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Houston consulate one of worst offenders in Chinese espionage, say U.S. officials – Metro US

Houston consulate one of worst offenders in Chinese espionage, say U.S. officials

Men load bags full of belongings from China’s Consulate into
Men load bags full of belongings from China’s Consulate into the back of a moving truck in Houston, Texas

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – China’s Houston consulate, which is due to be closed on Friday, has been one of the worst offenders in terms of Chinese espionage in the United States and its actions went well over the line of what was acceptable, senior U.S. officials said on Friday.

The United States ordered the consulate closed this week, leading China to retaliate on Friday by telling Washington to shut its consulate in the city of Chengdu, as relations between the world’s two largest economies deteriorate.

In a briefing for journalists, a senior State Department official linked espionage activity at the Houston consulate to China’s pursuit of research into a vaccine for the new coronavirus.

The official said China had been very clear about its intent to be first to the market with a coronavirus vaccine.

“The medical connections here aren’t lost on me and … the medical connection in Houston is also pretty specific,” the official said.

While the official gave no details of what aspects of vaccine research may have been targeted or where, Texas is home to the Galveston National Laboratory, an anchor lab for the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Disease Biodefense Laboratories Network, which supports government-funded research.

The lab is located on the campus of the University of Texas Medical Branch, where researchers have been conducting COVID-19 vaccine research. University officials declined to comment.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin has described the U.S. allegations as “malicious slander” and the consulate closure as “unreasonable.”

A senior U.S. Justice Department official said it was accepted that consulates of all countries were bases of operations for foreign intelligence services.

“It’s understood that there will be some activity here by those services,” he said. But, he added, “The sum total of the Houston consulate’s activities went well over the line of what we’re willing to accept.”

“At some point you say, ‘enough is enough’ and you decide which are one of the worst offenders,” he said.

The Justice Department official said that while illegal, the activities were “not necessarily amenable to criminal charges,” due in part to the diplomatic immunity that consulate officials enjoy.

The senior State Department official said, despite the disagreement between the two countries, U.S. diplomats who had been withdrawn from China earlier this year because of the coronavirus outbreak there would continue to return.

“The Chinese side has been cooperative in that; they understand the need to get back to balance,” he said.

A flight bound for Shanghai carrying U.S. diplomats left the United States on Wednesday as Washington pressed ahead with its plan to restaff its mission in China.

According to a July 17 internal State Department email seen by Reuters, more such flights are planned.

It said these included a tentative July 29 flight to Tianjin and Beijing that was in the initial planning stages, while a target date for another flight, to Guangzhou, was still to be determined.

(Reporting by David Brunnstrom and Daphne Psaledakis, additional reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Editing by Rosalba O’Brien and Grant McCool)