Za źródłem polskich gazet ...
Beijing nice to its moles
When its foreign moles have been unmasked, Beijing takes care of them, welcoming them to China and finding jobs for them as advisors.
The tragic plane crash that claimed the lives of Poland’s President and a swath of political and military top brass on April 10 took the spotlight off a spy scandal that the Polish Intelligence services Sluzba Wywiadu Wojskowego, SWW, has been grappling with for more than a year.
The affair concerns the disappearance in May 2009 of Stefan Zielonka, an officer of the SWW. Zielonka was very familiar with NATO’s encryption and coding systems and with the Polish intelligence service's networks abroad.
The Chinese State Security Service, the Guoanbu, is believed to have exfiltrated Zielonka back to China. Much in the same way that the Soviet Union did during the Cold War, Beijing operates a special program to find new lives for Western diplomats or intelligence agents who have been burned while serving as its moles. Zielonka is believed to have been given a home in the Shanghai region along with his wife and child, who disappeared shortly after he did. Once they have settled down, the Western new arrivals carry on working for Chinese intelligence, and are given advisory posts in departments responsible for intelligence-gathering in their country of origin. Intelligence Online has been told that several European countries have “lost” agents this way in the past few years.