Retired US Army sergeant arrested for alleged attempts to spy for China

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A former US Army sergeant who allegedly searched online for "what is China's intelligence agency" has been arrested for attempting to provide classified information to China's spy service.

Joseph Schmidt, 29, was arrested at the San Francisco airport after arriving from Hong Kong.

His "efforts to betray our country", Washington state federal prosecutor Tessa Gorman said, were "shocking".

Mr Schmidt was an active-duty soldier from 2015 to 2020.

He mostly served at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in western Washington and primarily worked in intelligence and had access to Top Secret documents, the highest level of classified information in the US government.

He allegedly made numerous documents and Google searches that describe attempts to provide US national security secrets to China, according to court filings.

Investigators say he conducted online research about how to defect to China and offered his services as an "interrogator" to the the Chinese consulate in Turkey and to China's intelligence service.

"I have a current top secret clearance, and would like to talk to someone from the Government to share this information with you if that is possible," he is alleged to have written in one email to the Istanbul consulate.

He is accused of creating a Microsoft Word document entitled "high level secrets".

Prosecutors say the title of the 23-page document was written in Chinese, but "nearly all of it is written in English".

Another document is titled "important information to share with Chinese government".

Investigators say he visited websites related to espionage and intelligence topics, including "What Do Real Spies Do and How are they Recruited".

After his army service ended, he moved to Turkey for around one month before moving to China. He did not return to the US until he landed in San Francisco on Friday.

"Members of our military take a sworn oath to defend our country and the Constitution," said Tessa Gorman, the acting US attorney for the Western District of Washington.

"In that context the alleged actions of this former military member are shocking - not only attempting to provide national defence information, but also information that would assist a foreign adversary to gain access to Department of Defense secure computer networks."

Mr Schmidt has been charged with attempting to deliver national defence information and retention of national defence information. He faces decades in prison if convicted.

It is not clear if he has hired a lawyer who can comment on his behalf.

The arrest comes just two months after two active duty members of the US Navy were arrested for spying for China in southern California.

Both men were allegedly paid thousands of dollars for blueprints and technical manuals and diagrams of ships and radar systems.