China

Russia Says Scientist Passed Hypersonic Missile Tech to China

 

Russia has accused one of its top scientists of passing hypersonic missile technology to China in 2017, two people familiar with the matter said.

Alexander Shiplyuk, head of Siberia’s Khristianovich Institute of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics (ITAM), was arrested last August for treason, along with two other hypersonic missile technology experts.

The 56-year-old maintains his innocence and insists the information in question wasn’t classified and was freely available online, the people said.

 

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“He is convinced of the fact that the information was not secret, and of his own innocence,” one of the people said.

The Chinese connection would make Shiplyuk the latest in a string of Russian scientists who have been arrested in recent years for allegedly betraying secrets to Beijing.

Asked about the accusations facing the ITAM experts as well as about previous treason cases linked to China, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said security services were watchful for possible cases related to “betrayal of the motherland”.

“This is very important work,” he added. “It is going on constantly and it is hardly possible to speak here about any kind of trends.”

 

China denies targeting Russian scientists

The cases facing Shiplyuk and his two ITAM colleagues – Anatoly Maslov and Valery Zvegintsev – are top secret and will be tried behind closed doors. A hearing in the case of Maslov, the first of the three to be arrested, in June last year, took place in St Petersburg on Wednesday.

Zvegintsev was detained last month.

The Chinese foreign ministry, when asked about allegations that Beijing had targeted Russian scientists to obtain sensitive research, said Sino-Russian relations were based on “non-alignment, non-confrontation and non-targeting of third parties”.

“This is fundamentally different from what some military and intelligence alliances have pieced together based on their Cold War mentality,” it added.

President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly said that Russia is a world leader in hypersonic missiles, cutting-edge weapons capable of carrying payloads at up to 10 times the speed of sound to punch through air-defence systems.

The ITAM cases, as well as previous arrests for treason, suggest Moscow is vigilant about losing any technological edge, including to China, an ally on which it has become increasingly reliant for political and trade support since launching its invasion of Ukraine 15 months ago.

 

Past work with PLA

ITAM, sited at the Academgorodok science campus near the city of Novosibirsk, says on its website that it is registered as a part of Russia’s military-industrial complex. The institute has had extensive international links including contacts with companies, universities and research centres across the world.

Among the institutions listed was the China Aerodynamics Research and Development Centre (CARDC), whose website includes several posts celebrating experimental breakthroughs relating to fighter jets and hypersonic missiles.

The CARDC site names the centre’s director as Wang Xunnian. According to two official Chinese local government websites, Wang is a major general in China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA).

 

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A review of publicly available Chinese academic papers shows the centre’s researchers have in recent years co-authored dozens of articles with colleagues working in institutes run directly by the PLA.

George Nacouzi, senior aerospace engineer at RAND Corp, said China “has been playing catch-up” with the US and Russia over the last few years on hypersonic technology.

He stressed that the three arrested Russians were only involved in one element of the work needed to build a hypersonic missile, a process that also includes the integration of sensors, navigational systems, and propulsion.

“It’s a long path. Just doing the basic research does not provide you with a missile,” Nacouzi said.

 

Past arrests

The investigations into the three scientists hit world headlines last week when their colleagues at ITAM signed an open letter in support of them.

The letter said it was impossible for scientists to do their jobs if they risked being arrested for writing articles or making presentations at international conferences.

The letter rejected the idea the three could have betrayed secrets, saying all materials they had published or presented had been rigorously checked to ensure they weren’t classified.

Kremlin spokesman Peskov, asked by reporters last week about the open letter, said: “We have indeed seen this appeal, but Russian special services are working on this. They are doing their job. These are very serious accusations.”

Last year, laser specialist Dmitry Kolker was arrested in Siberia on treason charges for allegedly passing secrets to China’s security services. He died two days later of cancer.

Kolker’s family has denied the accusations.

Alexander Lukanin, a scientist from the Siberian city of Tomsk, was arrested in 2020 on suspicion of passing tech secrets to Beijing, Russian state news agency TASS reported at the time. Last year, he was sentenced to seven-and-a-half years in prison.

Valery Mitko, a scientist heading the Arctic Academy of Sciences in St Petersburg, was also accused in 2020 of passing secrets to China, where he had travelled regularly to give lectures, TASS said at the time. He died two years later at the age of 81 while under house arrest.

 

  • Reuters, with additional editing by Vishakha Saxena

 

Also read:

 

Chinese Hackers ‘Targeted Kenya Ministries Amid Debt Strains’

 

Russia’s Ukraine Hypersonic Missile Claim Misses The Mark

 

China Outpaces US Tenfold on Hypersonic Missiles: US General

 

China Has Big Lead in Critical Emerging Technologies: Study

 

US Tech Boosted China’s Hypersonic Missile Projects – WaPo

 

Vishakha Saxena

Vishakha Saxena is the Multimedia and Social Media Editor at Asia Financial. She has worked as a digital journalist since 2013, and is an experienced writer and multimedia producer. As a trader and investor, she is keenly interested in new economy, emerging markets and the intersections of finance and society. You can write to her at vishakha.saxena@asiafinancial.com

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