A report by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) released on Wednesday alleges that China is sending military scientists to Western universities to engage in advanced studies to improve the People’s Liberation Army military capabilities.
The report, “Picking Flowers, Making Honey,” notes that international cooperation and an open spirit of collaboration, including with Chinese scientists, has led to some of the great scientific achievements of recent times.
But the report also notes that the PLA “has also ridden this wave of research collaboration, sponsoring more than 2,500 scientists to travel to universities in technologically advanced countries such as Australia as students or visiting scholars over the past decade.”
The report’s title comes from a PLA expression Yìguó cǎihuā, zhōnghuá niàngmì, which translates as: “Picking flowers abroad to make honey in China.”
“It’s not clear that Western universities and governments are fully aware of this phenomenon,” the report said, adding: “Current policies by governments and universities have not fully addressed issues like the transfer of knowledge and technology through collaboration with the PLA.”
A key player is the PLA National University of Defense Technology, which sends researchers abroad, sometimes disguising “their military affiliations, claiming to be from non-existent academic institutions.”
Another source is China’s Army Engineering University, which was formed in 2017 by the merger of the PLA University of Science and Technology and a number of other PLA academic institutions.
PLA Affiliations
In some cases, the report revealed, it would appear that Chinese PhD candidates or post-graduate researchers, working in strategic fields such as quantum physics, signal processing, cryptography, navigation technology and autonomous vehicles, are even the recipients of taxpayer funding in their host countries.
But it has to be noted that this is very much a two-way street, with foreign universities benefitting greatly from Chinese, and in some cases PLA, research grants.
“One professor at the University of New South Wales, for instance, worked with PLA scientists using Australian Research Council grants worth $2.3 million,” the report claimed.

Chinese state media promptly reacted to the report’s release, arguing:
“China’s rise has brought some Australian political, academia and media elites a sense of crisis and has made them lose their reason … If Taiwan, Singapore, South Korea and Japan – regions and countries that share a similar culture with the Chinese mainland – can achieve technological progress, why can’t the Chinese mainland make it without stealing?”
This argument is not entirely without merit, but it neglects to mention that none of the countries it mentions as sharing “a similar culture with the Chinese mainland” have all to some degree or another politically matured and democratized. They also all have varying degrees of commitment to maintaining the current status quo in the region.
Five Eyes
But, also in fairness, it needs to be added that the Australian report’s principal concern is with Chinese infiltration of universities of what are known as “five eyes nations,” an intelligence alliance comprised of the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada and New Zealand. All countries are signatories of the UKUSA Agreement, involving shared signals intelligence.
In the wake of NSA-leaker Edward Snowden’s revelations about the agreement’s spying operations, it has become public knowledge that it is undoubtedly the biggest and most sophisticated espionage operation in history.
Meanwhile, at least two of the countries that China claims as culturally similar – Singapore and South Korea – are reportedly implicated in Five Eyes’ sharing of spying information.
This a roundabout way of saying that China is compelled to expropriate advanced foreign technology covertly – either through internet espionage or through the handover of research results disguised as academic cooperation. The reason is that China’s territorial ambitions are at odds with the interests of its regional neighbors, as well as with those of the Western liberal order, such as it is.

Technology first
Meanwhile, as Beijing continues to trumpet its “Made in China 2025” goal, the South China Morning Post reported this week that, in a Politburo “group study” session, President Xi Jinping stated that the nation must continue to emphasize AI to secure the country’s coming technological and industrial revolution.
Research into AI in China has until now been the preserve of mostly private internet giants such as Tencent and Alibaba, making this one of the rare occasions that the Chinese leader has officially endorsed the technology.
It is arguably a further sign that the Cold-War technology-trade standoff between China and the US and its allies will undoubtedly continue – if not increase in intensity.
On Wednesday the Asia Times documented allegations of systematic re-routing of international internet, clearly with “malicious intent,” while Reuters reported that the US has indicted 10 “hackers and company insiders” for high-level industrial and technological espionage.
The US indictment unsealed on Tuesday charged the 10 with breaking into private companies’ computing systems and stealing information vital to turbofans used in commercial jets.
According to the indictment, from January 2010 to May of 2015 agents of a provincial foreign intelligence arm of China’s Ministry of State Security, along with company insiders, had “conspired to steal sensitive commercial technological, aviation, and aerospace data by hacking into computers in the United States and abroad.”
As Marco Rubio, Republican Senator for Florida, said in a Tweet earlier this year:
“China is the broadest & most dangerous & meaningful espionage challenge America faces. From medical research to technology, from military to academia, virtually every part of American life is a target of Chinese government spy efforts.”
Regardless of his political affiliations, Rubio is simply stating a position that is now commonplace in the US vocabulary of geopolitical strategy. China is doubling down on its ambitions.
The question now is only whether the possible outcomes can be limited to finger-pointing, increased security legislation, and indictments for theft and hacking.

You have a small dinkum…..Indians are small.
You have a small dinkum…..Indians are small.
Chris Taylor believes in the Yellow Peril.
Chris Taylor believes in the Yellow Peril.
Chris Taylor.
What exactly is the point of your article? To insinuate the potential danger of academic excellence in Chinese hands or minds? That it would be dangerous to have a Chinese with ‘brains’ or nuclear weapons in his hands? Are you sinophobic or what?
Why stress on the point of PLA students, why not any or all Chinese students?
Why pinpoint on the aphorism by the Chinese leaders to its student population of ‘Picking Flowers and Making Honey’. Do you really know the practical meaning or you insist that it is a cryptic esoteric or covert message of espionage configuration? Isn’t it’s just to be ‘Bee Productive’ or ‘Work Assiduously Like An Ant’. Or maybe in common Western parlance or idiom – ‘Make Hay While The Sun Shines’?
If you have been unbiased and objective and geopolitically objective you would instead emphasise on the importance and relevance of the ‘bee’ metaphor or allegory to the ‘cross-fertilisation’ of ideas and human intercourse for the advancement and maintenance and fostering of peace and economic and scientific development of the world. In a nuclear era we have to either live or die together.
Tell me have you checked with the elite of Silicon Valley what the situation could possibly be without its huge population of Indian IT and AI scientist and technician employees and ‘students’? Why worry about Chinese students? In my opinion in an AI world India would reign supreme! Culturally or should that be spiritually they have in their DNA ‘minds’ that transcends the worldly mind and perspective – the potential to conceive what is beyond the beyond. Yes in 2050 Indian will be the top nation in the world par excellence in AI.
Quid Pro Quo is not about ‘Shut the Door’. It is about reciprocity. It is about you scratch my back and I scratch yours. The ‘Five Eye Nations’ should reciprocate by sending its students from their military or spy establishments or otherwise to study at the top 5 universities in China.
The simple fact is that the majority of Chinese students in the ‘Five Eye Nations’ are those that have failed to qualify for admission to the top 5 universities in China.
Vincent Cheok @ https://whirlwindrambler.com/
Chris Taylor.
What exactly is the point of your article? To insinuate the potential danger of academic excellence in Chinese hands or minds? That it would be dangerous to have a Chinese with ‘brains’ or nuclear weapons in his hands? Are you sinophobic or what?
Why stress on the point of PLA students, why not any or all Chinese students?
Why pinpoint on the aphorism by the Chinese leaders to its student population of ‘Picking Flowers and Making Honey’. Do you really know the practical meaning or you insist that it is a cryptic esoteric or covert message of espionage configuration? Isn’t it’s just to be ‘Bee Productive’ or ‘Work Assiduously Like An Ant’. Or maybe in common Western parlance or idiom – ‘Make Hay While The Sun Shines’?
If you have been unbiased and objective and geopolitically objective you would instead emphasise on the importance and relevance of the ‘bee’ metaphor or allegory to the ‘cross-fertilisation’ of ideas and human intercourse for the advancement and maintenance and fostering of peace and economic and scientific development of the world. In a nuclear era we have to either live or die together.
Tell me have you checked with the elite of Silicon Valley what the situation could possibly be without its huge population of Indian IT and AI scientist and technician employees and ‘students’? Why worry about Chinese students? In my opinion in an AI world India would reign supreme! Culturally or should that be spiritually they have in their DNA ‘minds’ that transcends the worldly mind and perspective – the potential to conceive what is beyond the beyond. Yes in 2050 Indian will be the top nation in the world par excellence in AI.
Quid Pro Quo is not about ‘Shut the Door’. It is about reciprocity. It is about you scratch my back and I scratch yours. The ‘Five Eye Nations’ should reciprocate by sending its students from their military or spy establishments or otherwise to study at the top 5 universities in China.
The simple fact is that the majority of Chinese students in the ‘Five Eye Nations’ are those that have failed to qualify for admission to the top 5 universities in China.
Vincent Cheok @ https://whirlwindrambler.com/
What about the NGOs and so called Christian missionaries all over China. What are they doing? Front line for CIA?
What about the NGOs and so called Christian missionaries all over China. What are they doing? Front line for CIA?
Yanks dont have to kill anyone new, the’re already killing each other.
Yanks dont have to kill anyone new, the’re already killing each other.
Let’s keep perspective. China allegedly sends students (legally and paying) abroad to learn and help the homeland modernize, wow, big revelaton. Meanwhile and not allegedly the US sends hundreds of thousands of soldiers and special ops abroad to intervene, interfere, invade and kill people worldwide.
Let’s keep perspective. China allegedly sends students (legally and paying) abroad to learn and help the homeland modernize, wow, big revelaton. Meanwhile and not allegedly the US sends hundreds of thousands of soldiers and special ops abroad to intervene, interfere, invade and kill people worldwide.
How the heck do we tell the spies from the dinkum ones, they all look the same to me !
How the heck do we tell the spies from the dinkum ones, they all look the same to me !
watch https://youtu.be/C-CG5w4YwOI
watch https://youtu.be/C-CG5w4YwOI
This Chris Taylor is a CIA propagandist. Shame!
This Chris Taylor is a CIA propagandist. Shame!
fake news
fake news