HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020518.jpg

2.11 MB

Extraction Summary

3
People
5
Organizations
3
Locations
2
Events
1
Relationships
2
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Government report / house oversight committee document
File Size: 2.11 MB
Summary

This document appears to be page 59 of a House Oversight Committee report (Section 5) analyzing the relationship between US and Chinese think tanks as of 2018. It details the demographics of US China experts, the necessity of cross-border interaction for research, and notes a significant decline in the openness and productivity of these dialogues due to stricter Chinese government regulations, such as travel limits and topic vetting. While part of a document dump often associated with investigations (potentially overlapping with foreign influence inquiries), this specific page does not mention Jeffrey Epstein or flight logs.

People (3)

Name Role Context
China experts Subject matter experts
Interviewed for the report, some served in US government
US think tanker Interviewee
Quoted regarding the decline in productivity of conversations
Chinese interlocutors Counterparts
Noted for a decline in candor and greater uniformity in speech

Organizations (5)

Name Type Context
US think tanks
Subject of the report regarding their focus on China
Chinese think tanks
Counterparts to US institutions
US government
Previous employer of about half the experts interviewed
Chinese government
Source of partial funding for one think tank; issuer of new restrictive regulations
House Oversight Committee
Implied by footer stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT'

Timeline (2 events)

2018
Interviews conducted with China experts
Unknown
China experts Interviewers
Ongoing (around 2018)
Track 1.5 or Track 2 dialogues
China and US
US scholars Chinese scholars

Locations (3)

Location Context
Primary subject location
Location of US think tanks
PRC
People's Republic of China, origin of some staff

Relationships (1)

US think tanks Professional/Research Chinese think tanks
Significant interaction... researchers need to visit China as well as host and receive visitors

Key Quotes (2)

"One directs a think tank that is partially supported by Chinese government funds."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020518.jpg
Quote #1
"The conversations have declined in productivity"
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020518.jpg
Quote #2

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (3,028 characters)

59
recognized China experts (with the exception of one who is more broadly an Asia
expert but has extensive experience with China-related projects) who have served as
directors of programs or centers in their respective institutions. About half have served
in the US government. One directs a think tank that is partially supported by Chinese
government funds. The interviews were all conducted in 2018.
China has become a priority field for US think tanks concerned with international
relations, and most now have staff members (often several) devoted to researching and
publishing on China. Many possess PhD degrees, Chinese language skills, and have
lived in or visited China over many years with some originally from the PRC. Some
stay on staff for many years, while others work on short-term (two- or three-year)
contracts. Most think tanks also employ student research assistants and interns
(including those from China).
There is significant interaction between American and Chinese think tanks—as
think-tank researchers need to visit China as well as host and receive visitors in the United
States to be well informed and to perform their own research work. Most interviewees
reported hosting or participating in ad hoc meetings in their home institutions with
visiting Chinese officials or scholars on a regular basis; although two do not host any
meetings with Chinese, they will attend such events if hosted by others. All but one
of the interviewees travel to China for their work: to deliver lectures, to participate in
conferences or Track 1.5 or Track 2 dialogues, and to do research for articles, books,
and reports.
A number of scholars noted a marked shift in the nature of their interactions with
Chinese colleagues and research projects over the past few years. While long-
standing Track 2 dialogues continue on issues such as cyber policy, nuclear policy,
and US-China interactions in third countries and regions, overall they seem not as
open, robust, and productive as in the past. Indeed, several long-standing Track 2
dialogues have been curtailed or stopped altogether—with scholars reporting that
it is increasingly difficult to establish sustained dialogues that are meaningful with
Chinese think tanks because of new rules, restrictions, and uncertainties. For instance,
Chinese institutions (both think tanks and universities) must now obtain central-level
government approval, such as vetting dialogue topics and foreign participants, before
being able to host foreign participants in China. New Chinese government regulations
generally limit Chinese think-tank scholars and university professors to one foreign
trip per year, and even go so far as to hold passports to make even personal travel more
difficult.
When dialogues do occur, another noticeable recent trend has been a decline in
candor and greater uniformity in what Chinese interlocutors say. One US think tanker
noted, “The conversations have declined in productivity,” while another commented
Section 5
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020518

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