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An official from the United States Defence Intelligence Agency was charged on Tuesday, 5 June, with selling US secrets to China in exchange for at least USD 800,000.
It was just the latest in a series of arrests of American officials on charges of spying for Beijing.
Hansen, the charges said, was retired from the US army where he worked in signals intelligence.
Fluent in Mandarin and Russian, he was recruited in 2006 to work for the DIA as a case officer, someone who recruits and manages foreign intelligence assets.
Based out of a commercial office in Beijing, Hansen made contacts with Chinese intelligence, and over several years tried to pitch himself to the DIA and FBI as a double agent who would act ultimately for the Untied States, the indictment said.
They also discovered that Hansen was in deep financial trouble from 2013 to 2016, with debts of several hundred thousand dollars.
During and after that time, he received more than USD 800,000 in payments from China, often cash that he hand-carried to the United States, that he could not explain.
By early this year, the FBI learned that Hansen was seeking from American colleagues information on the US position on North and South Korea, as well as its military operations plan against China, to be sold to his Chinese contacts.
In January, former CIA agent Jerry Chun Shing Lee was arrested on charges that he sold information to China. He is reportedly suspected of having provided information on the CIA's network of informants that was brought down by Chinese between 2010 and 2012.
Former State Department official Kevin Mallory was arrested last year for spying for China.
And another US diplomat, Candace Marie Claiborne, was also arrested for taking money from Chinese intelligence officials, though she was not directly accused of supplying information in exchange.
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