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A secret foreign army is already here. Bombshell national security reports reveal insidious plan to tear America apart

A secret foreign army is already here. Bombshell national security reports reveal insidious plan to tear America apart

Daily Mail​5 days ago
A secret foreign army is already here. Bombshell national security reports reveal insidious plan to tear America apart
Atlanta's main airport grinds to a halt when drones are seen buzzing in the sky.
Hours later, Chicago goes dark after a power substation mysteriously catches fire.
San Diego officials were already struggling to control an oil spill on the Coronado. Faucets have run dry in Denver due to a contaminated reservoir.
Then, a racist TikTok meme inspires a mass shooting in Minnesota, a cyberattack briefly shutters the Nasdaq exchange, and armed immigrants storm the Eagle Pass border post in Texas.
No, this isn't the opening sequence to a Hollywood movie — these are the nightmare scenarios in two bombshell reports from America's top national security think tanks.
Sandor Fabian, at the Modern War Institute, and RAND Corporation's Ian Mitch, paint a terrifying picture of the growing web of Chinese agents, often passing for students and businesspeople, deployed on US soil.
They've been in the US for years, silencing dissidents among the Chinese diaspora. But this 'secret army' can be redirected to acts of sabotage if US-China relations turn nasty, the scholars warn.
'The ways available for China to inflict serious physical and psychological damage on the US homeland and population in case of war are only limited by Beijing's imagination,' says Fabian, a former commando.
Another caravan of immigrants heads to the US border, only in this scary scenario, it's armed and directed by a foreign adversary
The US federal government faces a 'significant challenge' because our society is already a tinder box of racial and political differences ready to be lit by foreign psy ops, he adds.
The reports are a clarion call for tighter security at power plants, airports, data centers and other potential targets, and more intelligence officers to counter the growing menace.
China's embassy in Washington DC in a statement told the Daily Mail that the reports were 'groundless and malicious smear attacks', asserting that Beijing is committed to 'peaceful development' and does not interfere in other countries' affairs.
Fabian and Mitch do not envisage an all-out war involving nuclear weapons between the US and China.
Instead, they imagine a conflict playing out between the two superpowers 6,000 miles away in the Indo-Pacific.
In that scenario, China could launch non-conventional attacks from within the US that it could plausibly deny, so as not to escalate into a nuclear war.
The reports come amid deepening tensions between the two economic powerhouses, and credible reports that Chinese President Xi Jinping has ordered his forces to be ready to invade Taiwan by 2027.
The US has defense ties with the self-governing Island, which Beijing views as a wayward province. A Chinese assault or naval blockade of Taiwan could quickly spiral into a conflict between the US and China, experts say.
Still, a US-China war is by no means a certainty, and both countries conduct wide-ranging talks on everything from trade disputes to developing norms on artificial intelligence and combating terrorism.
Fears about clandestine operations on US soil came to a head in June, when a Chinese researcher in Michigan and her boyfriend were charged with smuggling a biological pathogen that ravages crops into the US.
Even small drones flying close to an airport have forced closures that cause millions of dollars of damage
Yunqing Jian, 33, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Michigan and member of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), allegedly smuggled a pathogen into the US
The fungus, Fusarium graminearum, is classified in scientific literature as an agroterrorism weapon
Chinese-American academic Wang Shuju posed as a pro-democracy activist while feeding information to Beijing
China-aligned groups launched coordinated raids on anti-Beijing protesters during President Xi Jinping's 2023 visit to California
An oil spill, like this one in southern California, is among the unconventional attacks that could be deployed
Yunqing Jian, 33, a University of Michigan postdoctoral fellow and Chinese Communist Party (CCP) member, and her partner, were caught at an airport with a dangerous fungus known as Fusarium graminearum.
They were charged with smuggling and lying to investigators. FBI Director Kash Patel called it a 'sobering reminder that the CCP is working around the clock to deploy operatives and researchers to infiltrate American institutions.'
Jian's arrest raised troubling questions about the roughly 280,000 Chinese students enrolled at US universities, and spotlights a series of shockers on US soil that can be traced back to Beijing.
Chinese-American scholar Shujun Wang was in 2024 convicted of posing as a pro-democracy activist, but in reality gathering information on dissidents and feeding their details to Beijing.
He famously burned down an artwork depicting Xi's head as a coronavirus molecule at a sculpture park in the Mojave Desert in July 2021.
Chinese operatives have meanwhile been caught running alleged political smear campaigns and monitoring dissidents in the US with spying gear and GPS trackers.
New Yorker Chen Jinping faces jail for running a bootleg police station for the Chinese government in Manhattan, to which he pleaded guilty in December 2024.
During Xi's visit to San Francisco in 2023, China-aligned groups launched coordinated raids on anti-Beijing protesters, attacking them with flagpoles and chemical sprays, and tossing sand in their eyes.
Chen Jinping and and others were arrested for allegedly operating a Chinese 'secret police station' in Manhattan's Chinatown
The surreptitious 'police station' in lower Manhattan was used to monitor and harass US-based dissidents
US authorities meanwhile have tracked dozens of incidents in which Chinese nationals, sometimes posing as tourists, attempted to access military bases and other sensitive sites — perhaps probing security and laying plans for future attacks.
House Republicans took action this week, introducing a bill to end the CCP's grip on American farmland.
Chinese entities have in recent years bought up 265,000 acres of American agricultural land, official figures show. Some of it is near sensitive military sites, stoking fears that the purchases could be used to stage military operations in the future.
US officials have already quietly busted dozens of espionage rings in recent years. But experts say that's just the tip of the iceberg.
Mitch, a former Department of Homeland Security intelligence officer, says China has built up a 'deep bench' of spies, sources, and contacts in the US chiefly aimed at silencing and harassing critics of its government.
All the while, he adds, they are 'developing the skills to physically sabotage critical infrastructure during a conflict.'
Fabian says the US homeland is far more vulnerable than most people — and policymakers — want to believe.
From drone attacks and cyber sabotage to manipulated mass protests and chaos at the border, he says the nightmare scenarios are endless.
He outlines a disturbing future: one where Chinese operatives exploit deep divisions in US society, weaponize immigration flows, crash critical infrastructure, and use social media to turn Americans against each other.
Overseas Chinese got out their flags to welcome Chinese President Xi Jinping during his 2023 visit to California
Homeland security agents prepare for drone strikes on LAX and other major airports
He points to real-world examples — fishing boats cutting undersea cables, drones grounding commercial planes, and malware shutting down gas pipelines — as proof of how low-tech or deniable attacks can cause massive disruption with minimal effort.
Among his most alarming predictions:
Cyberattacks on healthcare systems, financial networks, and power grids — causing mass panic and long-term service outages.
Drone incursions over military bases and airports, with the potential for sabotage, surveillance, or deadly strikes.
Proxies and manipulated protests inflaming racial and political tensions — potentially sparking riots and civil unrest.
Weaponized immigration, using mass migration flows to overwhelm federal agencies, spark political outrage, and ignite violence.
Social media manipulation, including deepfakes, fake news, and foreign-controlled algorithms aimed at dividing Americans and paralyzing national unity.
Both researchers warn that America's intelligence teams are overstretched.
The FBI in 2020 revealed that about half of its caseload of 5,000 counterintelligence probes related to China.
That has likely increased in the past five years, even as agents have been transferred to the immigration enforcement beat.
For Fabian, Washington must not only bolster security at soft targets and expand intelligence operations — but also wake up the American public to the chilling threats their enemies may already be plotting.
'It is time to begin developing a total defense approach to preparing American society, not just the military, for the realities of a future war,' he said.
A spokesperson for China's embassy in Washington strongly rejected the claims in the reports.
'The articles are groundless and malicious smear attacks against China. We firmly oppose it,' the spokesperson said in a statement.
'China is committed to the path of peaceful development. We never pose a threat to any country, nor do we interfere in other countries' internal affairs.'
Instead, added the spokesperson, China and the US have a 'shared responsibility for safeguarding peace and cooperation, and no reason for conflict and confrontation.'
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How bull---t took over our lives
How bull---t took over our lives

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'One of the most salient features of our culture is that there is so much bull---t.' So begins American philosopher Harry Frankfurt's unexpectedly delightful essay, On Bull---t, first published in an academic journal in 1986 and later as a bestselling book in 2005. Today its message is even more resonant. Greta Thunberg may think we are living in a climate emergency, but what is clearer, if less trumpeted, is that we are living in a bulls--- emergency. Thanks to – among other things – the democratising effect of the internet, the resultant decline in deference to 'experts', rising scorn for the political establishment, online echo chambers, the blurring of fact and fiction online – a problem recognised in 1995, by the journalist John Diamond: 'The problem with the internet is everything is true'' – we live in a post-truth era. All these factors favour the liar, but they favour the bull---ter even more. How astute then of Princeton University Press to reissue Frankfurt's essay, in a 20th-anniversary edition the neat size and colour of Mao 's little red book. (You might carry it around in your pocket so that you too can become a bull---t detector.) Heaven knows that it's the superpower we need today: Frankfurt perhaps didn't know when he wrote those words how high the tide of bull---t would rise in the ensuing two decades. And he surely had no inkling that the defecatory business model of Thames Water would provide an obvious parallel for his subject. But what is bull---t and how is it different from lies? Frankfurt draws on philosopher Max Black's 1983 essay, The Prevalence of Humbug, to help make that distinction: 'humbug' is 'deceptive information, misrepresentation, short of lying, especially by pretentious word or deed, of somebody's own thoughts, feelings and attitudes'. For Frankfurt, bull---t is humbug's vulgar bastard sibling but somehow worse. That Frankfurt never really defines his key term beyond 'humbug' may seem a shortcoming. Or maybe not. Maybe bull---t is like what pornography was for the US Supreme Court Judge Potter Stewart who famously failed to define the term but added: 'I know it when I see it.' Likewise, we often sense bull---t. We recognise it when the government minister, asked about a policy about-turn, begins their reply: 'The prime minister has been very clear about this…', only to continue with some sub-Chat GPT dross that doesn't even start to address the question. Or when a police officer tells the media in tone-deaf boilerplate, 'Our thoughts and prayers are with the friends and family…'. We see it thriving in greenwashing ads for oil companies; virtue-signalling gender fluid sign-offs in flyers from estate agents; why the AI Overview at the top of your Google search is plausible but on closer examination obviously wrong. We see it, most topically, when Donald Trump, like an overtired toddler, bless him, issues a raging 4am caps-lock policy initiative on Truth Social – yet the following day announces something that contradicts his nuit blanche fever tweet. The great thing for Frankfurt about such bull---ters is that they are not liars – not quite. As he explains: '[The bull---ter] does not reject the authority of the truth, as the liar does, and oppose himself to it. He pays no attention to it at all. By virtue of this, bull---t is a greater enemy of truth than lies are.' At least liars, in principle, can be argued against, and their lies exposed. (What bull---ters and liars have in common, as Frankfurt recognised, is that they take the rest of us for mugs. True, some of us are attuned to bull---t, but not all of us and not always.) At the same time, the virtuoso of bull---t can be regarded as smart and deserving of promotion. In his sub-Machiavellian 1998 bestseller, The 48 Laws of Power, for instance, pop psychologist Robert Greene might have heralded bull---t. I imagine the 49th law of power should read as follows: any human seeking airtime, status and, in extremis, the big chair in the Oval Office, better become a bull---t artist. Frankfurt also quotes a passage from Eric Ambler's spy novel Dirty Story, in which a character relates the sage advice he got from his father: 'Never tell a lie when you can bull---t your way through.' Bull---t was certainly part of Trump's skill set before he was elected president. His butler, Anthony Senecal, related in a 2016 interview a particularly summative anecdote about the US president's relationship to truth: one day, Senecal was reading Trump's book The Art of the Deal, and was puzzled by a passage in which Trump mentioned that the tiles in the nursery of Mar-a-Lago, West Palm Beach club, had been personally made by Walt Disney. 'Is that really true?' the butler asked the billionaire. Trump replied: 'Who cares?' The great virtue of Frankfurt's book is that he called out such bull---t long before Trump and other populist bull---t artists got elected. That said, perhaps even Frankfurt, who died in 2023, might not have foreseen how central the art of bull---t would be to his president's second term. Consider more recent Trumpisms: during last year's presidential race, he claimed illegal immigrants were eating pets. In March this year, speaking at a joint session of Congress, he alleged that the Biden administration had spent '$8m for making mice transgender'. The claims had journalists scurrying around like, well, transgender mice (if such rodents exist) to debunk or substantiate the claims. But, in a sense they missed the point. The truths of these matters – most likely that there are no transgender mice nor pet-eating illegal immigrants – didn't matter. What Trump did here was apply his former adviser Steve Bannon's notion of 'flooding the zone' with bull---t, in order to occupy the media's time and effort, which in itself takes a kind of genius. Since he wrote On Bull---t, other intellectuals have extended Frankfurt's analysis. Among them was the late American anarchist anthropologist David Graeber who, in his jolly 2013 piece, 'On the Phenomenon of Bull---t Jobs', paid tribute to Frankfurt's essay. Graeber's all-too-convincing argument was that many of us are working in jobs that are bull---t: 'A world without teachers or dock-workers would soon be in trouble. But it's not entirely clear how humanity would suffer were all private equity CEOs, lobbyists, PR researchers, actuaries, telemarketers, bailiffs or legal consultants to similarly vanish.' (When I interviewed him, Graeber conceded that some might argue that his own work is bull---t. He didn't include book reviewers like me as bull---t artists, but he could have done.) In 2018, philosopher George Lakoff proposed an anti-bull---t remedy for journalists called the truth sandwich. Confronted by the quotidian pump of Trumpian bull---t, the thing to do is not to repeat it. Or if one did repeat it, envelope it in – as it were – the nourishing bread of truth. As you may have noticed, that hasn't happened: the hopeful notion that we might have reached peak bull---t has been disproved by politicians ever since – from Boris Johnson's stints at the No 10 Covid lectern to risibly gaudy yet impotent threats against Israel and the US from Iran's supreme leader. The foregoing may seem to suggest only men do bull---t. Not so. Think of Liz Truss who, in her hilariously self-serving memoir, wrote of her battles with proponents of trans rights: 'I am not prepared to leave the field until the battle is won.' Pure bull---t, especially from someone who left the battlefield as prime minister after 49 days of chaos at Number 10. Meanwhile, journalist Matthew d'Ancona has argued that the post-truth era was only made possible by Sigmund Freud. In psychoanalysis, he claimed, the imperative is to treat the patient successfully, irrespective of the facts. 'Sharing your innermost feelings, shaping your life-drama, speaking from the heart: these pursuits are increasingly in competition with traditional forensic values.' Truth, in other words, is the leading victim in the spread of therapeutic culture. Frankfurt's essay concludes similarly: we have given up the ideal of correctness for that of sincerity, he claimed. He wrote: 'Convinced that reality has no inherent nature, which he might hope to identify as the truth about things, [the individual] devotes himself to being true to his own nature. It is as though he decides that since it makes no sense to try to be true to the fact, he must therefore be true to himself.' In that sense, Trump is the Humpty Dumpty of politics. Consider Alice Through the Looking Glass, where Lewis Carroll has Alice observe: 'The question is whether you can make words mean so many different things.' Humpty Dumpty retorts: 'The question is, which is to be master – that's all.' Power and mastery are all. Truth is beside the bull---ter's point. It's a sign of our cynical jaded times that even some of the president's fans know not to expect truth from him. No wonder, then, what happened in Selma, North Carolina in April 2022: 'I think I'm the most honest human being, perhaps, that God ever created,' Trump told a rally. His remark was greeted with laughter in the crowd. An equally valid reaction would have been: 'Bull---t!'

'The truth about Andrew would bury the Royal Family for good': Warnings Epstein may have sold prince's most intimate secrets to Putin - including videos - exposed in the devastating book royals tried to ban
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Man who 'kidnapped girlfriend, shackled her in shed and sexually abused her for two weeks' RELEASED from jail
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Man who 'kidnapped girlfriend, shackled her in shed and sexually abused her for two weeks' RELEASED from jail

A father-of-three accused of kidnapping his girlfriend, shackling her inside a shed and sexually abusing her for two weeks has been released from jail. Timothy Wood, 36, was arrested on July 2 after his girlfriend appeared at a neighbor's home covered in cuts and bruises, police said. She told investigators she had been held captive, beaten with an electrical chord and even stuffed into a crawl space for two days. The alleged victim said she managed to escape after two weeks by fleeing through an unlocked door. The Phoenix Police Department responded to a 911 call from the neighbor and arrested Wood for aggravated assault, sexual assault, felony kidnapping, and unlawful imprisonment. But he has since been released from jail after the Maricopa County Attorney's Office requested that police obtain additional evidence. The woman spoke to local news on the condition of anonymity to share her terror and shock that her alleged abuser was allowed to roam free. 'They told me that there was enough evidence to put him away. They told me that they found everything. The forensic nurse even corroborated my injuries,' she told local CBS affiliate, AZ Family. When asked what her message would be to the prosecutor who released Wood from jail, she told the outlet, 'Enjoy my funeral'. The department has since resubmitted the charges to the attorney's office. Wood's alleged victim told AZ Family that she started to cry when she heard the news. 'I want to get him off the streets not only to get justice for me, but to keep him from hurting somebody else 'cause he will.' Harrowing abuse Wood allegedly held his victim captive for two weeks in a backyard shed after she was evicted from her home. He forced her to stay in the shed, even when she had to go to the bathroom, and would only allow her to the main home if they were together, court records obtained by AZ Central revealed. She was allegedly subject to physical abuse during her captivity and told police that it only subsided when she had sex with him. The alleged victim was confined to the shed that was locked with chains and bricks. In one harrowing instance, she was allegedly tied down by her ankles. She told investigators that Wood struck her with an electrical cord and threatened to cut off her foot with a saw. He even allegedly suffocated her by kneeling on her neck and told her he'd kill her if she reported him to authorities. In another instance, Wood allegedly forced her into a crawl space and buried her alive for two days. She eventually found an unlocked door and said she escaped to a neighbor, who helped her call authorities. The neighbor told local Fox affiliate, Fox 10 Phoenix, that she found the woman with two black eyes, a cut, a bruise on her leg, and a bruise on her head. 'She was frantic. She was scared to death that he was going to find her and kill her,' the neighbor recalled. Prosecutors said during a court hearing that the woman was forced to have sex under death threats and was tied down with chains. 'This victim, very well for 14 days, may have been worried that she may not survive this incident,' a county prosecutor said. Wood appeared in court last month and denied the current accusations levied against him. He told the judge that he was a father of three and the allegations were 'crazy'. Wood then accused his alleged victim of just getting, 'out of the loony bin'. 'I guess she has these episodes, and when she has an episode, I'm supposed to call her mom,' Wood said. 'I wasn't home at the time. When I got home, the police were there, and this all just kind of broke out.' Chilling criminal record Wood has demonstrated a cycle of abuse since 2007 when he was arrested for aggravated assault, according to online court records. He pleaded guilty to the charges and was arrested again in 2010 for attempting to commit domestic violence, for which he also pleaded guilty. Court records obtained by AZ Central indicated that police arrested Wood in 2007 after witnesses reported he was attempting to kidnap a woman who was screaming near his truck. He told police that the woman was his girlfriend and they were arguing about him leaving his car. Wood was placed on probation, which he violated three years later by choking a pregnant woman. He was sentenced to a year in prison with jail credit and completed his time the following year. Daily Mail reached out to the Maricopa County Attorney's Office for additional court records and to the Phoenix Police Department for an update on the refiled charges against Wood.

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