While diplomatic rows are inevitable, the priority is to keep channels open, and engage with Beijing about the climate crisis

Once upon a time Britain would have sent a gunboat up the Yangtze River. That would teach those Chinese a lesson. To hear some MPs talk about Beijing’s espionage activities, you would think gunboats were already on their way.

Of course, it is malicious and hurtful for a foreign state patently to hack into Britain’s Electoral Commission and target senior parliamentarians – as the government on Monday claimed China did in 2021. It is equally malicious to fabricate MPs’ emails and use a Commons researcher as an informant. No less evil is the culture of fear sown among Britain’s 150,000 Chinese students by agents of Beijing, albeit tolerated by British universities greedy for money.

Simon Jenkins is a Guardian columnist

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

‘There is hope’: expert writes guide to tackling procrastination

Psychology professor draws on 20 years of studying often crippling issue that…

A new start after 60: ‘I became a security guard at 66. Am I ever scared? No’

From her first job, at 11, cleaning a factory floor, Anne-Marie Newland…

Government rejects Hillsborough law, but adopts charter

Ministers reject families’ call for legally enforceable ‘duty of candour’ and for…

Decision Desk HQ

trump speech, how many votes left in georgia, Donald Trump Jr, pennsylvania…