U.S. media exclusive: Biden’s Undersecretary of Defense for Policy is a military ally of Communist China

National Pulse published an exclusive report that Biden‘s pick for Under Secretary of Defense for Policy is a military ally of the Chinese (Communist) State.

According to the report, Biden’s Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Colin Kahl, who heads the Stanford University center, has had a “multi-year” relationship with the Chinese Communist Party and the Chinese Communist military, including participation in meetings “funded” by the Communist government. ” conferences.

Kahl joined the center in January 2018 as a senior fellow at Stanford’s Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies and as co-director of the Center for International Security and Cooperation (CISAC).

This appointment came after he served as national security advisor to then-Vice President Joe Biden – and earned him a job as a strategic advisor at the Biden Center at the University of Pennsylvania.

In addition to the “substantial” and “rarely reported” millions of dollars in anonymous donations from China (the Communist Party) that Stanford received, Kahl’s center had unusually close ties to the Chinese Communist Party.

Ties to the Chinese Communist Military

According to a report by the National Committee on United States-China Relations (NCUSCR), CISAC hosted researchers from many entities with ties to the Chinese Communist Party military and government, including those flagged by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) for espionage and blacklisted by the U.S. government.

“CISAC has hosted many foreign visiting scholars, including several Chinese visiting scholars in the Peace and Cooperation Program… Chinese scholars participating in the Peace and Cooperation Program have come from the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, the Chinese Academy of Engineering Physics (CAEP), the Central Party School, the National Defense University and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. “

According to the FBI, the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences is a “front group for intelligence gathering and recruitment of overseas spies by the Chinese (Communist) State.

According to the FBI, the Communist Party relies on employees of the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences as “spotters and evaluators” of potential Western spies.

Officials from the Chinese Ministry of State Security – described by the FBI as keen to “influence the foreign policies of other countries” – also “used the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences’ connections as a cover identity.

The Chinese Academy of Engineering Physics has been blacklisted by the U.S. Department of Commerce for its close ties to the Communist Party’s military – a threat also faced by the PLA National Defense University, a participating school.

The Central Party School, “an institution of higher learning that trains senior and middle-ranking Party leaders and Marxist theoretical cadres,” and the Foreign Ministry are also composed entirely of Communist government officials.

The Center has also hosted speakers from national universities.

Ties to the Chinese Communist Government

Stanford’s CISAC also participated in a conference in Beijing hosted and co-sponsored by the CCP’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

A Stanford researcher noted that there has been a “years-long exchange” between the two groups, adding that they will “develop a joint blueprint” on matters such as space cooperation.

“The exchanges have been frank and constructive, as they build on the understanding and trust developed through years of exchanges between CISAC and the China Institute for International Studies (CIIS). In the next phase, a small team of U.S. and Chinese experts will develop a joint blueprint to enhance understanding of key issues of nuclear stability and space cooperation.”

The fellow added, “Although held in the midst of uncertainty about the future of U.S.-China relations, the meeting included constructive exchanges on strategic stability, obstacles to space cooperation and other sensitive topics.”

Stanford’s Chinese counterparts at the conference “came from a variety of institutions – such as the China Institute of International Studies, the Chinese Academy of Engineering Physics, the People’s Liberation Army Rocket Force, the Rocket Force Academy, the China National Defense Science and Technology Information Center, the PLA’s Southern Theater, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, the People’s University of China, the National Defense University, the Tsinghua University, the National Defense University, the National Chengchi University, and the Tsinghua University. Renmin University of China, National Defense University, Tsinghua University, and others.”

The cooperation with the Chinese Communist military entities was unearthed after a Stanford University researcher was also indicted by the U.S. Department of Justice for failing to disclose her ties to the Chinese Communist military.