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Military版 - China’s Hunt for Fugitive Businessman Guo Wengui Kicks Off Manhattan Caper Worthy of Spy Thriller
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话题: mr话题: guo话题: chinese话题: china话题: officials
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1 (共1页)
S*****n
发帖数: 4185
1
Pressure from Beijing officials seeking Mr. Guo’s return sparks frantic
response from Trump administration—and Pennsylvania Station, JFK airport
standoffs
Guo Wengui, a wealthy Chinese businessman, sat in the sun room of his
apartment on the 18th-floor of the Sherry-Netherland Hotel on New York’s
Fifth Avenue. With him were four officials from China’s Ministry of State
Security, whom Mr. Guo had agreed to meet.
For many months, Mr. Guo, from his self-imposed exile, had been using
Twitter to make allegations of corruption against senior Chinese officials
and tycoons. During the hours long conversation, the officials urged him to
quit his activism and return home, after which the government would release
assets it had frozen and leave his relatives in peace.
Liu Yanping, the lead official, said he had come on behalf of Beijing “to
find a solution,” according to Mr. Guo and a partial audio recording Mr.
Guo said he made of the May encounter and posted online in September.
Mr. Liu’s demeanor made clear this wasn’t a friendly negotiation, and he
hinted at the risks for Mr. Guo. “You can’t keep doing this forever,” Mr.
Liu can be heard telling Mr. Guo on the audio recording, reviewed by The
Wall Street Journal. “I’m worried about you, to tell you the truth.”
The dramatic meeting sparked an unresolved debate within the Trump
administration over the Guo case and laid bare broader divisions over how to
handle the U.S.’s top economic and military rival, according to people
familiar with the matter. U.S.-China relations have been upset by
disagreements over trade, cyberespionage and policy toward North Korea, and
Mr. Guo’s New York stay is only adding to the tension.
The Chinese officials, who were in the U.S. on visas that didn’t allow them
to conduct official business, caught the attention of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, which wanted to move against them, according to people
familiar with the matter. The bureau’s effort ran into friction with other
U.S. officials, including those at the State Department, who have tended to
favor a less-confrontational approach, according to the people.
Some U.S. national security officials view Mr. Guo, who claims to have
potentially valuable information on top Chinese officials and business
magnates and on North Korea, as a useful bargaining chip to use with Beijing
, the people said.
The episode took a twist when President Donald Trump received a letter from
the Chinese government, hand-delivered by Steve Wynn, a Las Vegas casino
magnate with interests in the Chinese gambling enclave of Macau. Mr. Trump
initially expressed interest in helping the Chinese government by deporting
Mr. Guo, but other senior officials worked to block any such move, according
to people familiar with the matter.
The Chinese Embassy in Washington declined to comment.
Wynn Resorts Ltd. Chief Marketing Officer Michael Weaver said in a written
statement to the Journal: “[T]hat report regarding Mr. Wynn is false.
Beyond that, he doesn’t have any comment.”
Mr. Guo, who built a real-estate empire in Beijing, has said he fled China
in 2014 after hearing that a state security official to whom he was close
would soon be arrested. Beijing has said it is investigating Mr. Guo in at
least 19 major criminal cases that involve bribery, kidnapping, fraud, money
laundering and rape, allegations that Mr. Guo denies.
Beijing has branded Mr. Guo as an attention-seeking criminal. Beginning this
year, his near daily broadcasts on Twitter alleging official corruption
have attracted many followers in China, who find ways to bypass China’s
internet firewall.
Mr. Guo’s application for asylum in the U.S. is pending. He settled at the
Sherry-Netherland in 2015, paying $67.5 million for the apartment
overlooking Central Park.
The account of Mr. Guo’s interactions with U.S. and Chinese officials is
based on a review of audio and video recordings he said he made of some
conversations, discussions with Mr. Guo and with U.S. officials familiar
with the matter.
The recent chapter in China’s pursuit of Mr. Guo began May 24, when Mr. Liu
, a top official in charge of discipline at the security ministry—China’s
equivalent of the Central Intelligence Agency—went with his colleagues to
the fugitive’s New York home. They entered the U.S. on transit visas, which
allow foreign government officials only to travel through the U.S. for a
short period en route to another destination.
Mr. Guo said he had agreed to meet the officials because Mr. Liu had
permitted Mr. Guo’s wife to leave China and join him in the U.S.
The Chinese officials spoke to Mr. Guo at length, touching on subjects
including employees and family members who had been detained in China. Mr.
Guo said the officials told him the government would treat him favorably
only if he would stop inciting anti-Communist Party sentiment.
Mr. Guo didn’t agree to the officials’ demands.
Later that afternoon, at the beginning of rush hour around 5 p.m., agents
from the FBI confronted the Chinese officials at New York’s Pennsylvania
Station, according to people familiar with the incident.
At first, the Chinese said they were cultural affairs diplomats. Then they
admitted to being security agents. The FBI agents instructed them to leave
the country, saying they were in violation of their visas and weren’t to
speak to Mr. Guo again.
The Chinese got on the train to Washington. The FBI assumed they would be
gone in 24 hours.
Two days later, on May 26, Mr. Liu and the other Chinese officials returned
to Mr. Guo’s apartment ahead of a planned flight back to China in the late
afternoon.
U.S. law-enforcement authorities, whom Mr. Guo had told about the impending
visit, decided it was time to act. The U.S. Attorney’s office in Brooklyn
prepared charges alleging visa fraud and extortion, according to people
familiar with the matter. FBI agents raced to John F. Kennedy International
airport ahead of the officials’ scheduled 4:50 p.m. Air China flight.
Meanwhile, the Chinese officials dined on dumplings prepared by Mr. Guo’s
wife, who was still grateful to Mr. Liu for letting her leave China,
according to her husband. Mr. Guo said he again declined the officials’
offer of clemency in exchange for silence, and walked the group out of the
building.
Prosecutors were still scrambling to secure final signoff from Washington to
go ahead with the planned arrests at the airport.
With the flight preparing to board and FBI agents taking positions on the
jet bridge, White House national security officials convened a conference
call with participants from the State and Justice Departments, the Pentagon
and the intelligence community.
State Department officials, worried about collateral consequences for U.S.
personnel in China, hesitated to approve the Justice Department’s plan to
make arrests.
An alternative was presented: Subject the Chinese officials to additional
screening, which would cause them to miss their flight and buy some time,
people familiar with the call said.
U.S. officials couldn’t fashion a consensus to approve either plan, and the
FBI agents were permitted only to confiscate the Chinese officials’ phones
before the plane took off.
A State Department representative said in a written statement: “Decisions
on these kinds of matters are based on interagency consensus.”
In a written statement about the events provided to the Journal, a Justice
Department spokesman said: “It is a criminal offense for an individual,
other than a diplomatic or consular officer or attaché, to act in the
United States as an agent of a foreign power without prior notification to
the Attorney General.”
The spokesman added that the U.S. is “committed to continuing cooperation
with China” on fugitive cases, and that the U.S. “is not a safe haven for
fugitives from any nation.”
The U.S. and China have no extradition treaty, a recurring point of tension.
Since 2014, China has escalated its global efforts to capture Chinese
fugitives accused of corruption, including those who have fled to the U.S.
The initiative, dubbed “Operation Fox Hunt,” often involves pressuring
relatives in China, confiscating the target’s assets and sending agents to
deliver personal threats.
Beijing officials tell their American counterparts they are justified in
engaging in such activities because the U.S. carries out similar operations
on foreign soil as well, U.S. law-enforcement officials say.
In June, U.S. officials revisited the JFK incident during a policy
coordination meeting that grew heated.
Ezra Cohen-Watnick, then senior director for intelligence programs at the
National Security Council, confronted Susan Thornton, an East Asia expert
who serves as Acting Assistant Secretary of State, charging her agency was
improperly hindering law-enforcement efforts to address China’s repeated
violations of U.S. sovereignty and law, according to people familiar with
the discussion.
State department officials criticized the FBI for not seeking permission
from them before initially engaging the Chinese officials, the people said.
State Department official Laura Stone said she was already facing
retaliation from Beijing, saying Chinese officials had allegedly confiscated
her notebook as she was trying to leave the country, the people said.
The FBI’s assistant director of the counterintelligence division, Bill
Priestap, deadpanned in response: “Was it because you had been trying to
kidnap and extort someone in China?”
Separately, at a June meeting in the Oval Office, counterintelligence
officials briefed President Trump on Beijing’s alleged efforts to steal
cutting-edge research from labs and trade secrets from U.S. companies,
according to people familiar with the meeting.
The president, surrounded by his top aides, including Vice President Mike
Pence, his son-in-law Jared Kushner, his former chief strategist Steve
Bannon and other national security and economic advisers, asked to see
policy options in 90 days. In the meantime, he said he knew of at least one
“Chinese criminal” the U.S. needed to immediately deport, according to the
people.
“Where’s the letter that Steve brought?” Mr. Trump called to his
secretary. “We need to get this criminal out of the country,” Mr. Trump
said, according to the people. Aides assumed the letter, which was brought
into the Oval Office, might reference a Chinese national in trouble with U.S
. law enforcement, the people said.
The letter, in fact, was from the Chinese government, urging the U.S. to
return Mr. Guo to China.
The document had been presented to Mr. Trump at a recent private dinner at
the White House, the people said. It was hand-delivered to the president by
Mr. Wynn, the Republican National Committee finance chairman, whose Macau
casino empire cannot operate without a license from the Chinese territory.
A White House spokesman declined to comment.
Some aides tried to shut the topic of conversation down, including by noting
Mr. Guo is a member of the president’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Fla.
, according to the people familiar with the meeting. The aides later worked
to prevent any possible attempts to deport Mr. Guo, an action they believed
would deprive the U.S. of a key point of leverage to use against Beijing,
the people said.
In early September, Deputy Assistant Attorney General Bruce Swartz, who
supervises the international affairs office at the Justice Department,
traveled to China for an anticorruption conference and lodged a protest with
Chinese law-enforcement authorities about China’s aggressive efforts to
force alleged fugitives to return from the U.S., people familiar with the
matter said.
While he was there, Beijing attempted to force another Chinese national to
return from the U.S., the people said, without providing details.
On Oct. 4, Mr. Guo was scheduled to speak at the Hudson Institute, a
prominent Washington think tank, the same day China’s Public Security
Minister Guo Shengkun was scheduled to meet with Attorney General Jeff
Sessions and others for high-level talks on law enforcement and
cybersecurity.
In the days leading up to the speech, the Hudson Institute detected a
Shanghai-based attack aimed at shutting down access to its website,
according to a spokesman. The Chinese Embassy also called Hudson personnel
warning them not to give Mr. Guo the opportunity to speak, according to
several people who received such calls.
The institute canceled the event. Kenneth Weinstein, the Institute’s
president, said Beijing “sought to dissuade” it from holding the event but
said the change of plans was caused by poor planning, not Chinese pressure.
Mr. Guo continued to antagonize the Chinese in the run-up to the Communist
Party’s twice-a-decade Congress, which began Wednesday. President Xi
Jinping is seeking to solidify his position as the country’s strongest
leader in decades during the weeklong event.
Earlier this month at an event in Washington, Mr. Guo released copies of an
alleged Chinese government document purporting to authorize a group of spies
to be dispatched to the U.S. to stop him and other targets. Beijing has
said the document is a forgery.
He also met with lawmakers and Mr. Bannon, the former White House chief
strategist who continues to advocate that the U.S. take a hard line on
economic negotiations with China. Mr. Guo posted photos of himself with Mr.
Bannon on a new English-language Twitter account he recently launched.
S*****n
发帖数: 4185
2
总结:
1.文贵说的是实话,那录音是FBI缴获后给他的;
2.Wynn背后坑文贵,文贵立马能知道是Wynn-能量巨大啊,wsn被坑都不知道谁下的手。
最后trump差点递解文贵,不过现在看到价值了-文贵的华盛顿记者会挽救了他自己。
1 (共1页)
进入Military版参与讨论
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trump和包子夫妻关系很好? 打脸的来了川粉们enjoy吧
文贵老领导Sessions不惜辞职力阻川普遣返阿贵文贵给Bannon捐了一亿美金
纽约时报找不到郭文贵?文贵牛逼,老川前顾问承认勾结吴征诽谤文贵
爱尔兰航空起诉郭文贵Guo Wengui The live broadcast on May 29(english subtitles)
相关话题的讨论汇总
话题: mr话题: guo话题: chinese话题: china话题: officials