Wang Lijun

Person
Mentions
19
Relationships
3
Events
4
Documents
5
Also known as:
Wang

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3 total relationships
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Documents Actions
person US State Department
Rejected asylum seeker
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1
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person US State Department
Asylum seeker rejected
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1
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organization State Department
Asylum seeker rejector
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1
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Date Event Type Description Location Actions
2012-02-01 N/A Wang Lijun walks into US consulate in Chengdu asking for asylum. Chengdu, China View
2012-02-01 N/A Wang Lijun walked into the US consulate in Chengdu asking for asylum. Chengdu, China View
2012-02-01 N/A Wang Lijun walks into U.S. consulate in Chengdu asking for asylum. Chengdu, China View
2012-02-01 N/A Wang Lijun arrested for corruption and sentenced to 15 years in prison after leaving U.S. protect... China View

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019808.jpg

This document is page 320 from a book (identified by ISBN as 'How America Lost Its Secrets' by Edward Jay Epstein), containing endnotes for pages 159-171. The text consists of citations for sources regarding Edward Snowden, espionage, the NSA, and Russian intelligence, dating primarily between 2012 and 2015. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' stamp, indicating it was produced as part of a congressional investigation, likely due to the author's surname matching Jeffrey Epstein or relevance to intelligence oversight.

Book endnotes / congressional production
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019647.jpg

This document appears to be page 159 from a book (likely by author Edward Jay Epstein, based on the filename code) included in a House Oversight investigation. It analyzes intelligence tradecraft regarding 'walk-ins' and defectors, discussing the strategic value of turning them into moles versus exfiltrating them. Specific cases discussed include the rejected asylum request of Chinese police chief Wang Lijun in 2012 and the flight of Edward Snowden to Russia.

Book page / investigative exhibit
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020545.jpg

This page from a government report details the efforts of the People's Republic of China (PRC) to influence and control Chinese-language media outlets in the United States, such as SinoVision, Qiaobao, and Sing Tao Newspaper Group. It discusses alleged financial subsidies, the ideological alignment of these publications with Beijing's official narratives, and the strategic goal of influencing the overseas Chinese community and American politics.

Government report / oversight document
2025-11-19

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This document is page 127 of a House Oversight report analyzing intelligence failures and defectors. It contrasts the rejected asylum request of Chinese official Wang Lijun with the case of Edward Snowden, detailing concerns that Snowden may have been recruited by Russian intelligence as early as 2009 or during his financial troubles in Geneva. The text outlines three possible scenarios for when Snowden came under Russian control and cites assessments by CIA Deputy Director Michael Morell and NSA Director General Keith Alexander.

Government report / investigative summary (house oversight)
2025-11-19

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This document is page 256, containing the endnotes for "Chapter Sixteen: The Question of When." It lists eleven sources, including books like "Spy Wars," articles from the New York Times and Reuters, a PBS program, and interviews conducted by the author with individuals such as Victor Cherkashin, Tyler Drumheller, and anonymous officials from the PFIAB and NSA. The citations cover topics related to espionage, including the NSA, KGB, Edward Snowden, and Robert Hanssen.

Endnotes page from a book or report
2025-11-17
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