It is a tale that would have amused Graham Greene: an American journalist, having pleaded guilty to acting as an unregistered agent of a foreign power, now finds himself at the centre of a geopolitical drama that is less spy thriller and more kabuki theatre. The man, whose byline once adorned respectable publications, has admitted to taking instructions from Beijing. And naturally, Whitehall, ever vigilant, is now reviewing the China espionage threat as though this revelation were a bolt from the blue.
One might ask: were our intelligence services asleep at the wheel? Or is this a convenient moral panic, cooked up to justify the next tranche of security legislation? The truth, as always, lies in the grey zone between incompetence and hysteria.
We are witnessing the intellectual decadence of a generation that has forgotten how to think about power. Instead of a cool-headed assessment of statecraft, we get a pantomime of treason. Compare this to the era of Philby and Burgess, when espionage was a matter of ideology, not a bureaucratic checkbox.
Now, a journalist is a ‘Chinese agent’ for writing articles that please the party? That is not espionage; that is journalism. Or at least, it is what journalism has become in a world where the Fourth Estate is expected to be a lapdog, not a watchdog.
The real threat is not the man who took a few favours from Beijing; it is the intellectual cowardice of a West that cannot tolerate dissent without branding it treachery. Rome did not fall because of spies; it fell because it forgot what it stood for. We are there now.








