What is becoming clear is that the UK’s level of alert can no longer focus narrowly on Russia, as it did for much of the post-Cold War era. China poses a different kind of challenge: slower, broader and often less visible, but no less consequential.
In a world that is more connected, more competitive and more dangerous than before, the UK’s task is to protect openness without being naïve, and to embrace engagement with others without leaving itself overexposed.
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What is becoming clear is that the UK’s level of alert can no longer focus narrowly on Russia, as it did for much of the post-Cold War era. China poses a different kind of challenge: slower, broader and often less visible, but no less consequential.
Defending against a[ growing China spy threat](https://inews.co.uk/news/politics/mi5-boss-china-plot-thwarted-3982722?srsltid=AfmBOorUIOoRBmSClGUqHF2jXASH97dIyPmT6nkKrmGuj0fraigAuKbg&ico=in-line_link) is therefore not about panic or paranoia. It is about recognising that networks – digital as much as physical – shape power and vulnerability.
In a world that is more connected, more competitive and more dangerous than before, the UK’s task is to protect openness without being naïve, and to embrace engagement with others without leaving itself overexposed.