Sec. 3. Statement of policy
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/bill/115/hr/6010/ih/section-3·A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
Congress finds the following: The Chinese Government and Communist Party employ a wide range of political, informational, and economic measures to influence, coerce, intimidate, or undermine United States interests or the interests of United States partners and allies. According to the December 2017 National Security Strategy of the United States of America, [A]lthough the United States seeks to continue to cooperate with China, China is using economic inducements and penalties, influence operations, and implied military threats to persuade other states to heed its political and security agenda. .
The political influence operations efforts of the Chinese Government and Communist Party have received less scrutiny than the efforts of the Russian Government, but given China’s economic strength and the growing apparatus being used to spread its influence globally, efforts to promote its authoritarian ideal pose significant and consequential long-term challenges to United States interests and values. The Chinese Government and Communist Party use both overt and covert means to target the political and economic elite, the media and public opinion, civil society and academia, and members of the Chinese diaspora.
The Chinese Government and Communist Party employs an array of government entities, friendship and exchange organizations, and government funded foundations, think-tanks, educational and other projects to carry out political influence operations, often called united front work . The Chinese Government and Communist Party’s political influence operations aim is to secure the regime’s political stability domestically and spread globally its political and economic model as superior to those of Western democracies.
The Chinese Government and Communist Party’s political influence operations take advantage of the open and democratic nature of the United States, including constitutional protections for free speech and a free press, and the desire by some individuals or institutions to attract Chinese investment, gain access to Chinese markets, or attain greater global influence. It is the sense of Congress that the Chinese Government and Communist Party’s political influence operations are not soft power intended to persuade, but sharp power intended to penetrate or corrupt democratic countries, foster attitudes and behavior favorable to the Chinese Government’s interest through disinformation, coercion, and other means, and to widen the scope of authoritarian influence globally.
It is further the sense of Congress that Congress and the American public need reliable and current information to understand the malign goals of these political influence operations, identify the key institutions, individuals, entities, and ministries that carry out such operations, and distinguish them from the cultural, educational, and people-to-people exchanges which benefit both the United States and China. It is the policy of the United States to— clearly differentiate between the Chinese people and culture and the Chinese Government and Communist Party in official statements, media, and messaging, and to ensure that efforts to curtail Beijing’s political influence operations do not lead to the targeting of Chinese-Americans or the Chinese diaspora, as they are most often the victims and primary targets of political influence operations; take steps to ensure that Chinese nationals who are legally studying, living, or working temporarily in the United States know that intimidation or surveillance by the Chinese Government and Communist Party is an unacceptable invasion of their rights while they reside in the United States; enhance cooperation and coordination with Australia, Canada, and Taiwan (Republic of China), whose governments and institutions have faced acute pressure from the Chinese Government and Communist Party’s political influence operations, and with other allies globally, to counter such operations, curtail advances of authoritarian ideals that challenge democratic values and international human rights norms, and create strategies to ensure countries in Africa, the Western Hemisphere, Southeast Asia, and elsewhere are aware of China’s sharp power and work collaboratively to counter coercive, covert, and corrupting elements; develop a strategic assessment and long-term strategy to counter the Chinese Government and Communist Party’s political influence operations, censorship, propaganda, and disinformation that undermines democratic institutions, targets United States citizens or nationals or intimidates their families in China; and uses economic tools, market access, cyberattacks, or other capabilities to undermine the freedoms of speech, expression, press, association, assembly, religion, or academic thought; implement more advanced transparency requirements concerning collaboration with Chinese actors for media agencies, universities, think tanks, and government officials, among others, and raise awareness, through various forums about the goals and methods of the Chinese Government and Communist Party’s political influence operations and common patterns and approaches used by Chinese intelligence agencies or related actors; require Confucius Institutes, and any other think tanks, academic programs, or nongovernmental organizations funded primarily by the Chinese Government or Chinese Government-affiliated entities and operating in the United States, to register under section 2 of the Foreign Agents Registration Act of 1938 ( 22 U.S.C. 612 ); seek ways to increase Chinese language proficiency among mid-career professionals; and create more flexible tools to screen investments from Chinese Government or Chinese Government-backed sources to protect against the takeover of United States companies by Chinese state-owned or state-driven entities, and to protect institutions or business sectors critically important to United States national security and the viability of democratic institutions.
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U.S. Code