Why we shouldn’t fall for the ‘Chinese influence’ scare at Westminster

We publish below two editorials from the Morning Star (Why we shouldn’t fall for the ‘Chinese influence’ scare at Westminster and China dismisses claims of an agent targeting British MPs) dealing with the absurd recent story about China allegedly buying ‘political influence’ in the British Parliament. The second editorial includes a quote from Friends of Socialist China co-editor Carlos Martinez noting that this escalating reds-under-the-bed narrative is performing the function of repressing individuals and organisations that oppose the West’s reckless New Cold War.

The latest scare over Chinese “influence” at Westminster should be taken with several barrels of salt.

Pointing to the convenience of a national security story being broken at a time when both Downing Street (over “partygate”) and Buckingham Palace (because of Prince Andrew’s increasing vulnerability over sex abuse allegations) could do with distracting the public will invite charges of conspiracy theories.

But the left would be naive to ignore the political role of the intelligence services.

The convention of seeing state institutions which are not party-political as not political at all works to promote the idea that the likes of MI5 are neutral professionals.

Yet here the overlap with foreign policy is obvious. Britain has slavishly mimicked every twist and turn of the United States in the new cold war against China, from tearing up tech firm Huawei’s role in building a 5G network to joining an absurd “diplomatic” boycott of the coming Winter Olympics.

Cold war hawks immediately amplified the move, most disgracefully Iain Duncan Smith, whose preposterous claim that “lives may have been put at risk” is rich coming from the man who, at the Department for Work and Pensions, fought a long battle to hide how many people deemed “fit for work” under his benefit reforms died shortly afterwards.

In fact MI5’s claims about Christine Ching Kui Lee are so vague that they aren’t so much unproven as unprovable.

Spooks don’t accuse her of espionage but of seeking “influence.” This was done by “establishing links” with various MPs (Tory, Lib Dem and Labour).

She “may aspire” to establish an all-party parliamentary group sympathetic to China. On the basis of these nebulous allegations Duncan Smith is demanding her deportation.

BBC security correspondent Gordon Corera understands that “one concern from security officials is that there are not the laws in place” to deal with Lee.

Translation: MI5 has no evidence she has done anything illegal.

Whatever our views on China we should be alert to the danger of taking British intelligence at its word.

The culture of deference to these shadowy bodies must end. Parliament has heard evidence on MI5’s appalling role in assisting people already subject to counter-terror control orders to travel to Libya in 2010 to help overthrow Muammar Gadaffi.

Salman Abedi, the son of one such individual who travelled with him, was among several helped back into Britain. He went on to murder 22 people at the Manchester Arena bombing in 2017. So much for MI5’s concern for our “security.”

MI6’s part in promoting the dodgy intelligence that helped Tony Blair justify the invasion of Iraq is also on the record.

There is more than a whiff of hypocrisy in the indignant response to reports of Chinese influence. Nobody batted an eyelid when former Enfield North MP Joan Ryan was filmed discussing £1 million in Israeli embassy money to take Labour MPs to Israel — a rather clearer bid to build “influence.” Nor when WikiLeaks released US cables naming another former MP, Ruth Smeeth, as an informant to “strictly protect.”

The Morning Star is no fan of the role private donations play at Westminster. But with OpenDemocracy having revealed last year that just 10 super-rich tycoons were responsible for a fifth of all political donations in the country over the last two decades, Lee’s donations look like small beer.

Her targeting is reminiscent of attacks on figures in the Chinese community in Australia, where last year businessman Dr Chau Chak Wing won a defamation case over similar insinuations that he was a Chinese agent.

This is a non-story. Politicians should not be allowed to distract us from the public health and cost-of-living crises that pose the real threat to people in this country.

And the left should resist any attempt to use it to normalise political deportations or hand yet more power to our unaccountable deep state.


China dismisses claims of an agent targeting British MPs

The Chinese foreign ministry has dismissed claims of an agent targeting British MPs, accusing the government of being “too obsessed with James Bond movies.”

MI5 claimed that London-based solicitor Christine Lee had been engaged in “political interference activities” on behalf of China’s ruling Communist Party.

Carlos Martinez, co-editor of the Friends of Socialist China platform and a No Cold War organising committee member, told the Star that the accusation “represents an escalation of the witch hunt against members of the Chinese diaspora in this country.”

He said: “There is no evidence whatsoever that Ms Lee has engaged in any illegal or inappropriate activity; she is being targeted for the sole reason that she aims to facilitate good relations between the UK and China.

“Would a security alert be raised if Ms Lee worked for the US embassy and was promoting healthy US-UK relations? Or if she worked for the French embassy and was promoting healthy France-UK relations? The very idea is absurd.

“Gerald Horne has written that the Red Scare of the 1950s was the ‘handmaiden of the cold war.’

“This updated reds-under-the-bed narrative, targeting the Chinese community in Britain, the US and Australia, is performing the same function of repressing individuals and organisations that oppose the West’s reckless new cold war.

“This is a very dangerous and undemocratic road to be travelling down.”

A spokesman for the Chinese embassy in London denied the claims, saying it always adhered to the principle of non-interference in other country’s internal affairs.

“We have no need and never seek to ‘buy influence’ in any foreign parliament. We firmly oppose the trick of smearing and intimidation against the Chinese community in the UK,” he said.

2 thoughts on “Why we shouldn’t fall for the ‘Chinese influence’ scare at Westminster”

  1. It happens that the empire – the Big Brother, The Capo – delegates the execution of its most unethical, blatant and potentially embarrassing sting operations, the dirtiest and most sordid and unworthy parts of its grand schemes to lower echelons, its most loyal acolytes, the unhinged guns for hire: the attack dogs.
    The UK is nowadays like the attack dog of the USA, the shameless foot soldier of global imperialism.

  2. Another instance of arch hypocrasy from the UK. But it to be expected as the USA has been manipulating the UK security services, government and many MP’s for decades now. You only have to look at the ridiculous decision over 5G to see that the UK bends over backwards to serve its US masters. Meanwhile it sinks into social decay, economic disaster and poverty. The UK government was happy to reduce benefits to the poor whilst spending millions to send a task force to the South China Sea and create a ‘Space Force’.

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