海归网首页   海归宣言   导航   博客   广告位价格  
海归论坛首页 会员列表 
收 藏 夹 
论坛帮助 
登录 | 登录并检查站内短信 | 个人设置 论坛首页 |  排行榜  |  在线私聊 |  专题 | 版规 | 搜索  | RSS  | 注册 | 活动日历
主题: Fury over plan to curb ‘Chinese espionage’ (zt)
回复主题   printer-friendly view    海归论坛首页 -> 海归商务           焦点讨论 | 精华区 | 嘉宾沙龙 | 白领丽人沙龙
  阅读上一个主题 :: 阅读下一个主题
作者 Fury over plan to curb ‘Chinese espionage’ (zt)   
ceo/cfo
[博客]
[个人文集]




头衔: 海归中将

头衔: 海归中将
声望: 院士
性别: 性别:男
加入时间: 2004/11/05
文章: 12941

海归分: 491633





文章标题: Fury over plan to curb ‘Chinese espionage’ (zt) (524 reads)      时间: 2005-11-26 周六, 23:15   

作者:ceo/cfo海归商务 发贴, 来自【海归网】 http://www.haiguinet.com


By Edward Alden and Stephanie Kirchgaessner in Washington
Published: November 24 2005 22:06 | Last updated: November 24 2005 22:06

The US Commerce Department called for public comments last March on a proposal to expand restrictions on the sharing of advanced research and technology with foreign nationals. The result was an outpouring of opposition, particularly from universities, which have already seen the enrolment of foreign students shrink because of new visa requirements adopted after September 11 2001.


ADVERTISEMENT




“I sit writing this letter one block from the site of the first self-sustaining chain reaction, produced in the 1940s by Enrico Fermi and collaborators,” wrote Simon Swordy, a professor of physics, astronomy and astrophysics at the University of Chicago, in one of more than 300 comments on the proposal, running to more than 1,100 pages.

“Ironically, if this proposed rule change had existed at that time, Fermi would not have been allowed to use the equipment to do this without a licence, since he was from Italy, then an enemy of the US.”

Noting that the father of the hydrogen bomb, Edward Teller, was a citizen of Hungary, then in the Soviet bloc, Prof Swordy wrote: “One might reasonably conclude the US would not have become a leading nuclear power if the intellectual input of foreign-born nationals had been excluded.”

The proposal has been under discussion in the administration since the Commerce Department’s inspector-general warned in a March 2004 report that the current level of controls was insufficient to stop the transfer of sensitive technology to foreign nationals.

Under rules in place since 1994, companies or research universities must apply to the government for an export licence if certain advanced technologies are shared with nationals of China, former Soviet bloc countries and embargoed countries such as Iran, Cuba and North Korea. That requirement covers even research that takes place entirely within the US.

Currently, however, an individual’s status is determined by his most recent citizenship or country of residence, not his place of birth. That, the report warned, was a serious loophole.

Counter-intelligence officials fear that China, in particular, is exploiting this loophole, and that the US has become increasingly vulnerable to Chinese espionage. The tens of thousands of Chinese who have taken out citizenship in Canada or Australia – countries that exchange technology freely with the US – are of particular concern.

“The Chinese intelligence efforts take advantage of our open economic system to advance China’s technical modernisation, reduce the US military advantage and undermine our economic competitiveness,” Michelle Van Cleave, the national counter-intelligence executive in the new Office of the Director of National Intelligence, told a congressional hearing in September. “Our general culture of openness has provided foreign entities easy access to sophisticated technologies,” she said.

Ed Krauland, a lawyer with Steptoe and Johnson in Washington, who works with industry groups opposed to the proposal, says: “There’s a lot of pressure on the Commerce Department to do this. There is a concern about the leaking of technologies to unreliable countries.”

But the administration’s proposal to address that problem has many universities and companies fearing the cure could be far worse than the problem. The Commerce Department report suggested that the “deemed export” rule be altered to control the sharing of technologies based on a foreign national’s country of birth, not his current residence or citizenship.

In its most extreme form, the proposal would capture US dual citizens and permanent residents as well as those from the closest US allies such as Canada and the UK.

It would also broaden definitions so that even laboratory use of equipment such as sensors and high-end oscilloscopes would be controlled.

Intel, the US semiconductor maker, said it could be forced to apply for hundreds or even thousands of “deemed export licences” annually just to continue its internal R&D. Licences can take as long as six months to be issued by Washington.

It said the rule would make Intel far less attractive to highly skilled foreign workers. “US national and economic security is … ill-served by regulation that impedes efforts of US companies to stay ahead technologically and otherwise remain globally competitive.”

Universities see the proposal as one more ill-considered Washington initiative that threatens their status as the world’s leading research institutions. The Association of American Universities, representing 60 top US universities, warned the scheme could “seriously undermine the vitality of American research”.

James Mulvenon, an expert on the Chinese military and deputy director at the Center for Intelligence Research and Analysis in Washington, says that while US counter-intelligence officials are highly attuned to the threat of Chinese espionage, “they are not really very savvy about what the economic impact of this will be”.

The most likely outcome appears to be a compromise that will further tighten the deemed export rules but would adopt something short of restricting all those born in China or other controlled countries.

Dave Wilkinson, recently named under-secretary of commerce in charge of export controls, told reporters this week that “we’re appropriately sensitive to the critical role that foreign nationals play in innovation and research in the US”.


作者:ceo/cfo海归商务 发贴, 来自【海归网】 http://www.haiguinet.com









相关主题
The Role of a Chinese Lawyer in Today... 海归主坛 2023-7-13 周四, 14:21
照做...Chinese Underground Hip Hop 海归茶馆 2016-4-13 周三, 21:14
没事找事系列:Of Course I Bribed Chinese Off... 海归商务 2013-7-16 周二, 06:20
老中微博:easy chinese girls 生活风情 2013-5-29 周三, 13:52
[转帖] Bay Area Chinese--湾区华人 » 热点追踪 » ... 海归主坛 2013-5-05 周日, 15:38
[转帖]Chinese Mother Buys $6.5 Million ... 海归商务 2013-3-29 周五, 03:09
时装made in Italy by Chinese! 海归商务 2013-2-19 周二, 22:40
贴上来。美聯社報導莫言獲獎的標題就是「以寫粗俗下流、雜亂無章故事而著名的中... 海归茶馆 2012-11-01 周四, 11:01

返回顶端
阅读会员资料 ceo/cfo离线  发送站内短信
显示文章:     
回复主题   printer-friendly view    海归论坛首页 -> 海归商务           焦点讨论 | 精华区 | 嘉宾沙龙 | 白领丽人沙龙 所有的时间均为 北京时间


 
论坛转跳:   
不能在本论坛发表新主题, 不能回复主题, 不能编辑自己的文章, 不能删除自己的文章, 不能发表投票, 您 不可以 发表活动帖子在本论坛, 不能添加附件不能下载文件, 
   热门标签 更多...
   论坛精华荟萃 更多...
   博客热门文章 更多...


海归网二次开发,based on phpbb
Copyright © 2005-2024 Haiguinet.com. All rights reserved.