China accuses ‘foreign governments’ of installing fake weather stations to collect data

Chinese Ministry of State SecurityBEIJING HAS ACCUSED “FOREIGN governments” of collecting data on China through hundreds of fake meteorological stations that have been illegally installed throughout Chinese territory. The announcement appears to form part of a broader “people’s anti-espionage war” that the Communist Party of China launched in 2015 in order to create a “positive atmosphere of national security” across the nation.

On Tuesday of last week, China’s civilian spy agency, the Ministry of State Security (MSS), shared information about the alleged fake meteorological stations on its WeChat social media account. The agency said it had discovered hundreds of fake stations in over 20 Chinese provinces. The discovery resulted from an investigation of 10 firms that specialize in installing meteorological stations, which was broadened to include a probe of over 3,000 “foreign-linked” meteorological stations across China.

The MSS claims that some of the foreign companies involved in installing meteorological stations had not obtained the required administrative licenses. Furthermore, some of the stations had been placed in the vicinity of food-production hubs or defense-related installations, allegedly in order to record geolocational data. The latter were transmitted abroad in real time, the MSS said.

According to the spy agency, some of the fake meteorological stations were “directly funded by foreign governments”. However, there was no mention in the statement of the specific governments that allegedly funded these stations. Instead, the statement noted that “the illegal collection and cross-border transmission of meteorological data endangers China’s sovereignty, security, and development interests”.

It is rare for the reclusive and secrecy-prone MSS to make any public announcements relating to counter-espionage. In the past year, however, it has announced the arrests of several Chinese officials who allegedly spied on China for the United States Central Intelligence Agency. There is no information about whether the alleged fake meteorological stations are connected to prior arrests of Chinese officials for espionage.

Author: Joseph Fitsanakis | Date: 06 November 2023 | Permalink

4 Responses to China accuses ‘foreign governments’ of installing fake weather stations to collect data

  1. Anonymous says:

    Don’t know why China’s MSS is getting so upset and vocal.

    “Geolocational data” of Chinese fixed and mobile military units and nuclear weapon facilities and all manner of photos and intercepted electronic emissions are recorded daily from overflying Russian Low Earth Orbiting satellites, from Russia’s GLONASS terrestrial positioning satellites and Russia’s large Geo-stationary recce satellites.

    Also intercept stations on Russia’s Siberian borders with China intercept all sorts of Chinese emissions, including radar emissions, which will give away the “geolocation” of Chinese military installations, of Chinese mobile nuclear missiles and tank divisions.

  2. Anonymous says:

    The roll up of several assets in China is concerning too me. I wonder if a mole hunt is underway.

  3. Anonymous says:

    Damn it. I use windy.com which is the greatest weather service ever created. China’s pollution levels are insane. This probably a way for the CCP to crack down on the propagation of weather and environmental data so they can maintain the pretense that everything is fine

    also pretty clear the chinese have a spy deeply embedded in the five-eyes who is giving up network after network.

    https://edition.cnn.com/2021/12/10/politics/cia-shift-china-train-manage-spies/index.html#:~:text=Over%20the%20course%20of%20several%20years%20beginning%20in,sources%20say%20it%E2%80%99s%20unlikely%20that%20they%20have%20recovered.

  4. Anonymous says:

    We understand that Russian deep cover agents working in China’s nuclear weapons and intelligence sectors only receive light torture and are then spy swapped. Such are the benefits of Russia’s and China’s “no limits” partnership when they spy on each other.

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