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Glamorous new face of China's influence machine: Female spies quietly infiltrating America's elite circles

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Daily Mail
2026/05/15 - 20:14 501 مشاهدة
By JAMES REINL, US SENIOR REPORTER Published: 21:14, 15 May 2026 | Updated: 21:14, 15 May 2026 For years, America's intelligence chiefs have issued increasingly dire warnings that Chinese operatives were quietly penetrating US institutions, cultivating influence from the inside while elected officials looked the other way. This week, those fears burst dramatically into public view when Eileen Wang became the first elected American official ever to plead guilty to acting as a covert foreign agent for Beijing. The Democratic mayor of Arcadia, an affluent Southern California city known as the 'Chinese Beverly Hills,' admitted secretly advancing the interests of Beijing while serving as a trusted public figure in local politics. Federal prosecutors said Wang operated as part of a sprawling influence campaign directed by Chinese government-linked officials, spreading pro-Beijing propaganda in the US without registering as a foreign agent. To Gordon Chang and other national security hawks, the case represented a chilling watershed moment. 'This should be the number one priority of the Trump administration – and so far it is not,' Chang told the Daily Mail. Chang, the author of Plan Red, said the scandal proved Beijing's reach extends far beyond Washington power brokers and deep into ordinary American communities. 'Wang's case shows that the Communist Party has infiltrated all levels of government in the US – we're talking down to the local level,' he said. Former Mayor of Arcadia, California Eileen Wang resigned on Monday after a federal plea agreement accusing her of acting as an illegal agent for China was unsealed It comes amid deepening tensions between the US and China, which were on display during talks between  President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping in Beijing 'Our efforts to remove [Communist] Party interference has got to be nationwide, and it's got to be comprehensive.' Wang's guilty plea has cast a scary spotlight on China's feared United Front Work Department, a shadowy Communist Party influence arm long accused of cultivating relationships across Western societies. Security experts say the agency specializes in nurturing business leaders, academics, diaspora figures and politicians who can quietly advance Beijing's geopolitical interests over time. It is not espionage in the cinematic sense of dead drops and hidden cameras. Instead, critics describe a patient political operation built on relationships, loyalty, pressure, backhanders and long-term cultivation inside democratic systems that depend on openness and trust. Wang, who was raised in China's Sichuan province and moved to the US in the 1990s, became a startling example of what those efforts can produce, experts said. According to prosecutors, Wang and her associate Yaoning 'Mike' Sun worked between 2020 and 2022 on behalf of Chinese government officials to distribute pro-Beijing messaging aimed at Chinese American audiences. Sun, who previously pleaded guilty to the same offense, is currently serving a four-year prison sentence. He also acted as treasurer for Wang's successful 2022 Arcadia City Council campaign. The pair jointly operated a Chinese-language platform called US News Center, which prosecutors say became a vehicle for Communist Party-approved narratives directed at Chinese Americans. Court filings say Chinese officials sent Eileen Wang propaganda material and instructed her to publish it online. In June 2021, prosecutors allege Wang quickly reposted a Chinese consul general's letter denying abuses against Uyghurs in Xinjiang. 'So fast, thank you everyone,' the official replied. 'Thank you leader,' Wang responded, according to the plea agreement. Federal officials say Wang never disclosed to the US government that she was acting at the direction of Chinese officials as required under foreign agent registration laws. Wang, 58, resigned as mayor this week after agreeing to plead guilty. She faces up to ten years behind bars. In a statement through her lawyers, Wang accepted responsibility for 'past personal mistakes' and said her former fiancé Sun 'led her astray.' Federal authorities say Wang helped operate a website called US News Center that posed as a Chinese-American news outlet to distribute pro-Beijing propaganda inside the United States  Known as the 'Chinese Beverly Hills,' Arcadia is home to about 53,000 residents, many of them Asian American families with roots in mainland China, Taiwan and Hong Kong Chinese national Christine Fang targeted Eric Swalwell and other up-and-coming politicians in the Bay Area Arcadia sits roughly 13 miles northeast of downtown Los Angeles and is home to about 53,000 residents, many of them Asian American families with roots in mainland China, Taiwan and Hong Kong. Wang's former City Council colleagues issued a statement about a 'deeply troubling' case of foreign interference, while insisting city finances and major governmental decisions were unaffected. But for critics of Beijing, the implications stretched far beyond one California suburb. 'This is on us,' Chang said bluntly, accusing successive American administrations of failing to prioritize Chinese political interference despite years of intelligence warnings. The revelations landed as Donald Trump met in Beijing with Chinese President Xi Jinping for a high-stakes summit that many analysts said underscored China's growing geopolitical clout and delivered more carefully choreographed spectacle than meaningful diplomatic breakthroughs. According to Chang, Beijing's influence operations in the US are now nationwide, bipartisan and deeply embedded inside American civic life. 'It is not a California problem or a Democrat problem,' he argued. 'It is an everywhere problem.' The Wang scandal joins a growing list of alarming cases involving alleged Chinese influence inside American politics and government institutions. Among the most notorious was Christine Fang, the suspected Chinese operative who cultivated relationships with rising California politicians between 2011 and 2015. Fang helped fundraise for campaigns, socialized with local officials and reportedly placed an intern inside the congressional office of then-rising Democratic congressman Eric Swalwell. Linda Sun, 41, (pictured) is accused of acting as an unregistered operative for the Chinese Communist Party while in working in roles alongside New York Governor Kathy Hochul and former Mayor Andrew Cuomo  Sun and her husband were accused of using Chinese funds to purchase a 2024 Ferrari Roma, (file photo) which sells for at least $243,300  She abruptly fled to China after learning federal investigators were scrutinizing her activities. Swalwell was never charged or accused of wrongdoing in connection with Fang. 'The first time China's Ministry of State Security contacted Eric Swalwell was not when he was on the House Intelligence Committee,' Chang said. 'It was when he was sitting on the city council of Dublin City, California.' 'Swalwell could not have been the only person that China was grooming – there must be hundreds or thousands of Swalwells.' Last year, another major case emerged when Linda Sun, a former aide to New York Governors Kathy Hochul and Andrew Cuomo, was arrested and charged with acting as an undisclosed Chinese government agent. Prosecutors allege Sun blocked Taiwanese officials from gaining access to state leaders and scrubbed references to Taiwan from official communications.  She pleaded not guilty, and after a jury deadlock, the federal judge declared a mistrial. Prosecutors seek to retry her case next year.  Years earlier, the FBI privately warned longtime California Senator Dianne Feinstein that a trusted staffer in her office had allegedly drawn the attention of Chinese intelligence operatives. Still, security officials warn Beijing's influence strategy is fundamentally difficult for America to combat because Washington lacks equivalent tools or leverage inside China's closed political system. Critics also note America remains haunted by the shameful internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, making any aggressive response involving Chinese American communities legally and politically fraught. Chang said Beijing fully understands that sensitivity and exploits it carefully. Around America's large Chinese diaspora, he said, the Communist Party has built influence networks through business relationships, cultural organizations, media outreach and long-term political cultivation. Nearly two million Chinese Americans live in California alone. A recent report from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence warned Chinese influence efforts on social media platforms could eventually manipulate American public opinion on a broad scale. The mysterious Chinese operative Christine Fang between 2011 and 2015 wooed California politicians Others argue the strength of America's democratic institutions ultimately remains its greatest defense. Former National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said earlier this year that America's system benefits from 'independent innovation, constant self-correction, and the organic trust built through public transparency.' But critics counter that transparency means little if political leaders refuse to act aggressively enough against foreign influence. Roman Rozhavsky, a senior FBI counterintelligence official, issued a stark warning after Wang's plea agreement became public. 'Individuals who act on behalf of foreign governments to influence our democracy will be identified, investigated, and brought to justice,' he said. For Chang, the Arcadia scandal exposed a vulnerability that has existed in plain sight for years. The intelligence, he insisted, was always there. What America lacked was the political will to confront it before a suburban mayor ended up admitting she had secretly worked for Beijing all along. No comments have so far been submitted. Why not be the first to send us your thoughts, or debate this issue live on our message boards. By posting your comment you agree to our house rules. Do you want to automatically post your MailOnline comments to your Facebook Timeline? Your comment will be posted to MailOnline as usual. Do you want to automatically post your MailOnline comments to your Facebook Timeline? 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