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Sunday, December 31, 2023

Asian American Officials Cite Unfair Scrutiny and Lost Jobs in China Spy Tensions - The New York Times

National security employees with ties to Asia say U.S. counterintelligence officers wrongly regard them as potential spies and ban them from jobs.

When Thomas Wong set foot in the United States Embassy in Beijing this summer for a new diplomatic posting, it was vindication after years of battling the State Department over a perceived intelligence threat — himself.

Diplomatic Security officers had informed him when he joined the foreign service more than a decade ago that they were banning him from working in China. In a letter, he said, they wrongly cited the vague potential for undue “foreign preference” and suggested he could be vulnerable to “foreign influence.”

Mr. Wong had become a U.S. diplomat thinking that China was where he could have the greatest impact. He had grown up in a Chinese-speaking household and studied in the country. And as a graduate of West Point who had done an Army tour in the Balkans, he thought he had experience that could prove valuable in navigating relations with the United States’ greatest military and economic rival.

As he looked into the ban, he discovered that other diplomats — including many Asian American ones — faced similar restrictions. Security officers never gave the exact reasons, and they made the decisions in secret based on information gathered during the initial security clearance process. Thousands of diplomats have been affected by restrictions over the years.

Similar issues range across U.S. government agencies involved in foreign policy and national security. In the growing espionage shadow war between the United States and China, some American federal employees with ties to Asia, even distant ones, say they are being unfairly scrutinized by U.S. counterintelligence and security officers and blocked from jobs in which they could help bolster American interests.

The paranoia weakens the United States, they say, by preventing qualified employees from serving in diplomatic missions, intelligence units and other critical posts where their fluent language skills or cultural background would be useful.

This story is based on interviews with more than two dozen current and former officials from multiple national security agencies and a review of dozens of Defense Department documents on security clearance cases.

The concerns, most loudly voiced by Asian American diplomats, are urgent enough that U.S. lawmakers passed bipartisan legislation in December to try constraining some practices at the State Department. The military spending bill of Dec. 14 includes language pushed by Representative Ted Lieu, Democrat of California, intended to make the department more transparent in its assignment restriction and review processes.

“We should be asking ourselves how to deal with the risk, not cutting off the people who have the best skills from serving altogether,” Mr. Wong said. “That’s a self-inflicted wound.”

The State Department eventually reversed the ban on Mr. Wong after he and others raised the issue internally. Similarly, the State Department has lifted 1,400 assignment restrictions during the Biden administration, and Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken this year announced an end to the practice.

But there are still bars for officials to clear. Today, some 625 State Department employees remain under the ban, according to department data released to The New York Times. The agency did not explain why. In addition, counterintelligence officers can recommend bans after investigating employees with job offers to countries, most prominently China, judged to pose special intelligence threats.

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken announced this year an end to the practice of assignment restrictions, but hurdles remain.Alex Wong/Getty Images

At the F.B.I., two counterintelligence officers said separately that they were persecuted by colleagues because of their China background, according to interviews and documents examined by The Times and reported here for the first time.

Similar fears of Chinese espionage in American institutions led to the creation of the Justice Department’s China Initiative during the Trump administration, when the F.B.I. investigated many ethnic Chinese scientists inside and outside the U.S. government whom federal agents suspected of illegally aiding China. In some cases where the Justice Department was unable to find evidence of espionage, officials brought lesser charges, only to drop them — but not before damage was done to the scientists’ reputations and careers. The department shut down the China Initiative in 2022.

The processes inside the national security agencies have existed since before the China Initiative and occur in the secretive world of vetting for security clearances and assignments. Because these inquiries are not public criminal investigations, they have gotten less public attention.

Critics of the bans say an American with family members in China is no more susceptible to becoming a Chinese intelligence asset than anyone else. And they say the U.S. government has failed to catch up to a population that has undergone vast demographic shifts in recent decades. One in four children in America has at least one immigrant parent, compared with 13 percent about 20 years ago. China remains a top country of origin for newly naturalized American citizens.

Government employees have little control over those family circumstances. Some U.S. officials argue, however, that security clearance denials or job restrictions are still justified because of the Chinese government’s record of putting pressure on some foreign citizens by detaining or harassing family members in China.

Legislation in 2021 cited State Department data showing the agency had placed the most restrictions for posts in China, followed by Russia, Taiwan and Israel. Some Russian American diplomats also have been affected.

The State Department said in a statement that it does not practice discrimination based on race, ethnicity or national origin, and that Mr. Blinken is determined to build a diverse workforce. It also said its counterintelligence processes are based on guidelines from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, and 13 criteria outlined in the Foreign Affairs Manual.

Senior Asian American officials do work throughout U.S. agencies, including on Asia policy. Vice President Kamala Harris’s mother is from India, and Katherine Tai, whose parents are from Taiwan, is the U.S. trade representative, a cabinet post.

But Representative Andy Kim, Democrat of New Jersey and a former State Department diplomat, said Asian American employees from across the government have approached him with concerns about the “constant specter hanging over them.”

As a State Department employee, Representative Andy Kim, Democrat of New Jersey, was barred from working on issues involving the Korean Peninsula.Sarahbeth Maney/The New York Times

Mr. Kim, who is Korean American, got a State Department letter a dozen years ago saying he was barred from working on issues involving the Korean Peninsula.

“It was one of the most disrespectful, humiliating experiences of my career,” he said.

Many federal government agencies have their own internal security unit that conducts investigations into employees, often without notifying the employee or giving any insight into their process. In the F.B.I., the unit conducts polygraph tests and can recommend that the department withhold or revoke an employee’s security clearance.

At the State Department, security officers would use information gleaned during regular background checks for security clearance to determine whether or not to take the extraordinary step of putting an assignment restriction into the file of a diplomat.

For many U.S. officials, obtaining the initial top-secret security clearance is an intrusive process, but is needed for their jobs. Applicants list their ties in foreign countries and subject themselves to a microscopic review of their personal relationships, former employers, financial history and lifestyle. Security officers can deny or revoke a clearance for reasons like holding large debt or recent illegal drug use.

The bar that certain federal employees and contractors have to clear appears to have risen as concerns have grown about China’s espionage capabilities. Public documents posted online by the Defense Department show how in the vetting of security clearances for individual federal contractors, the assessments of China’s spying efforts over the past two decades have grown longer and more detailed, according to a review by The Times of more than three dozen of the documents.

The State Department said in a statement that it does not practice discrimination based on race, ethnicity or national origin.Joshua Roberts/Reuters

Applicants with ties to China face a “very heavy burden” of persuasion that they are not potential intelligence threats, the decisions often say.

In one 2020 decision, a 24-year-old engineer for a defense contractor who immigrated to the United States from China in middle school was described by an administrative judge as a “loyal American citizen” who lived a “typically American lifestyle.” But his ties to family members in China, while “perfectly normal,” also posed a “heightened risk of manipulation or inducement,” the judge wrote. His appeal for clearance was denied.

In another case from 2022, a man who was born in the United States and worked for a defense contractor was denied a clearance because of his wife’s Chinese relatives. The judge acknowledged that “coercion is rare,” but added that “it does occur, and there is little that China would not do to further its goals.”

Mark Zaid, a lawyer who has represented hundreds of government employees fighting agencies on security clearance decisions, said “there’s no doubt that Asians bear the brunt of that scrutiny more so than many others.”

Susan Gough, a Defense Department spokeswoman, said that security clearance determination is a “risk-based decision,” and that the department aims to verify each employee “is worthy of the special trust granted to them on behalf of our nation.”

Several public cases have revealed counterintelligence overreach within federal departments. In November 2022, Sherry Chen, a China-born American hydrologist who worked on flood forecasting, won a $1.8 million settlement from the Commerce Department after officials there accused her of unlawfully downloading sensitive government data and falsely portrayed her as a spy for China. They based their suspicions on a brief exchange she had with a former classmate who was also a local Chinese official. The F.B.I. arrested her, but prosecutors eventually dropped charges.

“They have a mindset that you are a spy, and all they want to do is prove their theory,” Ms. Chen said in an interview.

Sherry Chen, a China-born American hydrologist, won a $1.8 million settlement from the Commerce Department after officials there falsely portrayed her as a spy for China.Maddie McGarvey for The New York Times

In 2021, a Senate committee released a report about the Commerce Department’s security unit that revealed Ms. Chen was one of many Chinese American employees who had been unlawfully investigated.

The report concluded that the unit had functioned as a “rogue, unaccountable police force,” and that it had broadly targeted offices with “comparably high proportions of Asian American employees.”

Even government officers who work on China counterintelligence are sometimes perceived as potential threats by security officials. They say those parts of their background that give them a familiarity with China unfairly mark them in the eyes of officials as possible spies.

Chris Wang became a counterintelligence analyst in the F.B.I.’s Los Angeles field office after graduating from the University of California at Davis. Although he got a top-secret security clearance, he was handed a letter on his first day in 2011 stating he was being placed in a special internal surveillance program known as PARM, in which his contacts, travels and computer use would be scrutinized by security officials. He would also be subject to frequent polygraph tests and interviews, according to a copy of the letter Mr. Wang shared with The Times.

“Your foreign contacts and foreign travel create a heightened risk of foreign exploitation,” it said.

Mr. Wang had trained under Chinese martial arts teachers in California and had done a half-year of undergraduate study in Shanghai.

A newly hired counterintelligence analyst in the F.B.I.’s Los Angeles field office in 2011 was told he was being placed in a special internal surveillance program because of his “foreign contacts and foreign travel.” He had trained under Chinese martial arts teachers in California and studied for half a year in Shanghai.Jake Michaels for The New York Times

His supervisors assigned him to counterintelligence on China. Then he lost access to the most sensitive information after failing a polygraph test; he said he was nervous because he feared being wrongly accused of having nefarious China ties.

While he passed a subsequent polygraph test and security interview to become an agent, Mr. Wang quit in 2020, after officials told him they would do an administrative inquiry into him, he said.

“Because of the stigma around China, Chinese Americans are more likely to be put in a box even if their associations are innocent in nature,” Mr. Wang said.

Another former F.B.I. officer who worked in counterintelligence, Jason Lee, said he was suing the agency for discrimination and for using national security as a cover for abusive behavior. At one point, he said, a polygraph test interrogator noted that Mr. Lee’s father also worked in a sensitive government job and wrongly accused him of being part of a “father-son Chinese spy ring.” Mr. Lee said that infuriated him and caused him to fail the test.

The F.B.I. declined to comment on specific cases but said it conducts polygraph tests fairly. It also said that “diversity is a core value” and that it fosters an environment where employees “are respected, are encouraged to be who they are, and are afforded every opportunity to thrive.”

At the State Department, a group representing Asian American employees has worked to push the agency to overhaul assignment restrictions. That has led to laws since 2016 aimed at forcing changes.

“I know dozens of diplomats who have lost out on getting assignments to China, Hong Kong and Vietnam,” said Yuki Kondo-Shah, a diplomat in London who successfully fought an assignment restriction banning her from Japan.

Although the employees praise Mr. Blinken’s statement in March announcing a softening of restrictions, they worry about another limit still in place: the provision called assignment review, in which counterintelligence officers can recommend bans after a routine investigation of employees with offers for posts that department officials assert have special intelligence threats.

“It’s really problematic,” said Tina Wong, a vice president of the U.S. Foreign Service union.

The list of posts is classified, but The Times learned that in addition to China, it includes Russia, Vietnam and Israel, which is a U.S. partner.

Tina Wong, a vice president of the union for Foreign Service employees, described the process in which counterintelligence officers can recommend bans as “really problematic.” Shuran Huang for The New York Times

Stallion Yang, a diplomat whom the State Department once banned from working in Taiwan, has gathered data for the Asian American Foreign Affairs Association, an employee group, about officials up for postings to one of the special intelligence-threat countries. Since 2021, he said, he has tracked 22 cases of employees with ties to Asia who were under investigation for longer than the standard period of one month.

The association sent a letter to Mr. Blinken raising concerns. Last month, John Bass, the under secretary of state for management, replied in a letter obtained by The Times that of 391 assignment-review investigations in the last year, only nine had resulted in a recommendation of rejection.

But diplomats say the number does not take into account employees who moved on to other jobs after the investigations dragged on.

And beyond those concerns, there are aspiring diplomats who were cut out of jobs much earlier, even failing to get security clearance approval.

One China-born American, Ruiqi Zheng, 25, said the State Department told her she would be denied a security clearance even though she had begun a selective fellowship there. After a clearance process lasting almost two years, she was rejected in 2021 because of ties to family members and others abroad, she said.

“Everyone I knew told me that it was too good to be true, that America would never accept foreign-born Chinese Americans like me,” she said. “But I chose to trust the process.”

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'I feel this is mostly targeted': Asian-American families in Redmond experience home break-ins and burglaries - KING5.com

In an email to KING 5, Redmond police said they are encouraging all homeowners to leave their lights on while they’re away to give the appearance of being home.

REDMOND, Wash. — In the last few months, Redmond police have had their hands full with home burglary cases. In October, detectives asked the public for surveillance footage to help them solve five recent burglaries that were similar to one another.

The break-ins continued this December, however. KING 5 has now learned of two additional Redmond home burglaries. In both cases, the victims are members of the Redmond's Asian-American community.

"We have kids and they are scared. Is it safe to live here? Like, we don't know," said Rajeev Rangappa, a homeowner in Redmond's Hawthorne community.

Redmond residents said they saw a red SUV cruising the Hawthorne neighborhood Wednesday. Then, on Thursday afternoon, Rangappa's home was burglarized.

"I know clearly that it was our safe, they took it," said Rangappa.

Surveillance video from his front door show the thieves running away with his family safe, as well as a backpack full of unknown items.

That safe was filled with their family’s passports and other valuables, he said.

“All the jewelry of my wife, my son, mine, everything is gone," said Rangappa.

The break-in happened just thirty minutes after he stepped out of his home to go shopping and run some errands with his son and nephew. When he got home, he was horrified.

"Clothes everywhere," he said. "And they they opened all the drawers, so they just ransacked everything.” 

It had turned out the burglars had made entry through his backdoor, after destroying his backdoor camera. 

"They disabled it, and they had thrown it on the floor. So it was not working at that point of time," said Rangappa.

Sadly, he said the only footage he has of the suspects does not show their faces. So he went on social media and came to find he’d had a shared experience with a couple who lives just minutes away.

"I feel this is mostly targeted towards Indians or Asian community folks," said Rangappa.

Neeru Goyal said she also wants to know why she was targeted. She shared her story on the Nextdoor App.

She said her nearby home was burglarized just days prior. 

"We came back on December 25, when we saw our whole house was ransacked," said Goyal.

Both victims were shocked about the similarities. 

"Whatever we accumulate in last 15, 16 years, as a part of our savings is lost," said Goyal.

Goyal, though, thinks she has an idea of who was involved in her burglary.

She showed KING 5 a video from her Ring doorbell that revealed a man dressed in all black, knocking on her door for several minutes straight.

"He kept peeking through the window. That was little creepy," she said.

She said she and her husband do not know the man.

"He was making sure that there's nobody at home," she said. "That guy kept knocking on the door for five minutes.” 

Police have not confirmed if he’s a suspect, but they did urge the public to call them at 425-556-2500 if you have any helpful information about recent burglaries. 

Redmond police were not available for an interview this weekend, but the home burglary victims told us they are hoping police will be more communicative with them going forward, if anything, to let them know they’re working on their cases. They are hopeful they will find the burglars-- and the families' precious belongings.

In an email to KING 5, Redmond police said they are encouraging all homeowners to leave their lights on while they’re away to give the appearance of being home. They also said to secure valuables in an offsite safety deposit box or heavy-duty safe that can be bolted down.

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Asian American Officials Cite Unfair Scrutiny and Lost Jobs in China Spy Tensions - The New York Times

National security employees with ties to Asia say U.S. counterintelligence officers wrongly regard them as potential spies and ban them from jobs.

When Thomas Wong set foot in the United States Embassy in Beijing this summer for a new diplomatic posting, it was vindication after years of battling the State Department over a perceived intelligence threat — himself.

Diplomatic Security officers had informed him when he joined the foreign service more than a decade ago that they were banning him from working in China. In a letter, he said, they wrongly cited the vague potential for undue “foreign preference” and suggested he could be vulnerable to “foreign influence.”

Mr. Wong had become a U.S. diplomat thinking that China was where he could have the greatest impact. He had grown up in a Chinese-speaking household and studied in the country. And as a graduate of West Point who had done an Army tour in the Balkans, he thought he had experience that could prove valuable in navigating relations with the United States’ greatest military and economic rival.

As he looked into the ban, he discovered that other diplomats — including many Asian American ones — faced similar restrictions. Security officers never gave the exact reasons, and they made the decisions in secret based on information gathered during the initial security clearance process. Thousands of diplomats have been affected by restrictions over the years.

Similar issues range across U.S. government agencies involved in foreign policy and national security. In the growing espionage shadow war between the United States and China, some American federal employees with ties to Asia, even distant ones, say they are being unfairly scrutinized by U.S. counterintelligence and security officers and blocked from jobs in which they could help bolster American interests.

The paranoia weakens the United States, they say, by preventing qualified employees from serving in diplomatic missions, intelligence units and other critical posts where their fluent language skills or cultural background would be useful.

This story is based on interviews with more than two dozen current and former officials from multiple national security agencies and a review of dozens of Defense Department documents on security clearance cases.

The concerns, most loudly voiced by Asian American diplomats, are urgent enough that U.S. lawmakers passed bipartisan legislation in December to try constraining some practices at the State Department. The military spending bill of Dec. 14 includes language pushed by Representative Ted Lieu, Democrat of California, intended to make the department more transparent in its assignment restriction and review processes.

“We should be asking ourselves how to deal with the risk, not cutting off the people who have the best skills from serving altogether,” Mr. Wong said. “That’s a self-inflicted wound.”

The State Department eventually reversed the ban on Mr. Wong after he and others raised the issue internally. Similarly, the State Department has lifted 1,400 assignment restrictions during the Biden administration, and Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken this year announced an end to the practice.

But there are still bars for officials to clear. Today, some 625 State Department employees remain under the ban, according to department data released to The New York Times. The agency did not explain why. In addition, counterintelligence officers can recommend bans after investigating employees with job offers to countries, most prominently China, judged to pose special intelligence threats.

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken announced this year an end to the practice of assignment restrictions, but hurdles remain.Alex Wong/Getty Images

At the F.B.I., two counterintelligence officers said separately that they were persecuted by colleagues because of their China background, according to interviews and documents examined by The Times and reported here for the first time.

Similar fears of Chinese espionage in American institutions led to the creation of the Justice Department’s China Initiative during the Trump administration, when the F.B.I. investigated many ethnic Chinese scientists inside and outside the U.S. government whom federal agents suspected of illegally aiding China. In some cases where the Justice Department was unable to find evidence of espionage, officials brought lesser charges, only to drop them — but not before damage was done to the scientists’ reputations and careers. The department shut down the China Initiative in 2022.

The processes inside the national security agencies have existed since before the China Initiative and occur in the secretive world of vetting for security clearances and assignments. Because these inquiries are not public criminal investigations, they have gotten less public attention.

Critics of the bans say an American with family members in China is no more susceptible to becoming a Chinese intelligence asset than anyone else. And they say the U.S. government has failed to catch up to a population that has undergone vast demographic shifts in recent decades. One in four children in America has at least one immigrant parent, compared with 13 percent about 20 years ago. China remains a top country of origin for newly naturalized American citizens.

Government employees have little control over those family circumstances. Some U.S. officials argue, however, that security clearance denials or job restrictions are still justified because of the Chinese government’s record of putting pressure on some foreign citizens by detaining or harassing family members in China.

Legislation in 2021 cited State Department data showing the agency had placed the most restrictions for posts in China, followed by Russia, Taiwan and Israel. Some Russian American diplomats also have been affected.

The State Department said in a statement that it does not practice discrimination based on race, ethnicity or national origin, and that Mr. Blinken is determined to build a diverse workforce. It also said its counterintelligence processes are based on guidelines from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, and 13 criteria outlined in the Foreign Affairs Manual.

Senior Asian American officials do work throughout U.S. agencies, including on Asia policy. Vice President Kamala Harris’s mother is from India, and Katherine Tai, whose parents are from Taiwan, is the U.S. trade representative, a cabinet post.

But Representative Andy Kim, Democrat of New Jersey and a former State Department diplomat, said Asian American employees from across the government have approached him with concerns about the “constant specter hanging over them.”

As a State Department employee, Representative Andy Kim, Democrat of New Jersey, was barred from working on issues involving the Korean Peninsula.Sarahbeth Maney/The New York Times

Mr. Kim, who is Korean American, got a State Department letter a dozen years ago saying he was barred from working on issues involving the Korean Peninsula.

“It was one of the most disrespectful, humiliating experiences of my career,” he said.

Many federal government agencies have their own internal security unit that conducts investigations into employees, often without notifying the employee or giving any insight into their process. In the F.B.I., the unit conducts polygraph tests and can recommend that the department withhold or revoke an employee’s security clearance.

At the State Department, security officers would use information gleaned during regular background checks for security clearance to determine whether or not to take the extraordinary step of putting an assignment restriction into the file of a diplomat.

For many U.S. officials, obtaining the initial top-secret security clearance is an intrusive process, but is needed for their jobs. Applicants list their ties in foreign countries and subject themselves to a microscopic review of their personal relationships, former employers, financial history and lifestyle. Security officers can deny or revoke a clearance for reasons like holding large debt or recent illegal drug use.

The bar that certain federal employees and contractors have to clear appears to have risen as concerns have grown about China’s espionage capabilities. Public documents posted online by the Defense Department show how in the vetting of security clearances for individual federal contractors, the assessments of China’s spying efforts over the past two decades have grown longer and more detailed, according to a review by The Times of more than three dozen of the documents.

The State Department said in a statement that it does not practice discrimination based on race, ethnicity or national origin.Joshua Roberts/Reuters

Applicants with ties to China face a “very heavy burden” of persuasion that they are not potential intelligence threats, the decisions often say.

In one 2020 decision, a 24-year-old engineer for a defense contractor who immigrated to the United States from China in middle school was described by an administrative judge as a “loyal American citizen” who lived a “typically American lifestyle.” But his ties to family members in China, while “perfectly normal,” also posed a “heightened risk of manipulation or inducement,” the judge wrote. His appeal for clearance was denied.

In another case from 2022, a man who was born in the United States and worked for a defense contractor was denied a clearance because of his wife’s Chinese relatives. The judge acknowledged that “coercion is rare,” but added that “it does occur, and there is little that China would not do to further its goals.”

Mark Zaid, a lawyer who has represented hundreds of government employees fighting agencies on security clearance decisions, said “there’s no doubt that Asians bear the brunt of that scrutiny more so than many others.”

Susan Gough, a Defense Department spokeswoman, said that security clearance determination is a “risk-based decision,” and that the department aims to verify each employee “is worthy of the special trust granted to them on behalf of our nation.”

Several public cases have revealed counterintelligence overreach within federal departments. In November 2022, Sherry Chen, a China-born American hydrologist who worked on flood forecasting, won a $1.8 million settlement from the Commerce Department after officials there accused her of unlawfully downloading sensitive government data and falsely portrayed her as a spy for China. They based their suspicions on a brief exchange she had with a former classmate who was also a local Chinese official. The F.B.I. arrested her, but prosecutors eventually dropped charges.

“They have a mindset that you are a spy, and all they want to do is prove their theory,” Ms. Chen said in an interview.

Sherry Chen, a China-born American hydrologist, won a $1.8 million settlement from the Commerce Department after officials there falsely portrayed her as a spy for China.Maddie McGarvey for The New York Times

In 2021, a Senate committee released a report about the Commerce Department’s security unit that revealed Ms. Chen was one of many Chinese American employees who had been unlawfully investigated.

The report concluded that the unit had functioned as a “rogue, unaccountable police force,” and that it had broadly targeted offices with “comparably high proportions of Asian American employees.”

Even government officers who work on China counterintelligence are sometimes perceived as potential threats by security officials. They say those parts of their background that give them a familiarity with China unfairly mark them in the eyes of officials as possible spies.

Chris Wang became a counterintelligence analyst in the F.B.I.’s Los Angeles field office after graduating from the University of California at Davis. Although he got a top-secret security clearance, he was handed a letter on his first day in 2011 stating he was being placed in a special internal surveillance program known as PARM, in which his contacts, travels and computer use would be scrutinized by security officials. He would also be subject to frequent polygraph tests and interviews, according to a copy of the letter Mr. Wang shared with The Times.

“Your foreign contacts and foreign travel create a heightened risk of foreign exploitation,” it said.

Mr. Wang had trained under Chinese martial arts teachers in California and had done a half-year of undergraduate study in Shanghai.

A newly hired counterintelligence analyst in the F.B.I.’s Los Angeles field office in 2011 was told he was being placed in a special internal surveillance program because of his “foreign contacts and foreign travel.” He had trained under Chinese martial arts teachers in California and studied for half a year in Shanghai.Jake Michaels for The New York Times

His supervisors assigned him to counterintelligence on China. Then he lost access to the most sensitive information after failing a polygraph test; he said he was nervous because he feared being wrongly accused of having nefarious China ties.

While he passed a subsequent polygraph test and security interview to become an agent, Mr. Wang quit in 2020, after officials told him they would do an administrative inquiry into him, he said.

“Because of the stigma around China, Chinese Americans are more likely to be put in a box even if their associations are innocent in nature,” Mr. Wang said.

Another former F.B.I. officer who worked in counterintelligence, Jason Lee, said he was suing the agency for discrimination and for using national security as a cover for abusive behavior. At one point, he said, a polygraph test interrogator noted that Mr. Lee’s father also worked in a sensitive government job and wrongly accused him of being part of a “father-son Chinese spy ring.” Mr. Lee said that infuriated him and caused him to fail the test.

The F.B.I. declined to comment on specific cases but said it conducts polygraph tests fairly. It also said that “diversity is a core value” and that it fosters an environment where employees “are respected, are encouraged to be who they are, and are afforded every opportunity to thrive.”

At the State Department, a group representing Asian American employees has worked to push the agency to overhaul assignment restrictions. That has led to laws since 2016 aimed at forcing changes.

“I know dozens of diplomats who have lost out on getting assignments to China, Hong Kong and Vietnam,” said Yuki Kondo-Shah, a diplomat in London who successfully fought an assignment restriction banning her from Japan.

Although the employees praise Mr. Blinken’s statement in March announcing a softening of restrictions, they worry about another limit still in place: the provision called assignment review, in which counterintelligence officers can recommend bans after a routine investigation of employees with offers for posts that department officials assert have special intelligence threats.

“It’s really problematic,” said Tina Wong, a vice president of the U.S. Foreign Service union.

The list of posts is classified, but The Times learned that in addition to China, it includes Russia, Vietnam and Israel, which is a U.S. partner.

Tina Wong, a vice president of the union for Foreign Service employees, described the process in which counterintelligence officers can recommend bans as “really problematic.” Shuran Huang for The New York Times

Stallion Yang, a diplomat whom the State Department once banned from working in Taiwan, has gathered data for the Asian American Foreign Affairs Association, an employee group, about officials up for postings to one of the special intelligence-threat countries. Since 2021, he said, he has tracked 22 cases of employees with ties to Asia who were under investigation for longer than the standard period of one month.

The association sent a letter to Mr. Blinken raising concerns. Last month, John Bass, the under secretary of state for management, replied in a letter obtained by The Times that of 391 assignment-review investigations in the last year, only nine had resulted in a recommendation of rejection.

But diplomats say the number does not take into account employees who moved on to other jobs after the investigations dragged on.

And beyond those concerns, there are aspiring diplomats who were cut out of jobs much earlier, even failing to get security clearance approval.

One China-born American, Ruiqi Zheng, 25, said the State Department told her she would be denied a security clearance even though she had begun a selective fellowship there. After a clearance process lasting almost two years, she was rejected in 2021 because of ties to family members and others abroad, she said.

“Everyone I knew told me that it was too good to be true, that America would never accept foreign-born Chinese Americans like me,” she said. “But I chose to trust the process.”

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Friday, December 29, 2023

Real Estate Stress Is Brewing in Asian Markets Other Than China - Yahoo Finance

(Bloomberg) -- Surging interest rates and regulatory scrutiny are causing distress for builders and creditors in Asian economies from South Korea to Vietnam, highlighting the breadth of housing woes in a region overshadowed by China’s crisis.

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While aggressive monetary tightening and the pandemic have had a more pronounced impact on commercial property in the US and Europe, it’s residential housing that is under more strain in Asia. One of the worst hit nations, Korea, saw the steepest home price slump in 25 years while a construction firm’s repayment struggle has rekindled fears of repeating the credit market turmoil in 2022.

“Countries that had high consumer debt or balance sheet burden will be areas that you want to focus on,” said Kheng Siang Ng, head of Asia Pacific fixed income at State Street Global Advisors. “Korea is one of them. Housing markets have been softening.”

Here are some places where property market risks have the potential to boil over in 2024:

South Korea

Korea’s property market is showing the most strain after China in the region, with prices in 2023 falling by the most in a quarter of a century after years of growth. The weakness is the direct outcome of moves by the Bank of Korea — the first major Asian central central bank to kick off the current monetary tightening cycle in 2021 — to push its policy rate to a 15-year high.

Turning the weakness into a crisis was a theme-park developer’s debt blowup in late 2022 that snowballed into the worst meltdown in the country’s credit market since the global financial crisis. While a suite of government rescue measures stabilized the situation, an engineering and construction company’s request to reschedule debt in late December prompted authorities to pledge more support.

Bad debts for both households and companies are piling up and the Bank of Korea said risks related to project financing debt - a type of security used to finance construction that triggered the 2022 crisis — are likely to increase next year. Even so, officials say the country’s financial system will generally remain stable.

The “potential restructuring of real estate project financing loans from the middle of 2024 following the election in April 2024 could raise volatility in the short-term money market at least temporarily,” said Citigroup Inc. economist Kim Jin-wook.

Indonesia

The local central bank’s most aggressive rate hikes since 2005 put heavily indebted home builders such as PT Lippo Karawaci and PT Agung Podomoro under pressure, as it crimped household purchasing power. A weak currency made matters worse, by increasing the cost of servicing their soon-to-mature dollar debt, forcing them to resort to asset sales to raise cash.

Fitch Ratings said at the end of November that “some kind of default is probable” on Agung Podomoro’s $132 million bond due in June 2024 after it has canceled an offer to buy back part of the unsecured notes. Refinancing risks for Lippo Karawaci, Lippo Group’s Indonesia unit, also are rising, according to Fitch, which downgraded the firm’s dollar note due in January 2025 to CCC+ in November.

But the prospect of an end to Indonesia’s policy tightening is giving dollar-denominated property notes an uplift, as investors anticipate an improvement to real estate demand.

Fitch has predicted a recovery in local corporate bond sales, citing increased refinancing needs and a more supportive economic environment. Borrowers are expected to continue to prefer shorter-tenor issuance in 2024, as there is higher demand for short-term notes amid rate uncertainty, Fitch said.

Vietnam

The government’s ambitious anti-graft campaign upended Vietnam’s property sector already plagued by oversupply, impeding corporate bond issuance that triggered a liquidity crunch and missed payments by borrowers. But regulatory interventions and multiple interest rate cuts have slowed the downward spiral.

“Vietnam’s real estate market has had an extraordinarily challenging year, but we believe the worst of the downturn has now passed,” Michael Kokalari, chief economist at VinaCapital Group Ltd., wrote in a report. “Mortgage rates peaked at as high as 16% at some banks in early 2023 but subsequently dropped dramatically.”

Still, signs of trouble remain. Some banks have thin capital buffers and some have high exposure to real estate, according to Sue Ong, credit analyst at S&P Global Ratings.

The poster child of the property woes is Novaland Investment Group Corp., one of the country’s biggest developers, notable for having a US-currency bond. The company agreed a maturity extension on holders of its $300 million convertible note, after an interest payment failure in July.

While the price of the note picked up on news the firm had struck a deal with creditors, the note is still indicated at 36 cents on the dollar, according to Bloomberg-compiled data. That’s a deeply distressed level showing low investor expectations for full debt recovery.

Hong Kong

Perpetual dollar bonds issued by several of the city’s developers suffered their worst selloff in years in August, amid worries about soaring financing costs and the spillover impact of China’s real estate woes. Leading the declines were New World Development Co. — one of Hong Kong’s most indebted developers. It’s debt underperformed industry peers this year.

Behind investors’ nervousness is a local property slump that saw the city’s home prices drop to the lowest in almost seven years. Revenues from office buildings and retail space have also weakened following three years of stringent Covid curbs and the Federal Reserve’s historic monetary tightening.

Demand was so depressed that Hong Kong developers were forced to cut home prices significantly, a tactic they hadn’t deployed for years, while banks struggled to lure buyers for foreclosed homes at equally deep discounts.

“We are cautious about developers in Hong Kong with large exposure to residential and commercial properties in lower tier cities in mainland China as well as those with large office portfolios outside prime districts due to the elevated vacancy rate and continued negative rental revisions,” said Zerlina Zeng, senior credit analyst at Creditsights. “We continue underweight Hong Kong developers with higher leverage due to the rising HKD funding costs, which would persist in 1H24.”

Australia

It’s a slightly different form of property stress in Down Under, where the Reserve Bank of Australia’s aggressive tightening cycle has raised concerns over households’ ability to stomach higher interest rates.

The International Monetary Fund has indicated the country is liable to feel the effect of higher borrowing costs, at a time when a large chunk of home loans fixed at record-low rates during the pandemic are set to be rolled over to higher, floating rates. In Australia, more than 50% of mortgages have variable rates, according to the IMF.

The RBA warned in October that a small but growing number of households were in the early stages of financial stress. About 14% fixed-rate borrowers expected to face an rise in mortgage payments of more than 60% once their maturities expire, it said.

Data from the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority on banks’ residential property exposure show new non-performing loans climbing to a three-year high though they still remain relatively low.

--With assistance from Nguyen Kieu Giang, Whanwoong Choi, Sharon Klyne, Claire Jiao, Swati Pandey, Jane Pong, Alice Huang, Jeremy Diamond and Jaehyun Eom.

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8 Asian Women Artists Turning Folklore into Sci-Fi Visions - Artsy

Art

Alexis Ong

Dec 28, 2023 2:00PM

Fei Yi Ning, still from The Moonshore, 2021. Courtesy of the artist.

Many iconic moments in Western science fiction are visions of hyper-masculine conquest, imbued with orientalist overtones that often depict “the East” as an arcane, unknowable world. Today, moving beyond these entrenched biases, Asian women artists and collectives are working to reshape a genre too often defined by white male interests.

These eight artists—each tapping into their respective folklores and cultural histories—illuminate much deeper and more personal territory than the usual sci-fi fare. Their work was also recently featured at “New Eden: New Science Fiction Mythologies Transformed” at the ArtScience Museum in Singapore.

B. 1972, San Francisco. Lives and works in Los Angeles.

Patty Chang, installation view of Mountain (Shangri-La), 2005–23, in “New Eden: New Science Fiction Mythologies Transformed” at the ArtScience Museum, Singapore, 2023. Courtesy of the ArtScience Museum.

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When it comes to subverting the mystique of Asia through Western eyes, Patty Chang’s installation Shangri-La (2005) is a perfect primer. Its main component is a 40-minute film in which Chang visits the Chinese city of Zhongdian, which was officially renamed Shangri-La City in 2001. In the film, the artist reveals the gulf between mundane tourism and the myth of a near-immortal paradise. The film loops next to its companion piece, a mirrored mountain sculpture that can be turned around like an abstract version of a Tibetan prayer wheel. Chang’s work was inspired by James Hilton’s novel Lost Horizon (1933) where the European fantasy of the Himalayas concealing a cloud-wreathed mountain utopia originated.

Chang’s work has been exhibited at the New Museum, Hammer Museum, the Moderna Museet, and more. She has received numerous honors including the Rockefeller Foundation Grant and the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship. She teaches at the University of Southern California.

B. 1985, Tehran. Lives and works in New York.

Morehshin Allahyari, installation view of Huma, from the series “She Who Sees The Unknown,” 2017–20, in “New Eden: New Science Fiction Mythologies Transformed” at the ArtScience Museum, Singapore, 2023. Courtesy of the ArtScience Museum.

Iranian Kurdish new media artist Morehshin Allahyari pointedly challenges digital colonialism in her research series “She Who Sees The Unknown” (2017–20). She uses Middle Eastern and North African mythologies to reshape heteropatriarchal traditions that define goddesses and oft-vilified female jinn (which comes from an Arabic word for demon or spirit). The series is made up of five multimedia installations that focus on different figures and aspects of mythology.

In the installation that introduces the nightmare-inducing jinn known as Kabous, Allahyari uses VR to create an intimate portrayal of war-driven dystopia, generational trauma, and salvation in the birth of a monstrous healer-daughter. In Huma, a fever-causing jinn is reimagined as a decolonizing entity that can control global warming. Allahyari’s work is connected to ongoing critical conversations around patriarchy, imperialism, and the environment.

Allahyari has received numerous awards and fellowships, most recently the United States Artist Fellowship in 2021. Her work has been shown at the Venice Architecture Biennale, the Whitney Museum of American Art, Tate Modern, and more.

The House of Natural Fiber

F. 1999. Based in Indonesia.

The House of Natural Fiber, installation view of Galactica v.2 Dharma Garden, 2023, in “New Eden: New Science Fiction Mythologies Transformed” at the ArtScience Museum, Singapore, 2023. Courtesy of the ArtScience Museum.

Yogyakarta, Indonesia–based collective The House of Natural Fiber was commissioned by the ArtScience Museum to produce Galactica v.2 Dharma Garden (2023), a new mixed-media installation that reimagines the Hindu goddess Lakshmi as an interstellar traveler arriving on new planets to terraform them into lush, thriving worlds.

A mural of fantastical godlike beings forms the backdrop for circular wall-mounted sculpture made with computer hardware: This is Lakshmi’s dharmic wheel-shaped ship—a green-lit glass cylinder of soil surrounded by eight ambiently swirling screens and softly beeping, terrarium-like environmental sensors. The wheel is a significant symbol in multiple Indian religions, but seen through the lens of Lakshmi—a goddess of agriculture, fertility, and prosperity—it evokes stewardship of life. It’s a thoughtful, technologically driven work that synthesizes the maternal aspect of the goddess with social and universal responsibilities, and the visual language of space travel.

The House of Natural Fiber is an interdisciplinary new media collective that explores social and environmental issues with an eye to practicality. In 2011, their installation Intelligent Bacteria – Saccharomyces cerevisiae won the transmediale award at Transmediale festival in Berlin. They have exhibited at new media space ESC in Austria, the Mal Au Pixel festival in Paris, and the Next Wave Festival in Melbourne.

B. 1994, Singapore. Lives and works in Newcastle, England.

Kara Chin, Awakening Ceremony, 2021. Courtesy of the artist and VITRINE, London and Basel.

Kara Chin’s gorgeous animation Awakening Ceremony (2021) intimately traces the evolution of domestic caregiving into rituals of worship. Against a vermillion-tiled kitchen tableau filled with kettles and robotic arms, small machines create their own life-giving ceremony to honor a large coffee dispenser. The palette is a technicolor version of a traditional Imari glaze, often used in Japanese porcelain exported to the West, but centered on the “Chinese red”—a talismanic shade in several Asian cultures that recurs throughout Chin’s practice, which also encompasses ceramic sculptures and installation. The result is a touching depiction of instinct and purpose, poking at the recurring ways in which we attempt to find meaning through technology, and the ease with which we identify with anthropomorphized objects.

Chin was selected for the U.K.’s annual New Contemporaries list in 2018, the same year she received the Woon Foundation Painting and Sculpture Prize. Her work was featured in the 8th International Triennial of Art and Ecology, and has been exhibited at galleries across the U.K. including Fieldworks, Goldsmiths Centre for Contemporary Arts, and The Milton Gallery. She is represented by VITRINE, which presented a solo booth by the artist at Frieze London 2023.

B. 1985, Tokyo. Lives and works in Tokyo.

Sputniko! and Napp Studio & Architects, installation view of Red Silk of Fate, 2021, in “New Eden: New Science Fiction Mythologies Transformed” at the ArtScience Museum, Singapore, 2023. Courtesy of the ArtScience Museum.

Sputniko!’s installation Red Silk of Fate (2021) is created using threads spun by silkworms genetically engineered to create oxytocin-infused silk. Long banners of red silk form a shrine-shaped roof that fills the gallery, with a circular halo of the titular red threads in the middle. The work refers to the East Asian belief that true lovers are bound by a red thread. This traditional line of thought is embodied by the shrine structure, but is challenged by the modern sensibilities of the short film Red Silk of Fate - Tamaki’s Crush, which plays alongside it. It’s a raucous, technologically fueled take on the shoujo genre of romance comics aimed at young women. In the video, a lovesick scientist engineers a “red silk of fate” to win over her male colleague, but doesn’t quite anticipate the potency of her creation.

Sputniko!’s work has been exhibited around the world including at the Cooper-Hewitt Design Museum, MoMA, and Mori Art Museum, and at festivals like the Triennale di Milano and Setouchi Art Triennale. She has received many honors, including the 2020 ASIAGRAPH’s Tsumugi Award, and held design-focused teaching positions at MIT and the University of Tokyo.

Club Ate

F. 2014. Based in Sydney.

Club Ate, still from Ex Nilalang Balud, 2015. Courtesy of the artists.

In films, installations, and performance art, Club Ate reinvents myths and legends from the Philippines into new, spiritually driven “future folklore.” Last year, their installation ANG IDOL KO / YOU ARE MY IDOL (2022) drew connections between historical indigenous shamans called Babaylan in the region (who were often queer and trans) and queer and trans idols today.

Across their films, they explore the idea of a “skyworld,” which evokes the malleable and impermanent nature of the imagination, inspired by ancient Tagalog stories. The series of films “Ex Nilalang” (2015–16) deconstructs colonial narratives that have vilified queerness and otherness in Filipinx mythology. Each “episode” recasts a different spirit or monster into a powerful, yet vulnerable creature, creating a richer understanding of their culture.

The Club Ate collective is led by Justin Talplacido Shoulder and Bhenji Ra. Shoulder also makes performance work under the pseudonym Phasmahammer and is the co-founder of queer artist collective The Glitter Militia. Ra is the mother of the House of Slé ballroom house/artist collective. Club Ate have performed and exhibited at the Sydney Biennale 2020, M+ Museum, the 8th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art, the National Gallery of Australia, and more.

B. 1990, Harbin, China. Lives and works in Shanghai.

Fei Yi Ning, still from The Moonshore, 2021. Courtesy of the artist.

Fei Yi Ning’s film and animation work explores the relationship between humans, technology, and the environment. The Moonshore (2021) is a dreamy but unsettling excursion into a posthuman future where people rely on AI-powered devices to combat short-term memory loss induced by ocean algae. At times, the film replicates the familiar visual language of classical Chinese mythology and literature while using organic shapes and microscopic slides to create a hallucinatory narrative about an uncertain future. Here, the AI caregiver is portrayed as an “aging priestess” in charge of memory.

Fei’s work has been shown at the 2022 Beijing Biennale, UCCA Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing, the MAXXI Museum in Rome, Friedman Benda in New York, the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne, and more.

B. 1979, Gifu, Japan. Lives and works in New York.

Saya Woolfalk, installation view of Cloudscape, 2021, in “New Eden: New Science Fiction Mythologies Transformed” at the ArtScience Museum, Singapore, 2023. Courtesy of the ArtScience Museum.

Saya Woolfalk’s “Empathics” are a fictional, interspecies race of women who have evolved with plants and animals into an entirely new sort of being. Drawing from her own identity and experience, the artist explores these speculative, hybrid concepts through a distinctly Afrofuturistic lens. For example, in the video installation Cloudscape (2021), patchwork-style collages of plant-like structures surround a brightly animated humanoid form with Woolfalk’s face, adorned with ceremonial headgear and face paint. Depicted in a bright, almost folk art aesthetic, the Empathics are also portrayed through prints and multimedia installations, gesturing to a new social and cultural ideal—an ever-changing, ever-transforming, ever-growing entity that uses hybridity as a path to utopia.

Woolfalk has received numerous awards and honors including a Fulbright Program grant, the Joan Mitchell Foundation MFA Grant, and the Franklin Furnace Fund Grant. Her work has been shown at the Frist Center for Visual Arts, the Whitney Museum of American Art, MoMA PS1, and more. She currently teaches at Parsons New School for Design and is represented by Leslie Tonkonow Artworks + Projects.

Alexis Ong

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