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This Article is From Jun 10, 2013

Leak of NSA programs tests US, China ties

Leak of NSA programs tests US, China ties
Beijing: A day after the presidents of China and the United States ended their first summit, pledges of cooperation by the two leaders faced an early test from an unexpected quarter -- an American intelligence contractor was leaking highly sensitive US surveillance programs from his hiding place in the Chinese territory of Hong Kong.


China, which has long chafed at US accusations that it carries out extensive surveillance on American government and commercial operations, may now have to make a decision on how to deal with the problem presented by the 29-year-old Edward Snowden, who has come out as the source of the leaks.


Cyber-security was one of the main topics during the informal summit this weekend between Chinese leader Xi Jinping and President Barack Obama at an estate in the California desert where they also sought to build a personal relationship.


But Snowden's presence in Hong Kong has already dragged China into what would have been a domestic issue for the United States.


"It's going to be seen by both sides as an unwelcome distraction," said Jean-Pierre Cabestan, a China politics expert at the Hong Kong Baptist University.


"This comes at a delicate time because of the Xi-Obama summit and the much bigger issues that both countries have to tackle and both governments and presidents have to discuss."


The Guardian newspaper reported Sunday that Snowden - who says he worked at the National Security Agency and the Central Intelligence Agency - is the self-confessed source of leaks about a phone records monitoring program and an Internet scouring program. Snowden was working as a contractor in an NSA office in Hawaii until he left for Hong Kong on May 20, the Guardian reported.


Snowden's exact whereabouts on Monday were unclear.


US officials see cybersecurity as probably the most pressing bilateral challenge, and Obama confronted Xi with specific evidence of intellectual property theft the US says is coming from China. Xi said China was also a victim of cyber-attacks but did not publicly acknowledge his own country's alleged activities.


The leaks about Washington's own domestic surveillance program could end up hurting US efforts to pressure China on cybersecurity, said Zhu Feng, an expert on China-US relations at Peking University in Beijing.


"This case will hurt the US bargaining power and dishonour its own credibility in charging China for cyberattacks. This is truth-telling," Zhu said. "China will likely tell the US, 'don't be too high profile, and don't take the moral high ground.'"


In going to Hong Kong, Snowden went to a Chinese territory that enjoys relative autonomy and has what he called a commitment to free speech. Although Hong Kong has an extradition treaty with the US, the document has some exceptions, including for crimes deemed political.


However, any negotiations about his possible handover will involve Beijing, which is unlikely to want to jeopardise its relationship with Washington over someone it would consider of little political interest, some analysts said.

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