WASHINGTON — The sale of the Waldorf Astoria to a Chinese insurance
giant is really bugging the State Department.
Grand plans by Beijing-based Anbang Insurance Group “to restore the
property to its historic grandeur” has some Washington diplomatic and security
insiders wondering if the Chinese will be adding more than a view to kill for.
Officials said Monday they are reviewing the sale — and implied the glittering
renovation scheme for the iconic Park Ave. hotel may mask a nefarious purpose:
espionage.
“We are currently in the process of reviewing the details of the sale
and the company’s long-term plans for the facility,” said Kurtis Cooper, a
spokesman for the U.S. Mission to the United Nations.
The State Department said it may end a 50-year practice of leasing a
residence at the hotel for the U.S. ambassador to the UN.
Also at stake is the department’s rental of two floors of the Waldorf
during the annual UN General Assembly.
The White House declined to say if President Obama will continue
staying at the hotel’s presidential suite during trips to New York. Every
commander-in-chief since Herbert Hoover has stayed there.
Cooper said security, along with cost, would determine if the State
Department maintains its relationship with the hotel in the wake of the $1.95
billion sale, announced last week.
“The State Department takes seriously the security of its personnel,
their work spaces and official residences,” Cooper said. “We are constantly
evaluating our security protocols and standard operating procedures to ensure
the safety and security of our information and personnel.”
Anbang, which bought the Waldorf from Hilton Worldwide, is reportedly
linked to China’s Communist Party, which has overseen a massive effort to use
cyberspying to steal U.S. trade and military secrets.
After all, the U.S. knows the game — we’ve done our own
cloak-and-dagger work involving diplomatic representatives of allies and foes
alike.
The National Security Agency’s eavesdropping efforts include bugging
the Manhattan headquarters of the UN itself, according to documents provided to
the German magazine Der Spiegel last year by ex-National Security Agency
contractor Edward Snowden.
The State Department regularly reminds U.S. diplomats who go to China
that they are likely to face surveillance and tells American citizens who
travel to China that someone might be listening in their hotel rooms.
“Hotel rooms (including meeting rooms), offices, cars, taxis,
telephones, Internet usage and fax machines may be monitored onsite or
remotely, and personal possessions in hotel rooms, including computers, may be
searched without your consent or knowledge,” according to the department's
latest travel advice for China.
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