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作者:Anonymous 在 罕见奇谈 发贴, 来自 http://www.hjclub.org
北京破解在美台湾间谍网 年耗千万贿美官
(博讯2004年8月18日)
大陆官方英文喉舌《中国日报》16日引述一名高阶消息人士的话说,遭中国当局以台谍罪名逮捕拘留的美籍华人董维,已供出美东地区一个大规模台谍网的资料。董维还披露台湾情治机关贿赂美国政要详情,称台湾每年都要投入几千万美元,用现金秘密收买美国会议员。
据大陆官方媒体《中国日报》引述一名高层消息人士透露,遭大陆当局以台谍罪名逮捕拘留的美籍华人董维,可能「已供出美东地区一个大规模台谍网的资料」,他将短时间内从目前在广州的拘禁地点被转至检察部门,等待被提出起诉。
据报道,董维于去年九月入境大陆之后遭到逮捕,目前被拘禁在广州。美国大使馆证实关于他的少数基本资料,其中包括他有美国公民身份。大陆当局调查则指,董维是台湾首要情报机构国安局的成员,为台湾收集机密情报,包括大陆最高领导人在秘密会议中的演说内容、大陆政经情况,以及北京当局对台、对美政策的资料。
台「国安局」买房赠董维
据《人民日报》属下的《环球时报》披露,董维于一九八六年赴美留学后,利用自己在大陆任职记者的身份,建立庞大的人际关系网,并于一九八九年结识台湾人赖胜权。在赖胜权拉线下,董维认识了台湾军情局驻日资深情报人员李海天,并基本确定了他作为台谍的身份。一九九○年,董维到新加坡,与当时任军情局三处处长、现为「国安局」副秘书长王西田会面。在王西田的要求下,董维正式加入成为台谍,化名「关宇」。
董维担任台谍每月薪金三千美元,由台「国安局」支付,另有七千美元作为工作基金。台「国安局」并给予董维一幢价值二十六万八千美元的房屋。董维在出任台谍期间,发展了五名内地人当台谍,包括原北京某校师吴健明(已取得美国国籍),及原北京某大学哲学师覃光广(已取得美国绿卡),从事情报工作。
爆台巨款收买美议员
吴健明于二○○一年在广州被捕,同年被驱逐出境;而覃光广则在二○○○年在北京被捕,后以间谍罪被判有期徒刑十年,次年七月获准保外就医。
在董维供述中,大陆赴美人员是台湾间谍机关重要的发展对象,少数大陆人为区区几百美元就不惜出卖国家机密。董维还交代,台湾每年都投入几千万美元,用现金秘密收买美国国会议员。每逢节日或有甚么值得庆祝的事,都会给各方面的政要送礼送现金。由于议员人数太多,有近六百人,所以一般是请顾问公司和基金会承包。这方面国民党和民进党都花了不少钱,民进党的投入更多一些。董维供称曾三次行贿美国政要,包括主管外交事务高官、纽约州一名议员和纽约某众议员等。
****************************************
题解,
既然洪哲老他们自称台美人,那么大陆裔美国公民就是大美人了,哈哈!!
阿官特别奉送China Daily 原文如下:
Taipei spy built network in USA
(China Daily)
Updated: 2004-08-16 06:37
Chinese-born American David Wei Dong, who is accused of stealing State secrets, may have "elicited a huge network of Taiwanese spying in the Eastern United States," a well-placed source told China Daily.
Chinese-American Dong Wei will be charged with espionage. [newsphoto/file]
"Witnesses have revealed that a couple of people on Taiwan's intelligence agency's payroll, including Dong, passed large amounts of intelligence to Taiwan," the source said.

Chinese-American Dong Wei will be charged with espionage. [newsphoto/file]
The witnesses mentioned by the source partially are based on oral declarations by another two figures who were arrested in China on espionage charges in 2001. One is Qin Guangguang, who was convicted to 10 years of imprisonment in July 2001 (and was released later for medical treatment) and the other is Wu Jianming, who was expelled from China in the same year.
Dong was arrested last September shortly after he entered the mainland, and now is being held in Guangzhou, capital of South China's Guangdong Province.
The US Embassy and Consulate only confirm a few basic facts, including he was an American citizen.
The investigation that fingered Dong as being on the payroll of Taiwan's top intelligence agency, the "national security bureau," shows that he collected confidential information, including speeches by China's top leaders in closed-door meetings, information about political and economic conditions; and Beijing's policies towards Taipei and the United States.
Recruited by Taiwanese Peter Wang, then a key figure with the Taiwan's "national security bureau," and current deputy secretary-general, Dong also introduced several "influential figures" to the intelligence agency for their spying acts against the mainland in addition to "lobbying activities" and "dollar diplomacy" in US political circles, according to the source.
For his espionage, Dong allegedly received US$3,000 per month from the Taiwanese spy agency as payment for his spying and US$7,000 to his fund for "work." He also accepted a US$268,000-valued house from the agency.
Dong will be transferred, "in all likelihood very soon," to prosecutorial departments for public prosecution, the source said.
According to Article 110 of China's Criminal Law, those who commit espionage and endangers national security will be sentenced to no less than 10 years of imprisonment or life imprisonment; and if the circumstances are relatively minor, the sentence is to be not less than three years and not more than 10 years of imprisonment.
Dong's family has employed Chen Manping with Guangdong Qiyuan Law Firm as Dong's counselor.
There is no word yet on the exact date Dong will go to trial or what sort of sentence he could be facing.
According to the Chinese judicial system, formal indictment occurs when authorities make a decision to prosecute.
"As the case involves State secrets, I think the court may not conduct a public trial," Chen said.
Chen told China Daily yesterday that his last meeting with Dong was on July 25 and the next is scheduled "in the coming two days."
Refusing to give out more details, the lawyer said that up to now, the procedure has been legal and he denied there was any pressure from outside sources although he admitted the sensitivity of the case.
Dong, 52, a former Beijing-based newspaper correspondent in Sichuan Province, also recruited Chinese students by granting them scholarships, drawing money from a US$1 million fund set up by the Taiwan military intelligence agency, according to the investigations.
Dong left the Chinese mainland to study in the United States in 1986 and became a US citizen in 1994.
Evidence shows most of Dong's activities were allegedly conducted while he lived in the United States.
The Chinese mainland has announced arrests of a number of people over the past several years on spying charges.
Li Shaomin, a Chinese-born American and Gao Zhan, a Chinese-American scholar were convicted and were expelled from the country in 2001. The above mentioned Qin is the permanent resident of the United States and Wu is a US citizen. They were all charged for collecting classified information against the mainland for the Taiwan intelligence agencies.
It is still unclear whether the US authorities have been aware of espionage occurring in the past several years in their territory or of the spying network involving US citizens or permanent residents.
Li Jianhua, a senior official with Chinese Embassy in Washington said all the countries are concerned about their own countries' security, saying that US people hold "negative reactions" to espionage.
"So do Chinese people," Li told China Daily by phone.
An international relations analyst involved in Sino-US issues who asked to remain anonymous warned that those espionage activities inside the territory of the United States also harm US interests.
In fact, besides these committing espionage against the mainland, the Taiwan intelligence agencies' job also included obtaining classified US information.
Back to 1998, 1999 and 2000, US official memorandums have warned that Taiwan's intelligence agencies attempted to obtain US technology of advanced weapons and economic confidential information, which would "pose a threat" to the country.
Taiwan authorities have "a substantial intelligence presence in the United States" and focuses its spying efforts on the United States and China, the reports said.
In addition, enrolled by the intelligence agency, Dong confessed he and some other people also worked with Taiwanese lobbyists who paid "tens of millions" US dollars to US consulting firms and foundations every year to "seek support" from the US for Taiwan, and sought to influence US politics by their "dollar-diplomacy."
The source said Dong had confessed that besides valuable gifts, Dong also saw some Taiwan intelligence employees sending "red envelopes (cash)" to US senior officials.
Dong said that in the Spring Festival of 2002, he saw an assistant of Peter Wang send a US senator "expensive china" and a "red envelope" which is claimed to have contained US$10,000.
Dong added that he was told that the intelligence agency also sent cash to some influential officials in the US Government through consulting firms although the acts are illegal in the country.
作者:Anonymous 在 罕见奇谈 发贴, 来自 http://www.hjclub.org |
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