American Intelligence publishes videos to ask Chinese authorities to reveal “secrets”.

CIA (CIA) has sent a message to Chinese officials who are concerned about their position in the government of Jinping in the government: “Come and work with us”.
The agency released a video of Al -Mundari on social media on Thursday, calling on the authorities to communicate with it. Videos posted on sites like YouTube and X won over 5 million views on the first day.
The campaign was aimed at the CIA Director, John Ratcliffe, when he pledged to use intelligence information from the agency’s human resources and increased its focus on China, recently targeted US officers with its own Goa Chari activities.
The goal is to hire Chinese authorities to steal “videos” secrets. China has said that “it is determined to dominate the world economically, military and technically,” he said.
“Our agency should continue to respond to this threat, emergency, creativity and will and is one of the ways we follow these videos to achieve this,” he said.
Two -minute videos are classified as the quality of cinema and there are scenes of communist party officers, luxury cars and bright skyscrapers, but articles share their growing frustration towards the system they worked.
In a video, a person who is described as an honest member of the party is concerned about the differences between his peers and what is for the safety of his family. As the music grows, he says: “I have made no mistake. I can’t continue to live with fear!”
The man then appears to communicate with his smartphone with CIA and ends with the video agency seal.
In addition to warning to potential communications about fake accounts that can solve the status of the CIA, the video below provides instructions on how to securely communicate with the agency.
These videos are the latest attempt made by the agency to facilitate information partnership and to secure potential communications.
At the end of last year, the US CIA published electronic instructions in Korean, Mandarin and Persian, describing potential information to communicate with US intelligence authorities without danging themselves.