
A bipartisan Senate coalition introduced new legislation Thursday designed to put an end to “nearly two decades” of federal officials being “asleep at the wheel” as China stole valuable American knowledge and technology to build up its economy and military.
The Safeguarding American Innovation Acts chief co-sponsors are Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) and Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.), who together have led a two-year investigation of Chinese commercial, academic, and technological espionage against the United States.
Portman is chairman of the Permanent Investigations Subcommittee of the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee, while Carper is the most senior Democratic member.
Among the major provisions of the proposal, according to a statement issued by Portman, are these:
- Punishing individuals who intentionally fail to disclose foreign support on federal grant applications, with penalties ranging from fines and imprisonment for not more than five years or both, and a five-year prohibition on receiving a federal grant.
- Strengthening the Student and Exchange Visitor Program by requiring the State Departments exchange program sponsors to have safeguards against unauthorized access to sensitive technologies and report to State if an exchange visitor will have access to sensitive technologies.
- Strengthening the State Departments authority to deny visas to certain foreign nationals seeking access to sensitive technologies when it is contrary to U.S. national security and economic security interests of the United States.
- Mandating a standardized U.S. government grant process by authorizing the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to work with federal grant-making agencies to standardize the grant application process; share information about grantees; and create a U.S. government-wide database of federal grantees.
- Lowering the reporting threshold for U.S. schools and universities receiving foreign gifts from $250,000 to $50,000 and giving the Department of Education authority to punish schools that fail to properly report.
The bill implements recommendations from the subcommittees series of reports beginning in February 2019 that exposed how China used its Confucius Institutes to funnel more than $150 million to U.S. universities and scholars at 100 institutions of higher learning and research.
The subcommittee found, among much else, that more than 70 percent of U.S. institutions failed to disclose Chinese funding even though it often came with “strings that compromise academic freedom.”
The subcommittees work has helped prompt increased attention by federal officials and academic administrations on espionage on American campuses by China and other foreign governments.
Earlier this year, a federal grand jury indicted former Harvard University Chemistry Department Chairman Charles Lieberman for making false statements about funding he received from China under its Thousand Talents recruitment program, which, like the Confucius Institutes, is used to steal American-developed technological resources.
Lieber, who specialized in nanoscience, worked with Chinas Wuhan University of Technology as a “strategic scientist” and was involved with the Chinese program for multiple years.
“For nearly two decades, the federal government has been asleep at the wheel while foreign governments have exploited the lack of transparency in our education system and bought access and influence on our school caRead More From Source
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