Beijing Declares Rare Earths and AI the Front Lines of a Global Espionage War

May 17, 2026

4 minute read.

Highlights

  • China's Ministry of State Security warns foreign intelligence agencies are targeting strategic industries including rare earths, semiconductors, and AI for espionage and technology extraction.
  • Beijing now treats rare earth processing technologies and supply chain data as strategic state assets, signaling that industrial competition itself is viewed as espionage-adjacent activity.
  • The security escalation means higher operational risks in China, tighter export controls, and accelerated Western efforts toward supply chain diversification and friend-shoring.

In a strongly worded notice published Sunday, Chinaโ€™s Ministry of State Security (MSS) (opens in a new tab) warned that foreign intelligence agencies are aggressively targeting Chinaโ€™s strategic industriesโ€”including rare earths, semiconductors, artificial intelligence, photovoltaics, and advanced chipsโ€”for espionage and technology extraction. The statement, released through the state-linked Global Times, frames economic competition increasingly as a national security conflict rather than normal commercial rivalry.

Rare Earths Move From Commodity to Strategic Weapon

For Western business and policy audiences, the most important development is not the cybersecurity rhetoric itselfโ€”but the explicit elevation of rare earths into Chinaโ€™s national security architecture. Beijing is effectively signaling that rare earth processing technologies, supply chain data, and industrial know-how are now considered strategic state assets.

That matters because China still dominates the global midstream rare earth ecosystemโ€”particularly separation, refining, metallization, and magnet manufacturing. The MSS statement strongly implies Beijing believes foreign governments and corporations are attempting to penetrate those industrial systems to reduce dependence on China or gain competitive leverage.

For U.S. and European firms, the message is clear: China increasingly views industrial competition itself as espionage-adjacent. And this raises implications to consider.

โ€œOpen Sourceโ€ Data Collection Now Treated as Threat

The MSS specifically warned that foreign entities are using phishing attacks, open-source intelligence scraping, dark web acquisitions, cloud systems, and AI-driven data analysis to gather sensitive industrial information.

This is significant because many Western firms operating in China rely heavily on cloud collaboration tools, engineering platforms, and international supply chain data sharing. Beijing appears to be preparing for tighter data localization, more security inspections, and potentially stricter controls over employee communications and technology transfer. The statement also reflects growing Chinese anxiety that AI itself accelerates intelligence gathering and industrial leakage.

Propaganda Layer: Fear, Discipline, and Internal Control

Because the article originates from _Global Times (opens in a new tab)_โ€”owned by the Peopleโ€™s Daily, the official newspaper of the Chinese Communist Partyโ€”the political messaging deserves careful scrutiny.

The article serves multiple internal purposes simultaneously:

  • justify expanded state surveillance and counter-espionage powers;
  • reinforce ideological discipline inside Chinese institutions;
  • warn employees against cooperation with foreign firms;
  • frame economic rivalry with the West as an existential national defense.

No direct evidence or named espionage cases were provided in the report.

What This Means for the West

The broader implication is profound: China is openly merging industrial policy, technology competition, and state security into one unified framework. For Western governments and corporations, this likely means:

  • Higher operational risk inside China;
  • tighter export controls and technology restrictions;
  • more fragmented supply chains;
  • accelerated โ€œfriend-shoringโ€ efforts in rare earths and AI.

The notice reinforces what we have known for years now: Beijing no longer sees the rare earth sector merely as commerce. It increasingly views it as strategic terrain in a long-duration geopolitical contest.

Disclaimer: This report is based on material published by Global Times, a media outlet affiliated with the Chinese Communist Party through the Peopleโ€™s Daily system. Claims and implications should be independently verified through additional sources.

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By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

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China's MSS warns foreign intelligence targets rare earth tech as Beijing elevates China rare earth security to national defense priority. (read full article...)

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