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Timeline of the Cox Report controversy : ウィキペディア英語版 | Timeline of the Cox Report controversy The timeline of the Cox Report controversy is a chronology of information relating to the People's Republic of China's (PRC) nuclear espionage against the United States detailed in the Congressional ''Cox Report''. The timeline also includes documented information relating to relevant investigations and reactions by the White House, the U.S. Congress, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and United States Department of Justice. == 1995 == June * Sometime in June, a walk-in agent for People's Republic of China intelligence services approached the United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) office in Taiwan and provided them with an official PRC document classified "Secret" that contained design information of all seven of America's nuclear warheads.〔(''Report of the Select Committee on U.S. National Security and Military/Commercial Concerns with the People's Republic of China'' ), Chapter 2, The "Walk-In", U.S. House of Representatives, Retrieved: April 14, 2006〕 Clinton's Director of Central Intelligence John Deutch was informed the following month.〔Gerth, Jeff and Risen, James, ("China Stole Nuclear Secrets From Los Alamos, U.S. Officials Say" ), ''New York Times'', March 6, 1999〕 July * Clinton's former Energy Secretary Hazel O'Leary, Chief of Staff Leon Panetta, and Deputy Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet learned of the PRC's theft of America's nuclear warhead designs sometime in July 1995, but did not inform the President at that time.〔Risen, James and Gerth, Jeff, ("U.S. Is Said to Have Known Of China Spy Link in 1995" ), ''New York Times'', June 27, 1999〕 October * On or about October 31, the FBI first learned of the PRC's possible theft of advanced U.S. nuclear weapons designs.〔(''Department of Energy, FBI, and Department of Justice Handling of the Espionage Investigation into the Compromise of Design Information on the W-88 Warhead Statement by Senate Governmental Affairs Committee'' ), August 5, 1999, Retrieved: May 29, 2006〕 November
* CIA Director Deutch informed Clinton's National Security Adviser Anthony Lake about the PRC's theft of America's nuclear weapon designs sometime in November 1995. The president was not briefed at that time.〔Risen, James, and Gerth, Jeff, ("U.S. Is Said to Have Known Of China Spy Link in 1995" ), ''New York Times'', June 27, 1999〕 * In late 1995 and early 1996, United States Department of Energy (DOE) intelligence official Notra Trulock took his findings on the PRC's theft of advanced U.S. nuclear warhead designs to the FBI. Trulock made the discovery independently from the CIA while analyzing data from the PRC's recent underground nuclear test. A team of FBI and DOE officials then traveled to three weapons labs (Livermore, Sandia and Los Alamos) and pored over travel and work records of lab scientists who had access to the relevant technology. By February, they narrowed its focus to five possible suspects.〔Gerth, Jeff, and Risen, James, ("China Stole Nuclear Secrets From Los Alamos, U.S. Officials Say" ), ''New York Times'', March 6, 1999〕
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