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Saturday, May 10, 2025

US bans government personnel in China from romantic or sexual relations with Chinese citizens

by

Newsdesk
31 days ago
20250409
FILE - Uniformed and plainclothes security officers stand guard outside the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, Aug. 3, 2022. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)

FILE - Uniformed and plainclothes security officers stand guard outside the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, Aug. 3, 2022. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein, File)

Mark Schiefelbein

The U.S. gov­ern­ment has banned Amer­i­can gov­ern­ment per­son­nel in Chi­na, as well as fam­i­ly mem­bers and con­trac­tors with se­cu­ri­ty clear­ances, from any ro­man­tic or sex­u­al re­la­tion­ships with Chi­nese cit­i­zens, The As­so­ci­at­ed Press has learned.

Four peo­ple with di­rect knowl­edge of the mat­ter told the AP about the pol­i­cy, which was put in­to ef­fect by de­part­ing U.S. Am­bas­sador Nicholas Burns in Jan­u­ary short­ly be­fore he left Chi­na. The peo­ple would speak on­ly on con­di­tion of anonymi­ty to dis­cuss de­tails of a con­fi­den­tial new di­rec­tive.

Though some U.S. agen­cies al­ready had strict rules on such re­la­tion­ships, a blan­ket “non-frat­er­niza­tion” pol­i­cy, as it is known, has been un­heard of pub­licly since the Cold War. It’s not un­com­mon for Amer­i­can diplo­mats in oth­er coun­tries to date lo­cals and even mar­ry them.

A more lim­it­ed ver­sion of the pol­i­cy was en­act­ed last sum­mer pro­hibit­ing U.S. per­son­nel from “ro­man­tic and sex­u­al re­la­tions” with Chi­nese cit­i­zens work­ing as guards and oth­er sup­port staff at the U.S. Em­bassy and five con­sulates in Chi­na. But Burns, the de­part­ing am­bas­sador, broad­ened it to a blan­ket ban on such re­la­tions with any Chi­nese cit­i­zen in Chi­na in Jan­u­ary, days be­fore Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump took of­fice. The AP was un­able to de­ter­mine ex­act­ly how the pol­i­cy de­fined the phrase “ro­man­tic or sex­u­al re­la­tion­ship.”

Two of the peo­ple with knowl­edge of the ban told the AP the new pol­i­cy was first dis­cussed last sum­mer af­ter mem­bers of Con­gress con­tact­ed Burns to ex­press con­cern that re­stric­tions on such re­la­tion­ships were not strin­gent enough. The House Se­lect Com­mit­tee on the Chi­nese Com­mu­nist Par­ty did not re­spond to a re­quest for com­ment.

The new pol­i­cy cov­ers U.S. mis­sions in main­land Chi­na, in­clud­ing the em­bassy in Bei­jing and con­sulates in Guangzhou, Shang­hai, Shenyang and Wuhan, as well as the Amer­i­can con­sulate in the se­mi-au­tonomous ter­ri­to­ry of Hong Kong. It does not ap­ply to U.S. per­son­nel sta­tioned out­side Chi­na.

The on­ly ex­cep­tion to the pol­i­cy is U.S. per­son­nel with pre-ex­ist­ing re­la­tions with Chi­nese cit­i­zens; they can ap­ply for ex­emp­tions. If the ex­emp­tion is de­nied, they must end the re­la­tion­ship or leave their po­si­tion, the peo­ple said. Any­one who vi­o­lates the pol­i­cy will be or­dered to leave Chi­na im­me­di­ate­ly.

The pol­i­cy was com­mu­ni­cat­ed ver­bal­ly and elec­tron­i­cal­ly to Amer­i­can per­son­nel in Chi­na in Jan­u­ary, but has not been pub­licly an­nounced.

The State De­part­ment said it does not com­ment on in­ter­nal mat­ters. The Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty Coun­cil re­ferred ques­tions to the State De­part­ment. Burns, the for­mer am­bas­sador, did not re­ply to an AP re­quest sent to his email ad­dress at The Co­hen Group, a con­sul­tan­cy that he re­joined as vice chair in Feb­ru­ary.

In Chi­na, a blan­ket ban on such re­la­tions has not been in ef­fect for many years. Un­til the new ban in Jan­u­ary, U.S. per­son­nel in Chi­na were re­quired to re­port any in­ti­mate con­tact with Chi­nese cit­i­zens to their su­per­vi­sors, but were not ex­plic­it­ly for­bid­den from sex­u­al or ro­man­tic re­la­tion­ships.

U.S. diplo­mats and in­tel­li­gence ex­perts say that Bei­jing con­tin­ues to ag­gres­sive­ly use so-called hon­ey­pots to ac­cess Amer­i­can se­crets. In pre­sen­ta­tions be­fore be­ing sta­tioned in Chi­na, U.S. per­son­nel are briefed on case stud­ies where Chi­nese in­tel­li­gence ser­vices sent at­trac­tive women to se­duce Amer­i­can diplo­mats, and warned that dozens of Chi­nese state se­cu­ri­ty agents can be as­signed to mon­i­tor any in­di­vid­ual diplo­mat of in­ter­est.

Lit­tle is known about the U.S. gov­ern­ment’s non-frat­er­niza­tion poli­cies else­where, as they are con­sid­ered clas­si­fied. It is un­known how re­stric­tive such poli­cies are in oth­er coun­tries.

“The MSS is will­ing to lever­age any hu­man con­nec­tion that a tar­get has to col­lect in­tel­li­gence,” Mat­tis said, us­ing an acronym re­fer­ring to Chi­na’s Min­istry of State Se­cu­ri­ty. “This rule change sug­gests the MSS has got­ten a lot more ag­gres­sive at try­ing to ac­cess the em­bassy and U.S. gov­ern­ment.”

The Chi­nese for­eign min­istry did not com­ment on the ban, say­ing in a faxed state­ment that it was “more ap­pro­pri­ate to ask the U.S. about this ques­tion.”

Chi­na al­so has been tight­en­ing al­ready strict con­trols on its per­son­nel over­seas, ac­cord­ing to Chi­nese reg­u­la­tions, news re­ports and four peo­ple fa­mil­iar with Chi­na’s bu­reau­cra­cy who spoke on con­di­tion of anonymi­ty so they could dis­cuss a sen­si­tive top­ic. In re­cent years, Bei­jing be­gan strict­ly en­forc­ing reg­u­la­tions that bar pro­mo­tions for Chi­nese civ­il ser­vants with spous­es who ac­quired for­eign cit­i­zen­ship and re­strict diplo­mats from spend­ing an ex­tend­ed pe­ri­od of time in one coun­try, forc­ing some to re­turn to Chi­na.

Chi­na’s for­eign min­istry and many oth­er gov­ern­ment bod­ies bar their of­fi­cials and staff from sex­u­al or ro­man­tic re­la­tions with for­eign cit­i­zens, while mem­bers of the Chi­nese mil­i­tary or po­lice are gen­er­al­ly barred from leav­ing Chi­na al­to­geth­er with­out ex­press ap­proval from their su­per­vi­sors.

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