistered foreign agent without prior notification to the Attorney General, one count of obstruction of justice, and three counts of making false statements to FBI investigators.

Chung, a native of China who is a naturalized United States citizen, held a Secret security clearance when he worked at Rockwell and Boeing on the Space Shuttle program. He retired from the company in 2002, but the next year he returned to Boeing as a contractor, a position he held until September 2006. The indictment alleges that he took and concealed Boeing trade secrets relating to the Space Shuttle, the C-17 military transport aircraft and the Delta IV rocket. Chung allegedly obtained the materials for the benefit of the PRC.

“Certain foreign governments are committed to obtaining the American trade secrets that can advance the development of their military capabilities. Todayâ€TMs case demonstrates that the Justice Department is equally committed to foiling those efforts through the arrest and prosecution of those who conduct economic espionage at the expense of our economic and national security,” said Assistant Attorney General for National Security, Kenneth L. Wainstein.

United States Attorney Thomas P. Oâ€TMBrien stated: “Mr. Chung is accused of stealing restricted technology that had been developed over many years by engineers who were sworn to protect their work product because it represented trade secrets. Disclosure of this information to outside entities like the PRC would compromise our national security.”

The case against Chung is related to an investigation into another engineer who worked in the United States and obtained sensitive military information for the PRC. The man, Chi Mak, and several of his family members were convicted last year of providing defense articles to the PRC (see: www.usdoj.gov/usao/cac/pressroom/pr2007/074.html). Mak is scheduled to be sentenced on March 24.

According to the indictment that was unsealed this morning, individuals in the Chinese aviation industry began sending Chung “tasking” letters as early as 1979. Over the years, the letters directed Chung to collect specific technological information, including data related to the Space Shuttle and various military and civilian aircraft. Chung allegedly responded in one letter indicating a desire to contribute to the “motherland.”

In various letters to his handlers in the PRC, Chung referenced engineering manuals he had collected and sent to the PRC, including 24 manuals relating to the B-1 Bomber that Rockwell had prohibited from disclosure outside of the company. According to the indictment, between 1985 and 2003, Chung made multiple trips to the PRC to deliver lectures on technology involving the Space Shuttle and other programs, and during those trips he met with officials and agents of the PRC government. The indictment alleges that Chung and PRC officials exchanged letters that discussed cover stories for Chungâ€TMs travel to China and recommended methods for passing information, including suggestions that Chung use Chi Mak to transmit information.

The indictment describes a May 2, 1987 letter from Gu Weihao, an official in the Ministry of Aviation and China Aviation Industry Corporation, which discussed the possibility of inviting Chungâ€TMs wife, who is an artist, to visit an art institute so that Chung could use the cover of traveling with his wife as an excuse to travel to the PRC. This same letter suggested that passing information to the PRC through Chi Mak would be “faster and safer” and concluded with the statement: “It is your honor and Chinaâ€TMs fortune that you are able to realize your wish of dedicating yourself to the service of your country.” The indictment describes a second letter from Gu Weihao, dated April 12, 1988, which asked Chung to provide information on “advanced technologies.” This letter stated that Rebecca Mak was in the PRC and she had reported that Chung and the Maks had a good relationship.

“The FBI is committed to protecting America’s assets from foreign thievery,” said Salvador Hernandez, Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office. “The arrest and indictment of Mr. Chung should serve as a reminder to those who would compromise the economic and physical security of the United States by stealing proprietary information. The FBI will continue to work with NASA, the defense community and other federal agencies to safeguard our nation’s technology.”

Each charge of economic espionage carries a maximum possible penalty of 15 years in prison and a $500,000 fine. The charges of acting as an agent of a foreign government without prior notification to the Attorney General and obstruction of justice each carry a maximum penalty of 10 years imprisonment and a $250,000 fine. The charges of conspiracy to commit economic espionage and making a false statement to federal investigators each carry a maximum possible penalty of five years imprisonment and a $250,000 fine.

An indictment contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt

The investigation in this case was conducted jointly by the FBI and NASA Counterintelligence. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Greg Staples and Ivy Wang, from the Central District of California.

 

130 Responses to “Caught…red handed.”

Comment by Max

they have to be careful with allowing non-citizens to work on classified reasearch.

 
Comment by Derek

Why does China want to know this stuff? are we not friends? I mean, there has to be a logical explanation as to why the PRC would be after such info. They would never want to do us harm, would they?

 
Comment by Karen2 (aka K2)

It is good to hear about these types of investigations.

The allegation of the transfer of military defense and weaponry secrets makes me sick. How anyone could offer information to another country is beyond me.

Anyone endangering the lives of our military at any time but especially during war deserves life in prison.

 
Comment by John

In many cases it’s greed that makes people do this…….but, sometimes it’s done because of financial necessity. I’ve been through several security clearance interviews for friends of mine that were seeking top secret clearances. The questioning always included what the “applicant’s” life style was like…….did they overspend, did they like expensive toys, are they over-extended in their line of credit, etc. This is usually who a foreign agent will target to come “work” for him. As more and more people are starting to struggle financialy, this could become an ongoing problem.

 
Comment by Marie

Max being a citizen or non-citizen has nothing to do with it. Remember Harold Nicholson, the most senior agent ever accused of spying for Russia? He was an American and worked for the CIA for years. His actions compromised (as in contributed to the death of) countless U.S. operatives.

I’m surprised that if convicted Bergerson will only get 10 years.

K2 there’s a saying in Spanish “por la plata baila el mono” which literally translated is “the monkey will dance for the silver (money)” or else “everyone has his price,” although I’m sure this is not the case for everyone, but only for some people. Most are honest, hard working and love their country, even though they may feel that there is room for improvement.

 
Comment by John

In many cases it’s greed that makes people do this…….but, sometimes it’s done because of financial necessity. I’ve been through several security clearance interviews for friends of mine that were seeking top secret clearances. The questioning always included what the “applicant’s” life style was like…….did they overspend, did they like expensive toys, are they over-extended in their line of credit, etc. This is usually who a foreign agent will target to come “work” for him. As more and more people are starting to struggle financialy, this could become an ongoing problem.

 
Comment by Avi

Lovely,

Imagine if they were Russian

 
Comment by Avi

we need to find the russians …….

 
Comment by Avi

Breaking News:

AP:

The US television network CBS reported Monday that two of its journalists had gone missing in the predominantly Shiite southern city of Basra.

CBS said all efforts were under way to find the journalists. It did not name the journalists and requested “that others do not speculate on the identities of those involved” until more information was available.

Iraqi police and witnesses said the kidnapping occurred Sunday morning when about eight masked gunmen wielding machine guns stormed the three-story Sultan Palace Hotel.

In New York, the Committee to Protect Journalists said it was “deeply concerned for the safety of our colleagues, and hope they are located swiftly and able to resume their important work covering this critical story.”

 
Comment by Derek

I have a security clearance and I found out later that they had actually contacted one of my middle school teachers during the investigation. They contacted most of the people I know, past employers, neighbors, old room mates, it was almost as invasive as a prostate exam. I know they take that stuff seriously and when someone is caught spying and sent to prison, their prison stay is typically horrific, just think of all of the veterans in prison, they may have broken some laws but I promise they will not look kindly upon someone branded as a traitor

 
Comment by Socal Surfer

MAX, here is the problem. Governement labs, universities and companies would rather hire a visa holding foriegner than a US citizen because they can pay them less, guilt them into not taking holidays and working OT without paying them. Also, they have an infinetly easier time firing them when budget cuts come. I know for a fact right now inthe VA research system there are many research staff with fake or highly questionable Doctorates running whole departments and they only hire people from their home countries and flaunt the first hire status of U.S. veterans and U.S. citizens. The VA doesnt have the money or knowhow to check the credentials of the foriegners they hire. It’s all onthe socalled honor system. It’s easy for lets say a seasoned nurse from russia to make up a fake doctorate (.M.D.) and get a job asa M.D. in the VA. One other thing people need to know is that an M.D. in one country isnt the same level of M.D. over here. Foriegn M.D.s can work here under the Medical Licence of another M.D. Lets take Veterinary medicine. In Austria. Anyone that breaths can go to Veterinary medical school. Its a joke. but its true. There are two levels of DVM over there. IT’s the second level of DVM that is equal to ours.What Austrians do here inthe USA is, They finish the first level (whish is equal to a Masters over here). They get a slip of paper that says they are doctors of veterinary medicine. Then they come over there and get jobs in the VA system running the research animal programs. Many of these programs are top secret. There is always one old 80yr old veterinarian around these places that hasa valid DVM license. They work under his license. This is how the espionage starts. It’s super easy. These people are not schooled in security. SOme are honest and some are not.

 
Comment by KT

Adam, you did a fantastic job in getting us this story, with so much detail, quickly. You really do have the best blog out there.

 
Comment by Marie

Social Surfer. You are generalizing. Not all doctors here are good, just as not all doctors and training overseas is bad. I speak from personal experience. The credentials of foreign doctors should be checked and they should be evaluated on an individual basis, without making them practically go back to med school to become licensed.

 
Comment by KT

Very interesting that a naturalized citizen had access to restricted information. The FBI and NASA Counterintelligence did a great job in catching these spies.

If you look at each one of these charges individually, they don’t carry that long of a term in sentence, collectively they do, but I would have guessed 25 yrs + for each. Anyone can get out in 15, 10 or even 5 years and continue on where they left off, probably not successfully, but they can try.

 
Comment by KT

So, I guess China will still be hosting the Olympics even though they have proven to send spies out to another country to obtain top secret military information. Good going Olympics committee for choosing a communist country who intend to inflict harm on their own people, other countries and others who speak out against their corrupt government. So nice of you to uphold higher standards when taking into consideration a country’s moral and ethical conduct.

 

It’s probably erroneous to refer to a “post cold war world”. We may have bankrupted the Russians and forced them to stand down, but we didn’t knock them out. The size of China’s population coupled with her need for resources is reminiscent of Pre-WWII Japan. They may have adapted their brand of Communism to allow for a capitalistic economy, but after Soviets spent themselves out of existence, that simply tells me that China’s watched and learned. One day they may well put the lessons they learned to use. -Rod-

 
 

Derek,

I know a guy that was imprisoned with Naval spy John Walker at the Butner FMC. His imprisonment was far from horrific and while me and “B” never really delved into the subject, Walker wasn’t treated any worse than the others. I suppose that could change if/when he gets out of the medical system. -Rod-

 
Comment by Emily

Did I read correctly that this started in 1986. 20 years ago and they are just catching/stopping these guys now?! Don’t get me wrong, I’m glad they finally were indicted, but I’m sure they were able to do a lot of damage over the last two decades. Doesn’t instill much confidence in our national security.

 
Comment by John

Rod………I think China is already putting lessons learned to use. Their accumulation of cash and other assets far outweighs what Russia was able to accomplish. It’s sad to think that the money that’s coming to us in the form of IRS rebate checks this summer is borrowed from China. Money that the US government hopes we will spend on consumer goods that will help stimulate our economy…………One problem with that, most consumer goods are made in China. So not only do they get their money back, it will create more jobs for them ( not us) and they also charge the US government interest on the loan that futher enriches them financially.

 

Y’know it used to be that when we caught a spy, or someone caught one of ours, there’d be a lot of saber-rattling and diplomatic protesting going on…even Presidents blasting the other side for it. Now it seems like all we do is put them on trial and forget about it. It seems like the lack of saber-rattling probably encourages foreign governments to spy on us since they lose nothing by trying. -Rod-

 
Comment by Derek

rod-

In a just world they would be thrown in with general population. I am of the mindset that rapists and child molesters are the worst and they deserve the worst punishment, but I do not place people that commit treason, desert, or conspire against our country much higher. it would be interesting to hear more about their treatment. I can tell you from my brief stint in the big house (well..9 days in county) at the age of 17 (turned 18 in there) that it was no place I wanted to stay.

 
Comment by Karen2 (aka K2)

Terri – can you hear me yelling over here.

What is going on? We give money to Mexico – so they can protect their border in the south!

Yet, we are to keep our border open, so the invaders can continue to wreck havoc here.

 
Comment by Max

John: But if China goes to war with the US then the US won’t have to pay back the loans. The president could then ask Taiwan to say that repayment of the loan isn’t needed, or that it’s been cut to a smaller percentage.

 
 
Comment by Derek

rod-

very nice indeed

 

Do you support seeking the death penalty against 9/11 suspects?
Yes 75% 87888
No 25% 29171
Total Votes: 117059

 
Comment by Derek

Rod-

add one more to that survey…..me

But instead of a yes or no, I would have to be in the category of “hell yes, I’ll chop their heads off”

 
 
Comment by Karen2 (aka K2)

Terri – have now emailed both MN Senators and my Representative about the Merida Initiative…..

feeling a little better – hope they know i was yelling at them! :)

 
Comment by KT

So first we had cut cables and now this

Breaking News >> BlackBerry Service Out Across North America

 
Comment by KT

NEW YORK — An outage has disconnected BlackBerry smart phones across North America.

AT&T Inc. says the disruption Monday is affecting all wireless carriers. AT&T first learned about the problem at about 3:30 p.m. EST.

There’s no word on the cause or when the problem might be fixed.

BlackBerry maker Research in Motion did not immediately return a phone call.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,330367,00.html

 
Comment by KT

AT&T, Inc. blames mysterious outage for disconnected service to all BlackBerry wireless smart phones across the continent; no word on when problem will be fixed.

 

Nothing’s changed:

NEW YORK — “CrackBerry” addicts were looking for thumbthing to do late Monday as BlackBerry smartphones throughout North America went on the blink.

AT&T Inc. says the disruption Monday is affecting all wireless carriers. AT&T first learned about the problem at about 3:30 p.m. EST.

There’s no word on the cause or when the problem might be fixed.

BlackBerry maker Research in Motion did not immediately return a phone call.

 
Comment by terristeelmagnolia

K2,
I just wrote to Bush, Senator Ensign, Senator Dingy Harry and Jon Porter AND Juan McShamnesty…
re: the Merida Initiative..

it’s such crap.

 

Terri, care to share? -Rod-

 
 
Comment by Terri ~ Las Vegas
 
Comment by KT

Terri, did you read Adam’s report on the Meridian Plan?

 

“Mr. Calderón, other officials say, is also trying to reshape the immigration debate in the United States by showcasing the “hard work” and “economic benefits” that his compatriots represent to the U.S. economy and economic integration of the two countries.”

They’re ILLEGAL. Doesn’t anyone care? The drug trade also has “economic benefits”…but we don’t encourage that, do we? Nor do I think I care for the words “…integration of the two countries.”. There’s only one that matters. -Rod-

 

Let’s try this another way…

If Calderon thinks that Mexican illegals are so good for the US economy, why are they so bad for his economy? If they work so hard, why doesn’t he put them to work there? If economic integration is so great, why is he trying to shut his own southern border?

Why won’t he tell the truth? -Rod-

 
Comment by Max

“BlackBerry maker Research in Motion did not immediately return a phone call.”

Well duh, they weren’t able to answer their phones as they all would have BlackBerries!

 
Comment by Carl

Someone should give that memo to Harry Reid and Dick Durbin. Stopping Hayden, the NSA, FBI, and CIA from effective surveillance would result in a completely compromised national security.

Someone should explain to the ACLU that it is absolutely necessary for our national security forces to be able to parse through 10’s of thousands of internet protocols and cell phone communications each and every day. Now, how do you accomplish that with a judge’s order for each and every one?

You can’t.

 
Comment by KT

Carl, I would gladly give up some of my civil rights for the greater good. The only people that need protection from the act are the ones that have something to hide.

 
Comment by KT

In China, if you hold up a banner that says One World, One Dream… you will be arrested and held for 3 years without being charged.

Berkley California’s Mayor is trying to put on the election ballot to force the Marine’s recruiting stations to end their lease. The group Code Pink is permitted to have free parking in front of the Marines Recruiting Center so they can protest. But this isn’t ordinary protest, they put bloody hand prints on the windows, chain themselves to the doors and scare away potential new marines that want to enlist. But yet, they are allowed to do this because they have the right to free speech and yet we still send Berkley Federal funds.

I think tomorrow the group called Move America Forward

http://www.moveamericaforward.org/index.php/MAF/AboutUs

Will be protesting starting at 5am until the end of the day. It is expected to get ugly.

 
Comment by KT

Sorry, I posted this in the wrong thread, my apolgies.

 

KT,

If someone did that at an abortion clinic, they’d be up on federal charges. -Rod-

 
Comment by KT

Rod. yep that would happen! So why are we federally funding them?

 
Comment by KT

answer: because we have a right to free speech, even if it’s against our government.

 

KT,

Sorry, I got sidetracked. Whoops.

It seems like there should be one standard huh? If you can’t chain yourself to an abortion clinic, then you can’t to a recruiting office either. No such luck. It’s that PC attitude that will cause the loss of everything we hold dear. -Rod-

Give this a read…

http://www.usapatriotsamerica.com/forum/showpost.php?p=56752&postcount=33

 
Comment by Susan- Az

This is alarming–

Chung has been at it since 1979? He has 14 counts going against him- even if he was convicted on all of these counts and these ran concurrently, he would never see the dawn of day outside here at his age- 72-

8 counts of economic security times fifteen years–
And then he gets to sit in a prison here- free food and bed-

I am with Marie– how is that Bergensen only gets ten years- if he serves that many- He is only 51 years old– and what about all the people who were put into jeopardy because of this espionage conspiracy–

Adam– you need to post more Super Bowl threads– the threads get scarier and scarier– I need to go back into my cave- and only come out for food and water-

 
Comment by Susan- Az

someone can borrow my old fashioned cell phone if your blackberry is out-

 
Comment by KT

Rod just read it thanks, listening to scanner in the backgraound hahaha

Susan I hope they get him on all counts.

 
Comment by Karen2 (aka K2)

Adam,
My concerns about the Merida Initiative are the following -

Understanding the initial investment was to be $500 million. The bill is attached to the Iraq funding bill and is proposed to be $1.4 Billion. If the bill is so important and worthwhile, why is it not put forth on its own. Why attach it the the Iraq funding bill?

Understanding the money is to be spent to combat drug trafficking. Due to the corruption in Mexico, nothing has been done in the past. I question the funding of the project to eliminate corruption.

Seems to me, a better way to fight corruption, is to work on building good business relationships, work on their education and training, and enable people to work.

Mexico needs to stop supporting their residents illegal entry into the US. They need to understand it up to them, not us to create a working class.

 
Comment by KT

This is really concerning that naturalized citizens are getting clearance to top secret stuff! Here’s part of an article from 2005 when this was working in the white house..

Federal investigators say Aragoncillo, a naturalized citizen from the Philippines, used his top secret clearance to steal classified intelligence documents from White House computers.

http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/story?id=1187030&page=1

Does our government need us to hold their hand and explain the risks associated with giving clearance to naturalized citizens?

This makes me sick.

 
Comment by KT

Israeli Spying:
The Mother of all Scandals

But by far the most egregious damage done by Pollard was to steal classified documents relating to the US Nuclear Deterrent relative to the USSR and send them to Israel. According to sources in the US State Department, Israel then turned around and traded those stolen nuclear secrets to the USSR in exchange for increased emigration quotas from the USSR to Israel. Other information that found its way from the US to Israel to the USSR resulted in the loss of American agents operating inside the USSR. Casper Weinberger, in his affidavit opposing a reduced sentence for Pollard, described the damage done to the United States thus, “[It is] difficult to conceive of a greater harm to national security than that caused by… Pollard’s treasonous behavior.”

http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/motherofallscandals.html

 
Comment by KT

This is interesting

From The TimesApril 21, 2007

The lost 20 years of CIA spies caught in China trap
Lured by a double agent and jailed secretly, the tale of Jack Downey and Richard Fecteau is one of the most extraordinary in espionage

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/us_and_americas/article1685467.ece

 
Comment by KT

Easy access: Russian and Chinese spies saturate US, UK

Jim Kouri Jim Kouri
April 12, 2006

The practically legendary MI5 British counterintelligence service is said to be deeply concerned over an increase in spying by Russian and Chinese operatives in the United Kingdom. The United States’ Federal Bureau of Investigation has similar concerns with Russian and Chinese agents infiltrating the US military-industrial complex, sometimes in violation of US immigration laws.
http://www.renewamerica.us/columns/kouri/060412

 
Comment by KT

Popular mechanics wants to tell us how China does it

How China Steals U.S. Military Secrets
A spate of recent spying cases opens the lid on China’s aggressive military buildup. What’s most troubling: It is based largely on U.S. technology. http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/military_law/3319656.html

 
Comment by KT

FOXNEWS.COM HOME > POLITICS

Panel: China’s Spies, Unfair Policies Threaten U.S. Economy
Thursday, November 15, 2007
WASHINGTON — A congressional advisory panel said Thursday that Chinese spying represents the greatest threat to U.S. technology and recommended counterintelligence efforts to stop China from stealing the nation’s manufacturing expertise.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,311805,00.html

 
Comment by Karen2 (aka K2)

Karen,

amazing articles. Just finished the incarcerated CIA agents. Can’t imagine losing 20 years.

Just lets us know, the ‘cold war’ ended with the collapse of the USSR. But, war and espionage continues.

As Rod stated earlier – it is imperative our investigative agencies have the tools necessary to fight this war.

 
Comment by KT

Absolutely I agree, I want them to have access to phone, financial and any other records needed. They need to be able to record conversations. I’m all for it. It’s really concerning me about the naturalized citizens though, they’re getting access to places where there is at least a doubt that they can be loyal to us. We’re just opening up the door and letting them in. Who knows about the ones that haven’t been detected yet. Doesn’t make me feel safe at all.

 
Comment by Susan- Az

Last year, Donald Keyser, a former high-ranking State department expert on China, was sentenced to a year in prison for illegally keeping classified documents at his home, and for making false statements to investigators about a 2003 trip to Taiwan where he was involved in a relationship with a Taiwanese intelligence official

———————————————————————————————————–

This guy got one year–
from an article posted today about William Bergersen-

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/c0a576d0-d8cd-11dc-8b22-0000779fd2ac.html

About the same story as Adam posted

 
Comment by Susan- Az

Here is this- if anyone likes looking these up–

Both Kuo and Kang were charged by criminal complaint with conspiracy to disclose national defense information to a foreign government, in violation of 18 U.S.C., Section 794(a) and (c). Bergersen was charged in a separate complaint with conspiracy to disclose national defense information to persons not entitled to receive it, in violation of 18 U.S.C., Section 793(d) and (g).

 
Comment by Susan- Az

oops–

my post went through too quickly– I copied the violations from Adam’s and pasted them in case anyone wanted to read these–the US Code and title 18— without having to go back up there and find it– sorry!

 

KT,

You’ve been listening to the scanner? Cool. I hope ya like it. It’s up roughly from 8am – 1am pacific time 7/days week. Some mornings I have it up around 7.

K2,

When I’m President important bills will have to be sent to me on their own, not shoveled in with other legislation. If the Congress won’t give me a line-item veto then I’ll improvise and create one myself. I’ll simply veto everything that comes my way disguised as something else. On this you have my word :) -Rod-

 

KT,

I too have noticed an uptick of treason by naturalized citizens. I have the feeling that they were sent here on a mission from the start. Maybe we need to do away with it. Maybe we need to do away with dual citizenship. It’s impossible to be loyal 2 two countries in all circumstances. It’s unfair to us and unfair to the ‘citizen’ to have to possibly make a choice between the two nations under stressful circumstances, such as a threat of war. -Rod-

 
Comment by Marie

Hold it KT, aren’t you being a bit unfair by crying wolf when it comes to naturalized citizens? My parents were naturalized citizens and I doubt you’d find any better, more fine and upstanding citizens than them. I guess they valued the fact that this country took them in when they were displaced during WWII. I’m a naturalized citizen too. I came to this country when I was 11. Does this make me suspect too and preclude my ever working in a “sensitive” position and getting clearance? What about the native born Americans that have spied? How are they different? Let’s get a grip here and be fair.

 
Comment by Marie

P.S. I’ve never considered myself to be anything other than American, and proud of it.

 
Comment by John

Rod………..I’m a little confused, how can “we….. do away with dual citizenship”? As far as I know, no one can control where, or to who, they are born…………Are you suggesting we completely seal our borders and let no one in………or out? Because if we get out we may mingle with the residents of other nations and maybe, just maybe create…….. little dual citizens. Then what?……..lol

 
Comment by Max

The closest would be to recind citizenship.
And a duel citizen should chose the country they live in.

 
Comment by Derek

The New Colossus

Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame,

With conquering limbs astride from land to land;

Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand

A mighty woman with a torch, whose flame

Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name

Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand

Glows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes command

The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame.

“Keep ancient lands, your storied pomp!” cries she

With silent lips. “Give me your tired, your poor,

Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,

The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.

Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,

I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”

I believe in this poem, I believe in America, I am the son of a son of a son of a son of immigrants, as most of us are. I believe we are the last great beacon of freedom and I cannot deny that dream to anybody willing to work for it. We need to open our doors to the people that the world does not want, the poor, the sick and the needy. We need to give them the opportunity to build a life, and it may be that it is their children that actually begin to build this great nation.

We have people from all parts of the world that would do us harm, including “home grown” terrorists, people that have forgotten what this great country has done for so many, people that let greed seep into their lives and then control them, people that allow their minds to be warped by others that hate freedom. Those traitors, deserve death.

We have reached a point in our nation where we are not the far off place, the world is smaller and unfortunately we need to change the way we do business, we still need to allow safe haven for the down-trodden, but we need to protect the sheep from the wolves. It is going to require changes in so many different parts of our country and it is going to be a long road, but I think it is doable.

Treason is a crime I cannot forgive, because a its very core, they wanted to destroy the very thing that gave them prosperity.

Any person caught selling our nation into bondage, selling our mothers and sisters to concubines, selling our sons into slavery and destruction deserves nothing but a swift execution.

But if we allow fear to control us, and we sell off our own liberty in exchange for security…well…we have done to ourselves what the monsters of the world have been unable to do to us so far.

 
Comment by Kathy in Texas

This is where it gets merky. I think many are here because they love America. And many are here for a free ride, to make money and send it home. I doubt that our current lawmakers are capable of passing any real answer to this.

 
Comment by Derek

I am fine with people making money and sending it home, as long as they pay taxes and live by our laws like everyone else. I knew a guy one time that was a janitor, He was in his late 20’s had a wife and 3 kids in mexico. He worked hard, he payed taxes, he car-pooled with 6 other guys doing the same thing, he had not seen his family in 3 years. He took a job as a janitor in america because it was more than he would make in mexico even with his 4 year college degree. He was saving his money in mexico so he could start his own business when he returned. He spoke 4 languages, he was bright and articulate. We talked all the time about family and home. He ached to be home, when he had finally earned enough money, he quit, his last day on the job, he shook my hand, we hugged each other and said goodbye. He worked very hard while he was here in America, he sacrificed alot, he never owned his own car, he lived in a very small house with several other immigrants, he slept on the floor, he scavenged books and furniture from the trash, he lived as humbly as anyone could for 6 total years, the whole time working towards his dream of having enough money to run his own business in mexico. He was a great man and would have made a fine citizen, but his heart was in Mexico.

I have a serious problem, with people working here illegally, with people hiring illegals, with illegals draining our welfare system. I am for sealing our border by whatever means necessary and creating ports or gateways or whatever you want to call them that allow people to immigrate here, help them integrate into our society and help them become citizens. I want a way to keep the bad people (cartels, terrorists, smugglers, violent people) out and allow good hard working honest people in.

We need balance, we need security and we need it now.

 
Comment by Marie

Max, Rod, and everyone else. I actually don’t think that treason has anything to do with dual, triple citizenship or being a naturalized citizen or a “real” American (whatever that is). It has to do with the person and that person’s beliefs and principles.

If money talks, the unprincipled will answer regardless of whether or not they are home grown or naturalized citizens. Treason has more to do with principles and compromising them or not having any at all, than with allegiance to a country. How many real Americans (because you seem to be making a distinction between those born here and those who came here) hate their country and revel in seeing it brought to its knees? Just think about it calmly. How many seek out opportunities to criticize this country left and right while benefiting from living here? Don’t just dismiss naturalized citizens across the board as being “unworthy” or second-class citizens.

 
Comment by John

Very well put Derek…….and I agree, every time we surrender a liberty for the sake of security……..they win, we lose.
I also believe in the ‘ Ten Percent Rule ‘, which basically says that most of the trouble caused in the world is only created by ten percent of the population. This is true whether you take the world population as a whole, or the population of your neighborhood……….it always seems to be just ten percent that causes 90 percent of the headaches. The good news is that this means the odds are in our favor ( 9:1 ) against these trouble makers and we should win out in the end. But everytime we give in, by surrendering a liberty, we put a notch in their win collumn…….IMO

 
Comment by Derek

Marie,

I am with you on that, I have seen people born in this country, benefited from its freedoms, built by its education, supported by its laws and embraced by culture…sell the whole thing for money.

That to me is far worse.

I have known too many good and bad people from many different countries to blanket all immigrants as bad.

I had a lady in the neighborhood I grew up in from germany, she spoke our language but was extremely self conscious because of her thick accent. She raised 4 successful children, a businessman, a police officer and 2 homemakers. She was also a biological radar, if someone was up to no good in the neighborhood, she had descriptions, license plate numbers and times they were there. She was also very capable of keeping my mother informed when me and my brothers were causing problems. She was also the most caring woman in the world, she was the first to console, comfort and give aid to any neighbor that needed it.

Being a good citizen is a personal choice, just as being a traitor is a personal choice, both should have personal rewards or consequences.

 
Comment by Derek

john,

That 10 percent rule is spot on

 
Comment by Susan- Az

My brother Mark and my son were both born in Mexico City and they both reside in the United States- they are not spying on anyone– My son, Robert, is in law enforcement and is now part of the SWAT team– so if anything, he is protecting us-

totally agree wtih you Marie- 100 percent– and thank you!

Many or most of us have grandparents or great grandparents or even great-great grandparents who originally came from another part of this world–

Swedish/polish here–

Ken- polish

 
Comment by Derek

Susan,

excellent point, on another not The word SWAT makes me chuckle, through out my many missions and deployments I have worked with New Zealand troops on many many occasions, they are funny, intelligent and tough. In the military world there is an acronym for everything, much like SWAT. we have NODS, MRE’s, GWOT, EOD, and a list of thousands, it becomes so ingrained into you actually start speaking in military speak with all of our acronyms, nicknames, radio protocal, just everything.

The kiwi’s (the new zealanders) are not to be outdone in this department and so emblazoned on all of their equipment, aircraft, vehicles, uniforms, and anything else belonging to the kiwi’s is the mother of all acronyms and the envy of all armed forces around the world (we all wish we would have thought of it)

The War Against Terror.

I will let you figure out what word is stenciled in 3 foot letters on their aircraft.

 
Comment by Alfredo

well well can somebody explain this? the killer of la Cabańa, Che Guevara in one Obama campaign volunteer office in Texas.
another Chavez?
this is scary!!

http://www.babalublog.com/

 
Comment by John

ahhhhhhhh……..reminds me of my brother Charles, when he wore is uniform to the home coming dance last fall………….charlie,uniform,november,tango

 
Comment by KT

Marie, with all due respect, I have immigrant relatives also. I do not feel that I am being unfair. Certainly not all, in fact most of the naturalized citizens are not a risk, but, they are some that are. My point is that we increase the risk of espionage with somebody whose loyalty might be to their own country and not the USA. On the other side of the coin we can also have Americans who want to give information to other countries. In no way am I outting down naturalized immigrants, my point is that risk is higher and they should not have access to classified documents.

 
Comment by Derek
 
Comment by KT

Rod, I also do not feel that naturalized citizens should be in our military. There was a case when an Arab went to Iraq or Afganistan, he wasn’t able to battle along with his group. He said he couldn’t do harm to one of his own. Meanwhile they’re being shot at.

 
Comment by Derek

I wear a shirt that is emblazoned with the army term for today.

Once upon a time, it was FUBAR, then it was SNAFU, now it is BOHICA

What is BOHICA?

It is when you are sitting in the desert, 2 weeks from going home and they extend you

It is when you just get home, and find out you are rotating back in 2 months

It is when you find out you are not getting paid and its going to take 3 months to fix

It is when you are dirty tired and hungry and all you want is hot chow and rest…but the Sergeant Major thinks you are too dirty to enter the chow hall

It is when you are charged with protecting civilians making 5 times the money for doing 1 tenth of the work

It is when you are issued uniforms too big or too small and told to deal with it

It is when you are scavaging through blown up humvees looking for parts while the brass ride safely around in brand new SUV’s

It is when you are told there will be no sleep because you are slotted for back to back to back missions.

ahhhhhhh BOHICA

Bend Over: Here It Comes Again

 
Comment by John

KT……….you don’t even have to be a US citizen to be in our military.

 
Comment by KT

Marie, it’s not the mom and pop naturalized citizens that I’m worried about. I appreciate them and grateful that they are here in America and wish them all properity. It’s the ones that come here and get naturalized for the sole purpose of espionage. The people who hired these spies were not capable of a proper background check. They hired them and ultimately it hurt the USA. If there was just one rule not to allow access to sensetive documents, then you reduce the risk. Which is better, hurting the feelings of a naturalized citizen or protecting United States Miltary secrets?

 
Comment by KT

John, I am aware of that, that’s my point. I appreciate that they want to bve in our military, it is commendable! Buit can we afford the risk of loyalty? We need them, but can you put them on the front lines and say, go shoot one of your own?

 
Comment by Susan- Az

Alfredo–

I saw that last night– Someone sent me the video of Obama’s campaign volunteer’s headquarters last night– I saw the Cuban flag and the Che Guevara behind the desk–

I was totally floored!

 
Comment by Derek

KT,

It is tough, and I honestly see your issues, but I have had terps that were tougher and meaner than any US soldier I have know. I have also seen Iraqi Army and Iraqi Police turn against us. I have know several US soldiers from south america serving and working at citizenship.

Tough call, but some of our best and brightest have been immigrants.

 
Comment by Susan- Az

Derek–

My son was also a cop in LA– And he is honest as the day is long– It just so happens he was born in Mexico City because I was living there at the time of his birth– It is not like I could take the first plane out and hit American soil to ensure he was born on this side– so I too take great offense as to this naturalization and dual citizenship issue–

My son is out fighting crime as I sit here all day and blog- :D

 
Comment by Derek

Susan-

I agree completely. I am by no means a politically correct guy, and I offend who I offend. But I believe we should all be held accountable or rewarded by our own actions. If I were to serve with your son in the military or police force, i would mostly likely crack jokes at his expense all day and would expect him to crack them at me. But god help the outsider that cracked anything his way

 
Comment by John

KT……..it is a tough call, but can we really be certain……after all the interviews, tests and background checks that an individual, irregardless of nationalilty, is going to turn against this country, or not, somewhere down the line?……..Probably not.

 
Comment by Susan- Az

I hope if Obama wins he remembers this-

During rendition of the national anthem when the flag is displayed, all present except those in uniform should stand at attention facing the flag with the right hand over the heart. Men not in uniform should remove their headdress with their right hand and hold it at the left shoulder, the hand being over the heart. — United States Code, Title 36, Chapter 10, Sec. 171

 
Comment by KT

Derek, you would know better than I would, I believe that. I’m more concerned of the ones who aren’t and I know there’s not many, but there are some. Now that doesn’t mean that all naturalized citizens are a risk and all non citizens in our military can’t do the job. It’s the ones that mean harm to us. How do we get protected from these type of incidences? Do we have to be P/C and take the risk? You, John, Rod, 44 have all taught me a lot about the military, I understand the need for these soldiers and the need for exceptional minds in NASA even if they are naturalized citizens. I posted quite a few articles that showed the spies we caught were naturalized citizens. They’re coming from citizens born here where their loyalty is to us. They’re coming from other countries. How do fix that? You simply don’t give them access to classified documents.

 
Comment by KT

Correction: They’re not coming from citizens born here where their loyalty is to us.

 
Comment by Susan- Az

On Alfredo’s link– someone put together a video of Ronald Reagan– it is really good–

May he rest in peace-

 
Comment by Susan- Az

Derek–

my son has a great sense of humor– ;)

 
Comment by John

KT…………I don’t think there is one answer to the problem of espionage, or what the motives are to perform such a dispicable act……either in the military or civilian world. Different people have different reasons, some for personal gain…..some to harm this country……..some both.
Although he wasn’t a spy, I’m always reminded of Timothy McVeigh…….a U.S born citizen and U.S soldier who served his countryu and then……

 
Comment by John

Adam……….I like that “10-80-10 rule”………that’s so true.

 
Comment by Marie

KT we will then respectfully agree to disagree. The dividing line between trust and mistrust is very fine, and from there to xenophobia is just another step. Those mom and pop naturalized citizens as you call them raised and educated children upon whom they can now look with pride, who are contributing to society. Are they to be penalized because of your fear by having barriers set up? By being told you can only make it this far and no further because we don’t trust you as you weren’t born in this country? I guess you would have to be on this side of the fence to understand. I can understand your fear of conflicting allegiances, but those are generally the exception to the rule and not the rule and if you look at the cases of spying in this country, inevitably there was an American (born in this country) somehow involved. Correct?

 
Comment by Marie

“The people who hired these spies were not capable of a proper background check.” Go after the ones who weren’t capable of a proper background check and make sure corners aren’t cut. It’s not a question of “hurting feelings” (I should ask you here who gave you the right to decide), it’s a matter of some people being more equal than others. As I’ve said before there are no guarantees. If you can guarantee that no American born in this country will ever engage in espionage, but that naturalized citizens will, then I will accept curtailing their privileges, otherwise NO.

 
Comment by Alfredo

and what about this FALN Puerto Rican terrorist, bombers in NYC?

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120277819085260827.html?mod=opinion_main_commentaries

almost freed, read this.
And now I remember Jose Serrano from NY being one of the best friends of Chavez. see why.

 

I’m not buying it, Marie. Two separate groups with two separate agendas. There’s a pattern of these naturalized citizens in gov’t working for the other side, cases I can think of that are decades old. Perhaps the fault is ours for allowing them into our nuke facilities, research labs and intelligence services and giving them the opportunities to sell us out. There appears to be more of them than the John Walkers, Robert Hansen’s and Aldrich Ames’. -Rod-

 
Comment by Karen2 (aka K2)

Adam,
RE: Merida Initiative

You are correct, one big difference is the Stuff – Equipment. But, the stuff is approximately 50% of the budget.

Also, Mexico is now questioning who will train their military / police.

The drug issue is huge…..but, the corruption in Mexico was there long before the drug trafficking.

I may be a little more sympathetic to ‘helping’ with this initiative, if the leaders of Mexico would stop encouraging their citizens to illegally enter the USA.

 

KT,

I recall a whole series of conversations on a board called “itshappening.com” after 9/11, with a US Marine who happened to be a naturalized citizen and an Arab. It wasn’t pretty. In the run up to Iraq he was very frank in telling us that he wasn’t sure he could shoot at another Muslim. I find that line of thinking unconscionable. For all I know he’s the guy that went over the hill…twice…and finally disappeared into Lebanon.

People rightfully point out that we can’t just discriminate against these guys, but at the same time we have to be realistic. If their beliefs put them at odds with the mission, then we do ourselves, them and their fellow Marines a disservice by sending them into a combat zone. If their divided loyalty is going to cause them to run off or kill their officers and other Marines, (there’s one case of that I know of) then we can’t put them in that position. -Rod-

 

K2,

Maybe 1/2 that money should be earmarked for use on Mexico’s NORTHERN border. Mexico needs to help us out here. -Rod-

 
Comment by Susan- Az

Adam–

Me too– if it is it too hard to remove your hat– don’t wear one then-

I fall in the 80% of your 10-80-10- let the truth be known-

K2– I have also stated that- corruption is been a long time thing in Mexico–

NATURALIZED CITIZEN – One who, being born an alien, has lawfully become a citizen of the United States Under the constitution and laws.

To change this, you would have to duke it out with the Constitution and the statutes-

 

John,

You do away with dual citizenship by making a naturalized citizen give up his native citizenship as well as by prohibiting natural born US citizens from becoming a citizen of another country unless he gives up his US citizenship. -Rod-

 
Comment by KT

Rod, that’s my thinking and my opinion, doesn’t make me right or wrong, just my opinion.

 
Comment by Susan- Az

Adam–

somewhere- maybe in the wine site, I saw a picture of you pitching– How fast could you pitch and how fast could you pitch today?

This is my question for the day-

 
Comment by Derek

Unfortunately we are not fighting a war that is divided along geographic or racial lines. We are fighting an enemy that is very difficult to see. Call it what you want but we are engaged in a holy war, this is not something we wanted, but something that was thrust upon us. We do not seek to destroy muslims, we do not seek to convert them, we do not seek to take their lands. We seek to preserve our freedoms. Yes the extremists want to take our freedoms, they want to convert or kill us, they want to take our lands and would if they could.

They miscalculated, they grabbed the tail of the tiger thinking the tiger would stay asleep. The tiger not only woke up but put a tiger pounce on them. They have scrambled, and are resorting to blowing up handicapped women and children because so many of them do not have the courage to follow their own beliefs.

We do not seek to change the muslim’s, we only seek to destroy a small segment of them. That is where we run into problems, because we do not persecute them, they are allowed to live, work, serve, and worship in our country. It is very difficult to distinguish between a well meaning muslim and a fanatic until the fanatic has done his harm.

I have many muslim friends that I respect and converse with and even they are stumped for answers when it comes to radical islam.

Saudi Arabia is beginning to give us a glimpse into how the rest of the worlds muslims live. Perhaps the muslims in america are heretics for believing in tolerance and kindness and understanding. Perhaps this world is going to explode into an all out holy war.

I wish we had a way of telling who was doing bad and who was doing good before the damage was done, but i think that would impede on our freedoms even more.

I do think that bringing back military firing squads for traitors, conspirators, spies, and the like would help deter a lot of it.

 
Comment by Derek

And not any kinda skilled firing squad, bring the rejects from basic rifle marksmanship, the guys that take 3 days to qualify and let the execution order read like a hanging order, instead of “hung by the neck until dead” it can read “shot by inexperienced basic training rejects until dead” that way they get shot a bunch of times while those guys are practicing their breathing and trigger squeeze and site picture. We could just hand all those guys a pile of rounds and let them fire away until the traitor is dead.

 

And to think that we might put that sleeping tiger right back into the White House…maybe that’s why the DHS and FBI today released a warning about female suicide bombers masquerading as being pregnant.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,330415,00.html

I agree that we’re in a religious war. The ONE thing that Bush did that I disagree with about the WOT was denying that fact. It doesn’t matter that it’s not *all* Muslims. Hey, OBL pledged to kill 2 million Americans. So far he’s roughly 1,994,000 short. Excuse me if I take that threat seriously. We need to step up our efforts to ensure our safety. If the Muslims are offended at being searched and scrutinized, they should ask themselves how offended we’d be were a nuke to detonate in Baltimore…or a nail bomb in a crowded mall. Excuse me if I don’t care that they are offended. -Rod-

 
Comment by Susan- Az

another spy story–

DIA (Defense Intelligence Agency) analyst Ana Belen Montes, convicted of espionage in 2002, told Cuban intelligence officers about a secret U.S. Army Special Forces camp in El Salvador that she visited in 1987. Weeks later, the camp was attacked by pro-Cuban guerrillas of the Marxist group Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front, DIA counterspy Scott W. Carmichael says in his book, “True Believer.” Mr. Carmichael, who led the DIA’s investigation of Montes, said in an interview that other Cuban agents are operating inside the U.S. government. “I believe that the Cuban Intelligence Service has penetrated the United States government to the same extent that the old East German intelligence service, the Stasi, once penetrated the West German government during the Cold War,”…(Washington Times, 15 Mar 07)

 

Susan,

I’d wager that our Dry Feet policy has indeed welcomed quite a few spies in from Cuba. It’d be silly to believe otherwise. -Rod-

 
Comment by Marie

I just reread this thread and don’t believe what I am seeing. You are pigeonholing people into “good” Americans – those born here, and “suspect” Americans – naturalized citizens. There’s a distinct hierarchy coming through in your writings which I thought I would never see in this country. Just consider the thought that all the problems in our society and all the so-called revolutions that are cropping up all over the world begin with this type of pigeonholing, dividing people and then escalate. I am truly amazed!

 

Are trying to deny that these naturalized citizens were spies? You don’t see a pattern of criminal cases with naturalized citizens being spies in government and government-run labs? I won’t be politically correct to please anyone. -Rod-

 
Comment by KT

Marie, Nobody here has lumped Americans born here into being the only good Americans out there. It has been pointed out that the ones that were caught were naturalized citizens and they became naturalized for the purpose of retreiving top secret information. That doesn’t mean that all naturalized citizens are a risk of being spies or wanting to harm to America. And of course, anyone can be a spy including American citizens born here who are traitors or greedy and want to give or sell top secret information to foreign countries. The spies that want to get at our top secret documents would need to be naturalized and get a job in the industry of choice then be granted access, unless they can make friends with an American and convince that person do their spy work for them. Protecting America and Americans, the country that you live in and nation that you chose to become part of, is top priority. Your safety is just as important as anyone elses.

Which is better Marie… being politically correct so we don’t hurt the feelings of naturalized citizens who want and deserved a better life or reducing the risk of espionage?

This nation was founded on immigrants and I’m not seeing anyone here saying anything bad about them. This is about naturalized citizens that became naturalized for the purpose of espionage.

 
 

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