Dutch intel agency paints grim picture of multiple threats

Erik Akerboom, director-general of the Dutch General Intelligence and Security Service, AIVD, painted a grim picture during a press conference in Zoetermeer, Netherlands, Thursday, April 13, 2023, of a growing number of internal and external threats to the rule of law in the Netherlands compounded by Russia's war in Ukraine and international cyber attacks and espionage. In its annual report, the General Intelligence and Security Service AIVD called China "the biggest threat to the Netherlands' economic security." (AP Photo/Mike Corder)

ZOETERMEER, Netherlands (AP) 鈥 The Dutch national intelligence agency painted a grim picture Monday of a growing number of internal and external threats to the rule of law in the Netherlands compounded by Russia's war in Ukraine, international cyberattacks and espionage.

In its annual report, the General Intelligence and Security Service called China 鈥渢he biggest threat to the Netherlands' economic security.鈥

The agency's director-general, Erik Akerboom, said that China is targeting the Netherlands as an innovative country that develops new technology.

鈥淲e see that every day they try to steal that from the Netherlands,鈥 he told The Associated Press.

鈥淭he Chinese use cyber as a weapon, cyber as a way to commit espionage, but they also send people to us 鈥 students, but also scientific persons of all kind to especially steal knowledge from very vulnerable places,鈥 he said.

The Netherlands earlier this year announced plans to impose on the export of machines that make advanced processor chips. The Dutch joined a U.S. push that aims to limit China鈥檚 access to materials used to make such chips, amid fears they could be used in weapons, to commit rights abuses or to improve the speed and accuracy of military logistics.

China has criticized the moves as violations of market principles in international trade.

Akerboom highlighted overlapping threats ranging from terrorism, extremism, cyberattacks, espionage, covert influence and sabotage, to organized crime undermining the rule of law.

The war that erupted when Russia invaded Ukraine last year exacerbated the situation. Sanctions on Russian energy imports led to a gas shortage, feeding into soaring inflation. That in turn led to an uptick in conspiracy theories, among other threats.

鈥淎s a result, extremist boosters in the Netherlands were once again given the opportunity to spread conspiracy theories about an 鈥榚vil elite鈥 after the corona crisis. Sometimes countries like Russia use the unrest in the West to secretly stir up contradictions in society,鈥 the report said.

Russia also has long been actively trying to steal secrets from the Netherlands and other European and NATO allies, the agency said. The report highlighted the agency's involvement last year in the expulsion of 17 Russian diplomats from the Netherlands who were suspected of espionage, and the unmasking of a Russian agent who tried to infiltrate the Hague-based International Criminal Court.

The agency pointed to a massive cyberattack targeting NATO member Albania last year as an example of 鈥渢he massive threat that now emanates from countries with cyberattack programs, such as China, Russia and Iran.鈥

Albania cut diplomatic ties with Iran last year over a July 15 cyberattack that temporarily shut down numerous Albanian government digital services and websites. Tirana called the disruption an act of 鈥渟tate aggression.鈥

The service also noted that 鈥渉atred, anti-Semitism and conspiracy theories spread in the Netherlands鈥 and said it 鈥減revented concrete threats within the Netherlands from becoming reality.鈥

The threats came, it said, from 鈥渏ihadists, right-wing terrorists and people who are extremely hostile to the government.鈥

The Taliban鈥檚 takeover of power in Afghanistan also has ramped up the existing threat of jihadi extremists, the report warned. It said that the Islamic State group now operating in Afghanistan was 鈥渟teering鈥 networks elsewhere.

Reacting to the recent leak in the United States of highly classified military documents, Akerboom said the disclosures underscored potential weaknesses in intelligence agencies.

鈥淲e cannot exclude that something like that might happen" in the Netherlands, he said. "You cannot guarantee that, but we do everything to prevent this because I think in the end this is a real risk that we should face. I think it might hurt indeed the plans, the strategies that you have. That makes us weaker.鈥

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