U.S. Intelligence Director Avril Haines recently reported in a congressional hearing that “more than half of the Chinese Communist Party’s media correspondents accredited to the United States are Red spies with a specific mission.”
This statement is certainly true, as the United States has waged a war against China in the Trump era, with battlefields in a variety of fields, from academia, media, technology, finance, and even the bureaucracy, showing that for decades, the old Communist Party has infiltrated the United States in a comprehensive and sophisticated manner, so to speak, with red spies all over the place.
Therefore, the U.S. is not just fighting for Taiwan, but also for self-preservation. Therefore, from Trump to Biden, the actions to drive out the CCP agents in the U.S. have not stopped for a moment, and now the EU is also following the U.S. actions.
Another name for Chinese Communist Party agents, also known as the “Chinese Communist Party underground”, originated in 1927, when Chiang Kai-shek launched a purge of the Party in Shanghai, and the original Sun Wen’s planned “United Russia and Communist Party” policy finally broke down.
At that time, members of the underground party had the following code of work: “hide the elite, build up strength, and wait for the right time in a long-term ambush”. Chiang Ching-kuo was ordered to take charge of Jiangxi, and only when he came to Jiangxi did he find that eight or nine out of ten people in the provincial capital were members of the Chinese Communist Party, and these people were Nationalists by day and Communists by night.
In 2012, writer Leung Mo-han wrote a book, “I and the Hong Kong Underground”, revealing that she was groomed to enter the Communist Youth League all the way from the time she entered secondary school on Hong Kong Island and then became a full-fledged Communist Party member.
In the book, Liang Mu Xian said: from the civil war period, at least 350,000 members of the underground entered Hong Kong and Macao in various capacities, and the Hong Kong New China News Agency was the command center.
The book also records how the underground brainwashed scholars to become leftists or Chinese Communist sympathizers during the Communist civil war.
In 1941, Zhou Enlai ordered him to enter the Southwest Associated University as a pastor of the YMCA to start his underground propaganda work. Many famous professors at the Southwest Associated University eventually became leftists or communist sympathizers, such as Wu Han, Pan Guangdan, Wen Yiduo, and Hua Luogeng. Wen Yiduo was later assassinated by unknown perpetrators.
After four years of civil war between the Kuomintang and the Communist Party, the KMT was confused and defeated, and Chiang Kai-shek only realized after a profound review that the academic world, the military, the media, and even government agencies had been invaded by red ants, so how could the KMT not be defeated? Zhang Mu Xian said there are four types of underground party members, the first is red, such people do not hide their ideology or identity, there are many such roles in Taiwan; the second is gray, sometimes cursing the Chinese Communist Party and curry favor with the right; the third is pink, sympathizers with the Chinese Communist Party; the fourth is black, will never reveal their Communist Party identity.
U.S. crackdown on red infiltration wakes up Taiwan
The U.S. began cracking down on red infiltration before waking up Taiwan. During the 2019 election period, the government passed the National Security Law to strengthen the National Security Law and the Anti-Infiltration Law in the Legislative Yuan in order to mend the broken net, thinking that it could block red forces from infiltrating Taiwan, counter the red media’s brainwashing of Taiwan, and stage arrests of New Party cadres for violating the National Security Law.
It was not expected that the Taipei District Court would acquit the spy on the grounds that there was no immediate danger to national security, causing an uproar in society.
In the past, the courts have imposed too low sentences on criminal cases of spies who endangered the country or sold secrets to the Chinese Communist Party, which has attracted criticism.
The Kuomintang government was defeated by the underground, and the ink is still wet on history.
The judiciary is an important part of Taiwan’s democratic defense. If the courts still live in a liberal and naive atmosphere, it will undoubtedly encourage society to be unguarded and indulgent towards these underground Chinese Communists.
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