-Caveat Lector-

China Finds Bugs on Jet Refitted in U.S.

By John Pomfret
Washington Post Foreign Service
Saturday, January 19, 2002; Page A1

BEIJING, Jan. 18 – Somewhere on a military airfield north of Beijing, China's
presidential aircraft, a new Boeing 767-300ER with all the trimmings, sits
unused with parts of its innards torn out.

Last October, days before its planned maiden voyage, Chinese military
communications experts discovered numerous high-tech listening devices
planted inside the plane, according to Chinese and Western sources, who
said they had been told of this by Chinese military officers and aviation
officials. The plane was grounded and has not been flown since it was
delivered.

Chinese aviation officials and military officers have charged that U.S.
intelligence agencies planted the bugs aboard the plane while it was being
refitted in the United States, the sources said. The U.S. Embassy declined to
comment on the allegations. Analysts said the devices were highly
sophisticated.

A CIA spokesman, Bill Harlow, declined to comment on the report, saying,
"We never comment on allegations like these, as a matter of policy."

The story behind the immobile Boeing jet offers a tantalizing glimpse of
modern spycraft. A Chinese source, with close ties to China's military
intelligence services, said members of the Third Department of the General
Staff Department of the People's Liberation Army discovered the devices.
The Third Department deals in signals intelligence.

The Chinese source said that, to date, 27 listening devices had been found,
including devices in the presidential bathroom and in the headboard of the
presidential bed.

A Western executive and a Western diplomat said they had been told by
Chinese aviation sources that the devices were highly sophisticated. The
diplomat said they "had to be triggered by a satellite communication. In that
sense, they were very advanced."

U.S. sources have said the controversy over the plane is emerging as an
issue in the summit meeting between President Bush and President Jiang
Zemin scheduled for Feb. 21 in Beijing. Chinese analysts said the incident
confirms their fears that the United States is an untrustworthy partner and
continues to treat China as an enemy.

After the listening devices were discovered, Western sources said, 20
Chinese air force officers and two officials from China Air Supply Import &
Export Corp., which was involved in negotiations for the jet, were detained.
Chinese sources said they were being investigated for negligence and for
corruption – the American firms were paid about $10 million for the refitting
job but China doled out $30 million.

In addition, a senior air force officer is under a form of house arrest for his
role in the affair. The officer has previously purchased planes for government
officials through the auspices of China United Airlines, owned by the Chinese
air force, which also had a piece of the transaction in question. A top officer
of the Bodyguards Bureau of the General Staff Department of the People's
Liberation Army, has also been criticized for tolerating the lax security, the
sources said.

The China Air Supply Import & Export Corp. and China United Airlines
declined to comment on the situation.

It is unclear how the episode could affect Boeing, which in September signed
a $2 billion deal to sell planes to China.

More broadly, Western diplomats said they believed Washington and Beijing
would weather the dispute. "This kind of thing is to be expected," said a
Chinese security expert, who noted that relations between Washington and
Moscow were not seriously disrupted by disclosures in the 1980s that the
Soviets had bugged the new U.S. Embassy. The expert added, "Even if our
relations were excellent, we would still spy on each other."

China purchased the Boeing 767-300ER in June 2000 for $120 million, a
Chinese source said. An executive at Delta Airlines said the Chinese were
so eager to obtain a top-of-the-line 767 that Delta allowed China to assume
its contractual responsibilities for one plane about to come off Boeing's
assembly line in Seattle.

China's state-run media, which dubbed the plane Air Force One, reported the
sale in August of that year. Several reports, including one that appeared in
the Guangzhou Daily, a mass circulation newspaper in that southern
metropolis, said the plane had already been brought to China for refitting.

In fact, the plane had been sent to the San Antonio International Airport for
refitting by several aircraft maintenance firms, including Dee Howard Aircraft
Maintenance Lp, Gore Design Completions Ltd., Rockwell Collins Inc. and
Avitra Aviation Services Ltd., a Singapore firm, according to companies that
worked on the contract. The job was worth less than $10 million, an industry
source said, and work continued during a very tense period in U.S.-Chinese
relations following the April 1, 2001, collision between a U.S. reconnaissance
aircraft and a Chinese jet off the coast of southern China.

In a report about the refitting work published last September, the San Antonio
Express-News quoted Earl Parker, a project manager for Avitra, as saying
the plane was not a "plain Jane, like [U.S.] Air Force One." Parker told the
newspaper the plane was refitted to accommodate about 100 people in
beige leather chairs that could be converted into beds. Larger, one-hour
oxygen canisters replaced the 20-minute type used on most aircraft. And the
new presidential suite consisted of a bedroom, sitting room and a bath with a
shower. The firms also added a 48-inch television set, satellite
communications, anti-missile defense systems and advanced avionics.

Chinese security guards provided round-the-clock security for the plane while
it was being refitted, the newspaper said.

How the listening devices got on board the plane is a mystery. Phil O'Connor,
a vice president at Dee Howard Aircraft Maintenance of San Antonio, said
today was the first time he he had heard of the allegations.

Robert Sanchez, chief operations officer at Gore Design Completions, also
of San Antonio, said he did not believe the allegations.

"We had an excellent relationship with every Chinese official who worked on
this project," he said. "We're not in the business of doing things like this." A
Rockwell Collins spokeswoman said the company would have no comment.

Work was completed on the plane in August and it was flown to China on
Aug. 10, stopping in Honolulu. A group of American workers and their
families accompanied the plane as guests of the Chinese government,
Sanchez said.

"The Chinese were very happy with the aircraft and with the work we did.
They took the workers to the Great Wall and showed them around," said
Sanchez. "Why would any of these corporations or workers consider that, if
they knew anything about this?"

Western diplomats and executives learned of the case in mid-October when
Chinese officials they normally did business with did not appear for
meetings. Chinese friends and colleagues informed them that the officials
had been arrested, they said.

The arrests occurred in China about the time that Jiang was supposed to
take his maiden voyage in the jet to attend the summit of the Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation forum in Shanghai. Jiang flew to the meeting on
another airplane.

Sanchez said Chinese government officials have not contacted his firm about
the problems. He also said that Chinese aviation officials said they wanted
Gore to work on three additional VIP aircraft.

"We're technical, not political," Sanchez said. "This incident is not going to
hurt the U.S. government; it's not going to hurt the government of China. It's
only going to hurt the firms. "

For years, China has worried that Western governments, using Western
companies, would use high-tech products to compromise China's security.
China spent millions of dollars protecting the new headquarters of the
Foreign Affairs Ministry from listening devices that could potentially be
mounted in office buildings nearby, a Chinese security source said.

Last year, the People's Daily, the official Communist Party newspaper,
carried an editorial in which it SAID the import of high-tech products from the
West constituted a security risk because Western governments would place
secret codes or technical Trojan horses inside the products to collect
intelligence.

Staff writer Thomas E. Ricks in Washington contributed to this report.

© 2002 The Washington Post Company

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