Former CCP officials say the CIA videos may trigger a wave of defections despite the CCP’s tight social control.

After the Central Intelligence Agency released two videos to persuade Chinese officials to provide intelligence about their communist regime, the Chinese foreign ministry denounced the effort, calling it “infiltration.”
Analysts said the Chinese regime’s strong reaction shows that the CIA’s videos are having an effect on officials within the ruling Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP’s) system.
The first video targets senior CCP officials who have watched their colleagues fall from power, go to jail, or be disappeared. After recapping the internal struggles among top CCP officials, the video calls on any senior CCP official who “wants to take control of his fate to find a path that will protect his loved ones and the fruits of his lifelong hard work” to work for the United States.
Lin said Beijing will push back on the “sabotage activities from overseas.”
A China expert said the Chinese regime’s warning to the United States is aimed at intimidating CCP officials who are considering the CIA offer.
“But its deterrent effect [of the CCP’s warning] is limited on those CCP officials who have been suppressed by the regime and for those who are pessimistic about the CCP regime because they are willing to fight to the death with the CCP anyway,” Chung Chih-tung, assistant research fellow at Taiwan’s Institute for National Defense and Security Research, told the Chinese language version of The Epoch Times on May 8.
Chung noted that this is the first time that Washington has openly facilitated the defection of CCP officials since the establishment of diplomatic relations between the United States and communist China. “This is the first shot and has created a favorable environment for the wave of CCP officials’ defection,” he said.
The recruiting videos have indeed made an impact, judging from the CCP’s strong reaction, Shen Ming-shih, director of the division of national security research at Taiwan’s Institute for National Defense and Security Research, told The Epoch Times on May 8.
“The CCP is more sensitive to espionage and may conduct more surveillance or take more stringent measures, which will cause more trouble for grassroots citizens or officials,” Shen said.
Shen noted that currently, it’s hard for foreign agents to enter China to collect intelligence through business or exchange activities, because they will be easily discovered.
“When foreigners show up in China, they are monitored as long as they behave differently,” he said.
Former CCP Officials’ Insights
Du Wen, who was the former director of the Inner Mongolia government’s legal advisory office and served as CCP’s vice premier Hu Chunhua’s legal adviser, told The Epoch Times, “If the CIA can properly arrange for the families of these senior officials, I believe a large number of them will defect.”Du was jailed for 12 years due to CCP infighting. After being released from prison in January 2023, he was still under the CCP’s police surveillance, so he defected to Belgium with his family.
“Now, everyone in China wishes for the death of the Communist Party and [its leader] Xi. I have met too many people who think of this, whether they have been taken down from their positions or not. But there is nothing they can do,” Du said.
“I know too well that they want to get out of China, but they can’t. How can they leave safely? There are technical difficulties, difficulties in leaving China safely, and difficulties in transmitting intelligence,” he said.

Du noted that the current senior officials in the Chinese regime are older and may have less proficiency in accessing the internet and circumventing China’s firewall. “In the absence of security knowledge, it’s indeed risky for these officials to share information through the dark web or encrypted channels,” Du said.
“There are many officials who want to flee but very few who can actually bring out valuable intelligence,” he said.
Li Chuanliang, former deputy mayor of Jixi City in Heilongjiang Province, told The Epoch Times, “Now, CCP officials have difficulty escaping because of restrictions in all aspects, but they have begun to oppose the Party ideologically. At least 80 to 90 percent of them are opposing the CCP in their minds.”
As a lower-ranking CCP official, Li said, “I know too much about the dark side of the Chinese regime, and everyone has discussed such issues.”
Li said that every official has seen through the CCP, “this kind of totalitarianism, control, terror.”
“They kill whoever they want, arrest whoever they want,” he added.

Li predicts there will definitely be CCP officials who want to defect. “The only question is how many can escape China and how to find the path to escape.”
He said he has watched the two CIA recruitment videos several times. “I also want to urge people within the CCP’s system to do it [work for the CIA], which is also a way to hold on to their conscience and to serve the motherland.”
He called on CCP officials, “Stop working for this terrorist organization [the CCP], and don’t be an accomplice.”