There Are Spies Among Us… and They Can Make You Rich

By Michael Robinson, Editor, American Wealth Underground, TaipanPublishingGroup.com

I’m sure you remember the story. Just a few weeks ago the mainstream media was riveted by revelations that 10 seemingly average suburbanites were actually Russian secret agents.

I’m sure you’ve heard the news. For the big-time reporters the stories had all the high drama of a novel by Ian Fleming, creator of the James Bond series. The infiltrators are alleged to have used forged passports, short-wave radio transmissions and messages written in invisible ink.

Indeed, some reporters even referred to the Russian-born Anna Chapman, described as the attractive 28-year-old redhead at the center of the scandal, as a real-life “Bond Girl.”

Then again, on Wednesdays, Chapman would go to a Manhattan Starbucks with her laptop to engage in high-tech espionage. There, federal officials allege, she would pass information over a wireless network to a minivan circling the block.

And yet indictments in the case indicate the agents operating under “deep cover” never did any real spying and never had access to classified American information.

Does anything strike you as a little odd here?

To me, the story just sounds too good to be true.

So, consider this: If Anna Chapman posed an honest threat to U.S. security, would she have had her own Facebook page using her real name?

The U.S. government seemed to bring a swift close to the scandal by swapping spies with Russia. End of story.

Or was it?

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Not when you consider that while you are reading this document real dedicated spies are hard at work trying to obtain access to sensitive American military and high-tech secrets.

And when they’re not trying to steal information, their cohorts are using malicious software code designed to damage computer networks operated
by federal agencies and major corporations.

They are believed to be behind the attacks last January on the computer networks operated by Internet giant Google, Inc. and nearly 150 other companies. It’s not our Cold War adversaries the Russians.

It’s the Chinese.

And they have been spying on the U.S. for years.

Consider that in 1999 the Cox Report submitted to Congress blew the lid off China’s persistent attempts to obtain information about America’s thermonuclearweapons and its most advanced computer technology.

The Cox Report was supposed to be a wake-up call.

And yet China continues to spy on the U.S. on a daily basis — often with great success.

Experts suggest the Chinese have several hundred to several thousand agents posing as tourists, students, teachers, visiting scientists and high-tech employees.

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In the Land of Mao Big Brother Is Always Watching

Given the hundreds of billions of dollars the U.S. owes China one has to wonder if our government sleuths will work as hard to expose and expunge the Chinese agents the way they did the Russian ring.

Remember how Google got in hot water because the online search firm didn’t want to help Chinese authorities track how their citizens used the Internet?

And that’s not all, not by a long shot. During the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, the government had miniature microphones installed in thousands of taxicabs to monitor conversations, according to an account in the Times of London.

The newspaper cited a 44-page “restricted” report from Scotland Yard as its source. The newspaper also said the Chinese government monitored crowds throughout the city using some 300,000 video cameras.

This year, the city of Shanghai hosted the World’s Fair. Roughly 100 million people are expected to have attended what is touted as the largest such event to date.

Local and national government agencies are estimated to have spent $6 billion to $12 billion on surveillance technology.

Meanwhile, under the government’s pervasive “safe city” initiative, China will spend roughly $25 billion over the next decade to provide comprehensive surveillance in about 660 cities.

That’s on top of an overall security market estimated at $30 billion.

The bottom line: spies are everywhere… not just in science fiction.

P.S. Not only do I believe that spies are among us… I also believe that we can make a lot of money off of them! I just found a Chinese company that has a heavy hand in the “spy situation”… and is perfectly positioned with exclusive contracts that could help them see a 400% spike in stock price in the coming months. You can read my latest exposé here.

About the Author

Michael Robinson is the Editor of Taipan Publishing Group’s American Wealth Underground, an investment research service that focuses on long-term, low-risk investment opportunities in the technology and government-contracting sectors. Michael is a 30-year media veteran who has worked as a staff writer for news outlets including Investors’ Business Daily, National Real Estate Investor, and The Wall Street Journal.

He is a two-time Pulitzer Prize nominee for investigative reporting and produced an award-winning five-part series on a controversial biotech drug while writing for the Oakland Tribune. Michael is also a published author. His book Overdrawn: The Bailout of American Savings uncovered a scandal at Bank of America that led to the dismissal of two executive vice presidents.

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