From Hudson Institute Weekend Reads <[email protected]>
Subject China Plans with Cuba for Global Dominance
Date July 1, 2023 11:00 AM
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Dockworkers walk past a Cosco Shipping container ship at the Chinese port of Yantai on December 29, 2022. (CFOTO/Future Publishing via Getty Images)

The Chinese Communist Party’s spying installations in Cuba, which the United States has reportedly known about since 2001, reflect Beijing’s plans for global dominance.

Read Hudson China Center Director Miles Yu [[link removed]]’s op-ed in the Wall Street Journal [[link removed]] on why every day the Chinese are allowed to spy from Cuba brings those plans closer to fruition—and why now is a good time to crack down.

Read [[link removed]]

Key Insights

1. As far back as 2001, US intelligence was reported to have known about the existence of the Chinese eavesdropping operation in Cuba.

These espionage efforts began in earnest after the collapse of the Soviet Union. The CCP, which viewed the Soviet disintegration as a betrayal of the communist cause, quickly seized the opportunity to use Cuba as a frontline anti-American station. As a result, Beijing and Havana have signed a series of agreements—some open, others secret—that have allowed China to modernize Cuba’s obsolete Soviet weapons and telecommunications systems.

2. Sanctioned weapons and equipment are ferried over, under disguise as normal shipments of commercial goods, by Chinese shipping giant Cosco.

Occasionally, China’s illicit arms shipments are caught and exposed. In March 2015, a 28,000-ton Cosco transport ship with self-loading cranes stopped at a Colombian port for replenishment en route to Cuba. When Colombian customs agents boarded it, they discovered a large undeclared cache of Chinese arms, including 99 rockets, 3,000 cannon shells, 100 tons of military-grade dynamite, and 2.6 million detonators, all manufactured by CCP defense manufacturer Norinco. These munitions had been hidden under the declared merchandise on the Cosco ship.

3. Eavesdropping on the military communications traffic between these facilities will provide China with important insights into how US forces train and plan for conflict.

Setting aside the politically potent symbolism of a foreign spy station 90 miles from the US mainland, the joint eavesdropping project between Havana and Beijing poses a national security problem of the most serious order. For the past 20 years, both political parties have been willfully indolent about this threat. American leaders of all political stripes need to remove their blinders and confront it.

Quotes may be edited for clarity and length.

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Success in the Struggle against the People's Republic of China [[link removed]]

Read Hudson Senior Fellow John Lee [[link removed]] and Macquarie University Senior Lecturer Lavina Lee [[link removed]]’s latest report [[link removed]] to learn how the United States can achieve success in a comprehensive rivalry with China where neither side is likely to achieve a decisive victory.

Read [[link removed]]

The Third Anniversary of the Hong Kong National Security Law [[link removed]]

Yesterday was the third anniversary of the CCP’s extralegal renunciation of “one country, two systems” and its brutal crackdown against the people of Hong Kong. Watch Hudson China Center Director Miles Yu [[link removed]]’s conversation with Benedict Rogers of Hong Kong Watch on the enduring ramifications of the 2020 national security law.

Watch [[link removed]]

The Chinese Communist Party’s Campaign on University Campuses [[link removed]]

Despite bipartisan consensus on China, the Biden administration has not done enough to counter the CCP’s efforts to spread its malign influence on college campuses. Read the China Center’s report [[link removed]], authored by Ellen Bork [[link removed]], to learn how the US can fight back.

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