Chinese Spies:
from Chairman Mao to Xi Jinping
Translated by Natasha Lehrer
Overview
Are the Chinese secret services now the most powerful in the world? After a long investigation into Beijing’s intelligence services and the backrooms of international politics, journalist Roger Faligot may have found the answer.
Unearthing previously unseen papers and interviewing countless insiders, Roger Faligot’s astonishing account reveals nothing less than a century of world events shaped by Chinese spies. Working as scientists, journalists, diplomats, foreign students, and businessmen, they’ve been everywhere — from Stalin’s purges to 9/11. This murky world has swept up Ho Chi Minh, the Clintons, and everyone in between, with the action moving from Cambodia to Cambridge, and from the Australian outback to the centres of Western power.
This fascinating narrative exposes the sprawling tentacles of the world’s largest intelligence service, from the very birth of communist China to Xi Jinping’s absolute rule today.
Details
- Format
- Size
- Extent
- ISBN
- RRP
- Pub date
- Other rights
- Paperback
- 234mm x 153mm
- 528 pages
- 9781925849639
- AUD$39.99
- 16 July 2019
- UK Hurst
Categories
Praise
‘Chinese Spies is an astounding and unmatched source book on the extraordinary reach of the PRC’s intelligence network. Roger Faligot explains in colourful detail the complex links between the spy agencies, the Party, the Party leaders, Chinese companies and the People’s Liberation Army. At once fascinating and chilling, it’s a book I found hard to put down.’
‘China is not just a country with intelligence services, but rather an intelligence state. In this wide-ranging book, Faligot traces this trajectory from pre-revolutionary Shanghai to the present and reveals a phenomenon for which the West is ill-prepared.’
About the Author
Translator
Natasha Lehrer’s writing has appeared in the Guardian, the TLS, the Nation and many other publications. Her co-translation of Nathalie Léger’s Suite for Barbara Loden won the 2017 Scott Moncrieff prize. Other translations include work by Georges Bataille, Robert Desnos, Victor Segalen, Chantal Thomas, and the Dalai Lama.