-Caveat Lector-

http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2001/2/22/213115.shtml

http://www.softwar.net/stanford.html


Clinton Administration Sold to China Systems Used by Iraq

Charles R. Smith
Friday, Feb. 23, 2001


The Clinton administration authorized the transfer of a
fiber-optic air defense system to China - the same one the
Pentagon claimed helped thwart U.S. air attacks against Iraq.

When U.S. warplanes struck new Iraqi air defense sites around
Baghdad, Pentagon officials were mum in naming the country that
sold the new air defense missile system to Saddam Hussein.

The Washington Post revealed that China was assisting Iraqi air
defense, an allegation promptly denied by Iraq. According to the
Post article, Chinese engineers were helping Iraq to install a
network of fiber-optic communications and computers designed to
track and destroy U.S. warplanes. (The export also violates U.N.
weapons embargoes against Saddam.)

President Bush's national security adviser confirmed last
Thursday that Chinese engineers were indeed helping Iraq.

The real story behind Iraq's high-tech buildup remains untold
until now.

The Chinese fiber-optic air defense system in the Iraqi desert is
in fact of U.S. origin. In 1994, Chinese spymaster Gen. Ding
Henggao obtained the advanced fiber-optic system through his
contacts inside the Clinton administration.

According to documents obtained using the Freedom of Information
Act, in 1994 Ding was a close friend of Clinton Secretary of
Defense William Perry.

Perry and Ding's relationship spans three administrations. Perry
reportedly met Ding in the late 1970s during the Carter
administration.

By 1994, Ding had risen to command the Chinese Army military
research bureau "COSTIND," or the Commission on Science
Technology and Industry for National Defense.

COSTIND, according to the General Accounting Office, "oversees
development of China's weapon systems and is responsible for
identifying and acquiring telecommunications technology
applicable for military use."

In 1994, the personal consultant to Perry teamed with Ding to buy
an advanced AT&T fiber-optic communications system for "civilian"
use inside China.

The communications system slipped past U.S. exports laws as a
joint U.S.-Chinese commercial venture called "Hua Mei." The
Chinese part of the venture was run by a newly formed firm named
"Galaxy New Technology."

Stanford professor John Lewis, a close friend and the paid
personal consultant for Perry, was the key board member of the
project.

According to the Far Eastern Economic Review, Lewis had his
friend Perry write a letter on his behalf to U.S. government
officials, favoring the fiber-optic export to China.

Lewis located Adlai Stevenson III, the former Democratic senator
from Illinois, to lead the American side of the joint venture.
Gen. Ding's wife, Madam Nie Li, headed the joint project as the
Chinese co-chairman. Lewis contracted AT&T to ship the secure
communication system directly to a Chinese army unit using Galaxy
New Technology as a front.

The documents show that Lewis not only worked for Stanford
University and the Chinese army at the same time, but that he
also worked for the U.S. Defense Department.

In August 1994, Lewis and Secretary of Defense Perry traveled to
Beijing to meet with Ding. According to the official list of
attendees, Lewis accompanied Perry as his paid "personal"
consultant.

Chinese Firm Backed by Military

AT&T officials who sold most of the equipment and software were
adamant that there was no need to check the Chinese firm because
the "civilian" Madam Nie Lie led it.

Yet, the so-called civilian firm was actually packed with Chinese
army officers and experts. Madam Nie Lie was not only the wife of
Gen. Ding Henggao; Madam Nie was actually Lt. Gen. Nie Lie of the
Chinese army.

Another member of New Galaxy Technology, according to a Defense
Department document, was Director and President "Mr. Deng
Changru." Deng is also known as Lt. Col. Deng Changru of the
People's Liberation Army, head of the Chinese communications
corps.

Still another Chinese army officer on the Galaxy New Technology
staff was co-General Manager "Mr. Xie Zhichao," better known in
military circles as Lt. Col. Xie Zhichao, director of the Chinese
army's Electronics Design Bureau.

In 1997, Rep. Henry Hyde pressed unsuccessfully for the
Department of Justice to investigate the Galaxy New Technology
scandal in a letter outlining his concerns.

According to Hyde, "in 1994, sophisticated telecommunications
technology was transferred to a U.S.-Chinese joint venture called
HUA MEI, in which the Chinese partner is an entity controlled by
the Chinese military. This particular transfer included
fiber-optic communications equipment, which is used for
high-speed, secure communications over long distances. Also
included in the package was advanced encryption software."

In 1994, the Chinese spymaster Gen. Ding personally penetrated
the U.S. Defense Department at the highest levels, using his
contacts with Secretary Perry to obtain a secure fiber-optic
network.

There was more than profit for Ding and his Chinese army company
packed with electronics experts.

The Chinese army's Electronics Design Bureau modified the
American fiber-optic communication system, changing it into a
secure air-defense system. The Chinese army then exported the
newly modified system to Iraq.

The Iraqi air defense network, NATO code-named "Tiger Song," is
made of U.S. and French fiber-optic parts modified by the
People's Liberation Army.

Iraqi missiles guided by Tiger Song regularly attack U.S. fighter
jets. U.S. jets have recently retaliated, striking back with
bombs and missiles.

Chinese military engineers from 2nd and 4th Signals Corps of the
Chinese Army Headquarters are even now repairing the damaged
Iraqi air defense system.

The cat-and-mouse game of missile and electronic combat with
Saddam is expected to continue for years as the Chinese army
engineers improve the deadly Tiger Song network.

In 1998, Gen. Ding retired from active service in the Chinese
army.

However, he was decorated by President Jiang Zemin as a hero of
the Chinese communist party for his successful operations against
America.

Ding's attack on America ranks as one of the most successful
espionage operations of the 20th century.

Tiger Song, the Chinese fiber-optic air defense system in the
Iraqi desert, is a legacy of the Clinton years that will now need
to be revisited regularly by U.S. bombers in the 21st century.


=================================================================
             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

  FROM THE DESK OF:
                     *Michael Spitzer*  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                      ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
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