China is using LinkedIn to recruit spies: FBI

NEW YORK, UNITED STATES — The United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and its intelligence partners in Britain, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand issued a joint warning that Chinese military intelligence is using LinkedIn and professional networking platforms to identify and recruit individuals with access to classified government information, Bloomberg reports.
China targets cleared personnel through fake job platforms
“China’s military intelligence services are using an increasingly wide array of professional networking sites and online job platforms to target Five Eyes government and military personnel — and anyone with access to classified or privileged information,” said the joint notice, signed by the FBI, Britain’s MI5, and the domestic security agencies of Australia, Canada, and New Zealand.
The statement, described as unprecedented in scope, warned that Chinese intelligence officers or affiliates pose as employees of private consultancies, think tanks, or HR firms to approach targets through legitimate-looking job advertisements.
Primary targets are security-cleared personnel in foreign affairs, intelligence, and military roles — particularly those in the Asia-Pacific region — but academics, journalists, and think tank employees with peripheral government access are also being approached.
FBI calls China’s recruitment tactics deliberate and systematic
“China has consistently demonstrated a willingness to disregard laws, norms, and international standards in pursuit of its intelligence objectives, often relying on deceptive online tactics to target Americans with access to privileged and sensitive information,” the FBI said in a separate statement.
Chinese spies have commissioned written reports from targets, paying amounts from a few hundred to several thousand dollars — some in cryptocurrency.
Military targets are asked about their roles, unit activities, home base, or naval vessel.
Five Eyes agencies said identified individuals have faced criminal prosecutions, job losses, and security clearance revocations.
The Chinese embassy in the UK called the accusations “entirely fabricated” and “malicious slander,” countering that Five Eyes members “have engaged in unscrupulous espionage and intelligence-gathering activities around the globe.”
For BPO providers and offshore staffing firms, the warning carries a direct operational implication: LinkedIn is a primary recruitment and business development channel for the outsourcing industry.
The fake-consultancy approach the Five Eyes describe — posting analyst-type job advertisements to attract people with institutional access — is structurally indistinguishable from legitimate offshore talent sourcing.
Firms doing sensitive work for government-adjacent clients should establish staff awareness protocols for unsolicited job-related outreach from unfamiliar organizations.

Independent




