How fake military job ads in Philippines led to alleged spy recruitment pipeline
The ads, some of which experts say were linked to China, aimed to get unsuspecting Filipino defence specialists to give up key information
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“We are hiring regional security researcher,” said a notice bearing the emblem of Janes – the well-known international aerospace and military technology publisher. It came with an eye-watering offer: “US$1,000-US$5,000.”
“Send us your CV,” the ad urged, giving Viber and WhatsApp numbers as well as an email address.
AdvertisementThe hitch: while the ad was real, the recruiter was not.
Researchers who traced the ad’s digital fingerprints say it appears to have been part of a wider online recruitment ecosystem – one that investigators believe helped build the alleged Chinese spy network that Philippine authorities said last month they had dismantled inside the country’s defence establishment.
AdvertisementThe Philippine National Security Council announced in early March that at least three Filipino civilian defence workers had been arrested after they confessed to passing sensitive information, including details of resupply missions in the contested South China Sea, to handlers said to be linked to Chinese intelligence.China has rejected the allegations.
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