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Home Front: WoT
Losing our secrets
2006-11-29
With a host of promised congressional investigations on Iraq, intelligence and homeland security, it's worth noting the relative Democratic silence on espionage by Communist China. The latter's spying successes on the Bush administration's watch are indisputable. Will Democrats pursue this evident national-security threat as aggressively as headline-grabbers like Iraq? Color us skeptical.

The latest news is the apparent compromise of highly classified stealth technology used on B-2 bomber engines. As Bill Gertz of The Washington Times reported Thanksgiving Day, federal authorities accuse former defense contractor Noshir S. Gowadia, an Indian-born American citizen, of passing highly classified stealth technology to China for at least $110,000 and possibly as much as $2 million as he traveled secretly to China six times over the period 2002-2005. A Hawaii resident, he also allegedly helped China modify cruise missiles to intercept U.S. air-to-air missiles, helped the Communist government make other technical improvements to other systems and exposed secret and top-secret information pertaining to U.S. stealth technology by e-mail to recipients in Israel, Germany and Switzerland. The first offense allegedly occurring in a lecture attended by foreign nationals of as many as eight countries in 1999.

Mr. Gowadia, who pleads innocent, says he "wanted to help these countries further their self aircraft protection systems" and drum up customers for future business. If federal authorities are right, the Chinese have scored a huge success on a key U.S. weapons system thanks to the efforts of a single businessman and his alleged conspirators, at least one of whom is employed overtly by the Chinese government.

This follows a string of espionage scores by Communist China over the last several years. Earlier this year, two Chinese-born brothers were arrested in Los Angeles for allegedly passing along Navy warship and submarine weapons secrets. Then there was the shocking case of Los Angeles businesswoman and triple agent Katrina Leung, who turned out to be the purveyor of secret details of highly sensitive U.S. intelligence operations against China. She had been sexually involved with two of the FBI's most senior counterintelligence officers. The long march of Chinese espionage undergirds that country's long-term effort to maximize its military power and become Asia's regional hegemon.

The biggest scandal, as Mr. Gertz writes in "Enemies: How America's Foes Steal Our Vital Secrets -- And How We Let It Happen," is that "U.S. officials still have done almost nothing to correct the ineptness and poor leadership that have brought us two decades of spy scandals." Mr. Gertz contends that in the five years since September 11, government agencies have actually made counterintelligence less of a priority -- a fact which cries out for national-security investigation.

Of course, Chinese espionage simmers whereas Iraq lights up debate and grabs headlines. Thus, and for no reason pertaining to its actual dangers, Chinese espionage is likely to be overlooked by the incoming Democratic congressional leadership.
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Fifth Column
China bought (B2) bomber secrets
2006-11-23
This guy has to swing.
China obtained secret stealth technology used on B-2 bomber engines from a Hawaii-based spy ring in a compromise U.S. officials say will allow Beijing to copy or counter a key weapon in the Pentagon's new strategy against China.

Details of the classified defense technology related to the B-2's engine exhaust system and its ability to avoid detection by infrared sensors were sold to Chinese officials by former defense contractor Noshir S. Gowadia, an Indian-born citizen charged with spying in a federal indictment released by prosecutors in Hawaii. Additionally, Mr. Gowadia provided extensive technical assistance to Chinese weapons designers in developing a cruise missile with an engine exhaust system that is hard to detect by radar, according to court papers made public recently.

He also helped the Chinese modify a cruise missile so that it can intercept U.S. air-to-air missiles, and helped Chinese weapons designers improve testing and measurement facilities, the court papers state.

Most of the indictment, handed up Nov. 8, outlines how the engineer helped China develop a radar-evading stealth exhaust nozzle for a cruise missile engine. Additionally, the court papers indicated that Mr. Gowadia sent e-mails to Israel, Germany, and Switzerland in 2002 and 2004 that contained data labeled "secret" and "top secret" that was related to U.S. stealth technology intended for use in the TH-98 Eurocopter and for foreign commercial aircraft.
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China-Japan-Koreas
B-2 Spy faces more charges
2006-11-09
A 62-year-old Maui engineer who worked on the B-2 stealth bomber has been charged with using secret military information to help China build a stealth cruise missile.

A federal grand jury upgraded a former indictment against Noshir S. Gowadia, originally charged with selling information involving the B-2 aircraft to three unnamed countries, and has charged him with assisting China with designing and testing an exhaust system nozzle that protects a cruise missile from detection. The 18-count superseding indictment issued yesterday also charges Gowadia with sharing secret military information with representatives of China to benefit China or harm the United States.

"As charged in the superseding indictment, the defendant in this case attempted to profit from his know-how and his knowledge of sensitive military technology," Kenneth Wainstein, assistant attorney general for the national security division, said in a press release. "This case demonstrates that the Department of Justice will vigorously prosecute those who illegally transfer such information and services to foreign countries," Wainstein said.

Gowadia could face the death penalty under the new charges. There is also the possibility of life in prison and a fine of $250,000 or double the gain for his violation. The indictment describes six trips to China by Gowadia to discuss, design and test the stealth cruise missile, along with secret e-mails with a representative of China's "Foreign Experts Bureau."

Gowadia is also charged with unauthorized retention and possession of classified military information and four counts of laundering the money he was paid for his work with China.
The government said in a news release that it intends to acquire Gowadia's property, which helped in the espionage violations or which he bought with the money from the alleged money laundering.

Gowadia, a naturalized U.S. citizen from India, worked 18 years for Northrop Corp., where he was an engineer and designed the B-2 stealth bomber's propulsion system.
In an earlier indictment from November 2005, Gowadia was charged with three counts of sharing secret military information with people unauthorized to receive it and three counts of sending technical data to a foreign military without a proper license. The six counts from the original indictment were retained in the superseding indictment. Gowadia has been in federal custody since his Oct. 26, 2005, arrest.

The newest indictment charges Gowadia with secretly planning to violate the Arms Export Control Act by entering an illegal agreement to design and test the cruise missile nozzle. The indictment also charges Gowadia with performing a defense service for the Chinese government without obtaining approval from the U.S. Department of State. The FBI, U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations, IRS Criminal Investigation Division, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, and Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement are participating in the investigation of the case.


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Home Front: WoT
FBI: Stealth Engineer Sold B2 Bomber Secrets
2005-10-28
An engineer who helped design the B-2 stealth bomber (search) has been arrested and accused of selling U.S. military secrets involving the aircraft to a foreign country, the FBI said.

Noshir S. Gowadia, 61, of Haiku was arrested Wednesday. According to the FBI, Gowadia in 2002 faxed a document detailing infrared technology classified top secret by the Air Force to a foreign official. The FBI (search) would not identify the country and did not disclose how much he allegedly received. Gowadia had been an engineer with Northrop Grumman Corp. (search) from 1968 to 1986 and had helped design the radar-evading B-2.

He was jailed without bail on a charge of willfully communicating national defense information to a person not entitled to receive it, an offense punishable by up to 10 years in prison. It was not immediately known whether he had a lawyer.

According to state records, Gowadia and his wife own an engineering and consulting company.
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