What the Chinese spying case witness statements reveal

16th October 2025

6 thoughts on “What the Chinese spying case witness statements reveal”

  1. This is fascinating – and we owe a huge thanks to David for sharing his analysis. One question that strikes me as pertinent to give context to these examples of testimony is one we can borrow from the United States: “What did the government know and when did they know it?”

    I ask this question because it is not disputed that China has conducted extensive economic espionage against the United Kingdom. I am reminded, for example, of reports dating back to 2016 or thereabouts which pointed to a visit of a Chinese Trade Delegation to the UK at which they were given an overview of the Pelamis Wave Power Generator system – and how, not long after that, China announced their Hailong 1 Wave Power Generator system – which looked *remarkably* similar in all respects except for scale.

    What interests me, specifically, is: if the UK has harbored concerns about China’s espionage activities in the UK, why on earth would the government agree to give China the authorisation to construct the *huge* embassy in London – phyiscally situated with alarming proximity to underground cables used by the UK government.

    This seems completely insane to me. Does anyone have insight on the way these chess pieces fit together? If the UK government had a reasonable collection of evidence that China has been conducting at least industrial espionage as far back as 2016, why would the UK grant China the approval for the London embassy? Am I missing something?

  2. Statement 3, para 7 describes activities of China at the time of the alleged offenses, but says that they were identified in March 2024; ie after the spying was alleged to have taken place.
    Thus this section at least cannot be used as evidence that the government or the accused believed China to be a threat at the time of the offenses.
    The CPS may reasonably have felt that this new evidence was not helpful.

  3. thank you for this , I have an ongoing interest in spy cases and have found searching for information online about this case to be riven with partisan “opinion “ and more in line with the political fall back of who knew what and when will they resign shtick.

    so thank you as always for a simple and effective dose of information

  4. A question: I’m trying to understand the difference between the 1911 and 2023 Acts .. and taking as read the changed geopolitical and technological contexts.

    In your previous post you stressed the difference between the evidential and public interest tests, and my understanding of today’s post is that it considers witness statements as they bear on the evidential test. But the phrasing of the 2023 Act, ‘prejudicial to the safety or interests of the state’ surely conflates the evidential and public interest tests?

    Allowing for my maybe being up a gumtree, doesn’t this raise a question against the wording of the 2023 Act? I take your point that the charges should have been brought under the 1911 Act, so my puzzlement doesn’t arise from your analysis of this case but from the legislation itself.

  5. Third witness statement paragraph 4: “China’s espionage operations threaten the UK’s economic prosperity and resilience, and the integrity of our democratic institutions.”

    The first threat can reasonably also be applied to Trump’s tariffs-by-decree. The global reverberations of his other political actions are covered by rest of the above quotation.

    “With friends like that…”

  6. The banality of this fiasco is what sticks out a mile. The time, money and paper wasted on a five minute sacking (I presume these folk are sacked) is a keynote feature of the British Way of Law and Politics.

    Now descended to Yah Boo Sucks politics. Who really cares whether the CPS screwed up – happens every day. This was never going to trial anyway – we need to make nice with China because we need the money and the US is not quite as reliable as it once was. Piggy in the Middle sums us up.

    While we are at it let the Chinese build their embassy, our sandwich shops will pay off the national debt – we need the money. Cable tapping is a non issue, we invented the technique and know a bit about how its done.

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