logo
Arrest of Chinese nationals in swing state, Israel's fight with Iran are 'wake up' call on CCP threat: experts

Arrest of Chinese nationals in swing state, Israel's fight with Iran are 'wake up' call on CCP threat: experts

Yahoo5 hours ago

Recent arrests of Chinese nationals at the University of Michigan have resurrected concerns about CCP-owned farmland and property in the United States, particularly in Michigan, and caused some to draw parallels with the current conflict between Iran and Israel.
Earlier this month, two Chinese nationals were charged with allegedly smuggling a "dangerous biological pathogen" into the U.S. to study at the University of Michigan in an incident that FBI Director Kash Patel described as a "sobering reminder that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) continues to deploy operatives and researchers to infiltrate our institutions and target our food supply, an act that could cripple our economy and endanger American lives."
Later, a third Chinese national with connections to the university was arrested, renewing questions about China's efforts to infiltrate and influence various sectors in the United States, including buying up farmland, which has been a growing concern nationwide.
A 2023 report from the United States Department of Agriculture found that "foreign persons held an interest in nearly 45 million acres of U.S. agricultural land," which represents 3.5% of all privately held agricultural land and 2% of all land in the country.
New Legislation Aims To Tell China 'No' On Buying Up American Farmland
While China is not at the top of the list of countries in that report, the arrests in Michigan have prompted calls from Congress to ensure that the CCP, viewed by many as the nation's top geopolitical adversary, is not buying up farmland in the United States.
Read On The Fox News App
Republican Sen. Pete Ricketts exclusively told Fox News Digital this week that China has been aggressively buying American agriculture, "which is why we need to have a heightened sense of vigilance around protecting our homeland."
Ricketts, along with Democratic Sen. John Fetterman, introduced the bipartisan Agricultural Foreign Investment Disclosure (AFIDA) Improvements Act that seeks to implement recommendations published by the Government Accountability Office in January 2024, which found the AFIDA was ill-equipped to combat foreign ownership of American agricultural land.
"China's land purchases aren't just about acreage—they're about access," Michigan GOP Rep. John Moolenaar, chairman of the House Select Committee on the Strategic Competition Between the United States and the CCP, told Fox News Digital.
"Even small parcels near military bases or critical infrastructure pose serious national security risks. In my home state, we've seen concerning cases like Gotion's site near Camp Grayling. We need full transparency into who's buying land and where—because the Chinese Communist Party shouldn't be allowed to hide behind shell companies to gain a foothold in our country."
Fbi Director Patel Leads Charge To Root Out Chinese Influence On Us Soil
China's encroachment into Michigan's agriculture was enough of a concern for Republican state Rep. Gina Johnsen to introduce legislation earlier this year banning foreign adversaries from buying up farmland.
"Our state's agricultural industry is a pillar of our economy. My community is an agricultural community," Johnsen said. Our farms provide food security, jobs, and economic stability for countless residents. However, there is growing concern about losing our farmland to countries of concern."
Additionally, Chinese farmland has become a topic of conversation in the wake of revelations that Israel's attack on Iran's nuclear capabilities was aided by years of covert planning, surveillance and infiltration by Israeli intelligence.
Code-named "Am Kelavi" (Rising Lion), the preemptive operation was the product of unprecedented coordination between the Israeli air force, the Military Intelligence Directorate, the Mossad and the country's defense industries. For years, they worked "shoulder to shoulder" to gather the intelligence files needed to eliminate Iran's most sensitive military and nuclear assets.
As part of that operation, Israel was able to establish a drone base inside Iran, where Mossad operatives retrieved them from hiding spots to use against Iranian sites.
Bryan Cunningham, president of Liberty Defense and former CIA intelligence officer, told Fox News Digital that the Israeli operation is a "wake-up call" for the United States about what a foreign adversary like China could potentially carry out in the United States.
"As an intelligence officer, part of me says, I wish that the sources and methods of building these drone factories inside the target countries hadn't been revealed," Cunningham said. "But on the other hand, it does serve as a wake-up call, hopefully for our policymakers, and it also ties in, and if I were the administration, I would make this tie in immediately and loudly with the Trump administration's border strategy."
Cunningham continued, "Our borders are where you're most likely to actually intercept these kinds of toxins, explosives, flares, 3D-printed weapons, ceramic weapons, whatever it is. So if it were me and I were the Secretary of Homeland Security, I would be tying this all together. You know, it is important to get people out of the country that have committed violent or other serious crimes in the country, but it's also really important to prevent people like these guys from bringing in those kinds of materials."
The FBI is increasing its surveillance of Iranian-backed operatives inside the United States as Trump weighs strikes, a senior law enforcement official told Fox News on Friday.
Fox News Digital's Deirdre Heavey, Lucas Tomlinson and Efrat Lachter contributed to this report.Original article source: Arrest of Chinese nationals in swing state, Israel's fight with Iran are 'wake up' call on CCP threat: experts

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Socialist NYC mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani once rapped about his ‘love' for Hamas teror-funding group ‘Holy Land Five'
Socialist NYC mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani once rapped about his ‘love' for Hamas teror-funding group ‘Holy Land Five'

New York Post

time31 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Socialist NYC mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani once rapped about his ‘love' for Hamas teror-funding group ‘Holy Land Five'

Socialist NYC mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani once voiced his 'love' for the five leaders of a notorious nonprofit convicted of funneling more than $12 million to the terror group Hamas. The former C-list rapper-turned-far-left-pol praised the heads of the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development – known as the 'Holy Land Five'– in a shocking 2017 rap track uncovered by the antisemitism-fighting group Canary Mission, and made public in a one-minute video segment released Friday. 'My love to the Holy Land Five. You better look 'em up,' the Queens assemblyman – who performed under the stage name Mr. Cardamom – says in a song called 'Salaam,' which the Queens assemblyman said is about growing up Muslim in New York. Advertisement NYC mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani (in middle) appearing a rap video for his song 'Nani' when he went by 'Mr. Cardamom.' Mr. Cardamom/Youtube The five heads of the now-defunct Texas based Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development — Shukri Abu Baker, Mohammad El-Mezain, Ghassan Elashi, Mufid Abdulqader and Abdulrahman Odeh — were all convicted in 2008 by a federal jury of funding Hamas, according to the Canary Mission. 'Mamdani sent his 'love' to convicted Hamas funders,' the Canary Mission video says. 'Let that sink in.' Advertisement The quintet were convicted of supporting terrorism, tax fraud, money laundering and other charges. The sentencing ranged from 15 to 65 years in prison for each. In another part of the track, the Israel-hating Mamdani — who is polling a strong second in nearly all polls heading into Tuesday's Democratic mayoral primary behind only ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo — raps, 'No ban. No wall. Build it up. We'll make it fall.' The antisemitism-fighting group responds in the video saying:' No ban, no wall—that's an open door for criminals and chaos.' 'Zohran Mamdani stands with convicted terrorist funders and wants open borders,' the group adds. Advertisement 'This is New York City — not a sanctuary for terrorists. Zohran Mamdani. Unfit. Un-American. Unthinkable.' Curtis Sliwa, a Republican mayoral candidate, said 'it's alarming that a mayoral candidate has a history of praising Hamas.' 'New Yorkers reject hate and extremism, and they should reject any candidate who refuses to do the same,' he added. Reps for Mamdani's campaign did not return messages Saturday.

US moves B-2 bombers as Trump considers Iran strike
US moves B-2 bombers as Trump considers Iran strike

Boston Globe

timean hour ago

  • Boston Globe

US moves B-2 bombers as Trump considers Iran strike

Iran fired a barrage of ballistic missiles and launched drones into Israeli territory on the ninth day of the conflict, which began with a surprise Israeli attack. International calls for de-escalation and a European diplomatic push have had little consequence on the air war raging between Israel and Iran, with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Aragchi warning on Saturday that U.S. involvement in the Israeli attack would be 'extremely dangerous for everyone.' Aragchi said the 'aggression must stop' before it would begin negotiating. Advertisement Emergency workers were at the site of an Iranian missile attack in Haifa, Israel, on Friday. DANIEL BEREHULAK/NYT The Israeli military's chief of staff has warned the Israeli public to prepare for a 'prolonged campaign' against Iran. Iran has said repeatedly that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only. But Israel regards Iran's potential for developing a nuclear weapon as a threat to its survival. Gideon Saar, the Israeli foreign minister, said the bombing campaign had pushed Iran two or three years back from the capability to make a nuclear weapon. But Israel has yet to take on some of the most significant nuclear sites, such as Fordo, which is hidden too deep underground for Israeli planes to destroy it from the air. Advertisement The region has been waiting to see whether Trump decides to join the fight. Israel hopes Trump will deploy American bombers to attack Fordo, a move that risks Iranian retaliation against U.S. forces stationed in the region. For now, Israelis and Iranians are experiencing terrifying days of bombardment that have upended daily life. Early Saturday, Iran fired missiles toward Israel, setting off air-raid sirens throughout the country's densely populated heartland. There were no reports of casualties. The Israeli military said it had launched a wave of airstrikes Saturday against Iranian missile sites, as well as a nuclear site near the city of Isfahan. The casualty toll was not immediately clear. The Iranian health ministry said more than 400 Iranians, most of them civilians, had been killed in the conflict so far. The Israeli government says at least 24 people have been killed there. A woman injured in an Israeli strike was in a bed at the Rasoul Akram hospital in Tehran on Saturday. ATTA KENARE/AFP via Getty Images Here is what else to know: -- Commanders killed: Israel's military said it killed Mohammed Said Izadi, Behnam Shahriyari and Amanpour Joudaki, commanders from the Revolutionary Guard. Izadi and Shahriyari were both senior official in the Quds Force, which oversees and supports proxy militias around the Middle East, according to Israel's defense ministry. Joudaki, it said, coordinated drone launches from southwestern Iran toward Israel. The deaths were not immediately confirmed by Iran. -- Geneva meeting: Talks between representatives of Iran and Europe ended on Friday with no signs of a breakthrough. The European effort aims to offer a diplomatic off-ramp for Iran to forestall a decision by Trump to join the war. Advertisement -- Street protests: Tens of thousands of people poured into the streets in Iran, Iraq and Lebanon after midday prayers Friday to vent their anger over the Israeli attacks. In Tehran, the Iranian capital, people trampled or burned American and Israeli flags, video from the scenes showed. This article originally appeared in

Former EPA administrator, activists react to 'One Big Beautiful Bill'
Former EPA administrator, activists react to 'One Big Beautiful Bill'

Chicago Tribune

timean hour ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Former EPA administrator, activists react to 'One Big Beautiful Bill'

As President Donald Trump touts a bill currently making its way through Congress as a win for the public, a former regional Environmental Protection Agency administrator is prepared to see devastating cuts to the office that could negatively impact human health. 'It's proposing severe cuts to both the scientific work that EPA's Office of Research and Development does and to the agency as a whole,' said Debra Shore, former administrator for EPA Region 5. 'It would severely reduce the agency's ability to fulfill its mission of protecting public health and the environment.' As the 'One Big Beautiful Bill' Act has passed the U.S. House of Representatives and moved to the Senate, activists nationwide have worried about the consequences. Shore said it's heartbreaking to see public servants at the EPA go through these cuts, especially as the administration tries to make the 'One Big Beautiful Bill' seem like a win. 'I have never worked with a group of such smart, devoted professionals who had a shared sense of mission as EPA employees,' Shore said. 'I know that's the case across the agency. … They could be working for far higher salaries in many cases, but they are dedicated to the foundational mission of the EPA, which is to protect public health and the environment.' On Tuesday and Wednesday, the EPA posted on Facebook, saying it 'delivers for all Americans.' 'One Big Beautiful Bill is putting American workers, taxpayers and families first,' the EPA's Tuesday post said. 'Under (Trump), the U.S. can unleash American energy while ensuring we have the cleanest air, land and water on (Earth).' The bill eliminates hundreds of billions of dollars in Green New Deal tax credits, repeals former President Joe Biden administration's electric vehicle mandates, and opens federal lands and waters to oil, gas, coal, geothermal and mineral leasing, according to the EPA's Tuesday post. According to the Wednesday post, the bill also 'streamlines onerous permitting processes,' refills the Strategic Petroleum reserve and 'delivers certainty to energy producers, saves and creates energy jobs, lowers energy costs for families.' A spokesperson for Sen. Todd Young, R-Indiana, provided a statement about the bill Friday. 'Senator Young continues to have conversations with his colleagues and stakeholders about improving the House-passed bill and addressing our nation's debt and deficit challenges,' said Leah Selk, spokesperson for Young. Representatives for Sen. Jim Banks, R-Indiana, did not respond to a request for comment Friday. Within the bill, the White House would also have the ability to cut federal agencies and reduce workforce, Shore said. 'This is just an utter abrogation of Congress' authority and power,' Shore said. 'It requires an annual report of planned reorganizational moves, and it also streamlines the ability of any future president to rebuild federal agencies because of some of the language in it.' Susan Thomas, director of policy and press for Just Transition Northwest Indiana, said it's concerning that EPA is treating the 'One Big Beautiful Bill' like a win, especially on social media platforms that are easily accessible. 'No one can take any information for granted anymore,' Thomas said. 'You must do your own research with trusted sources because the amount of greenwashing that's coming down is so dangerous. … This is becoming increasingly difficult, but it's more important than ever.' Thomas and Gary Advocates for Responsible Development board member Carolyn McCrady are both worried about the effects that environmental justice communities will face if the bill passes the Senate. McCrady expects public health to worsen as a result of EPA rollbacks. An October report from Industrious Labs found that most residents in Gary are in the top 10% of U.S. residents most at-risk for developing asthma and at-risk of low life expectancy. In 2020, Indiana had a lung cancer rate of 72.5 per 100,000 people, with Lake County as one of the state's counties with the highest cancer mortality rates, according to the American Lung Association. A 2016 JAMA Network report also found Gary as one of the top five U.S. cities with the lowest life expectancy at one point. 'I think people are going to be sicker faster,' McCrady said. 'I don't think people will be able to be served in the medical community in the same way, because in Indiana, millions of people are going to lose their health insurance because of the Medicaid cuts.' Although McCrady believes the EPA cuts are devastating, she isn't surprised to see them included in 'One Big Beautiful Bill.' Cuts will continue to put communities like Gary at a greater disadvantage, McCrady said. Thomas also believes that Northwest Indiana's environmental justice communities will struggle as a result of the 'One Big Beautiful Bill.' 'They've already stripped away all of the environmental justice provisions that had taken years to recognize and acknowledge and to start to put in place,' Thomas said. 'This is just a very sad state that we're in.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store