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Xi promised Biden China wouldn’t interfere in 2024 election: CNN exclusive

Chinese leader Xi Jinping told U.S. President Joe Biden that China would not interfere in the 2024 U.S. presidential election when the two men met in November — an assurance reiterated by the Chinese foreign minister to Biden’s national security adviser this past weekend, two people familiar with the conversations told CNN.

The previously unreported exchange between Xi and Biden took place during a high-stakes, hourslong meeting in California that was aimed at easing historically high military and economic tensions between the two superpowers.

It was Biden who raised the issue, according to one of the sources, who described the exchange as brief. In a meeting this past weekend in Bangkok with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan again brought up the topic. Wang offered Sullivan the same assurance Xi had given Biden months prior — that Beijing would not meddle in the American election this fall, the source said.

The potential for China to interfere in or influence U.S. elections has repeatedly come up at senior-level meetings between the two nations in recent months, the source who was briefed on the matter said.

Those discussions signal just how fraught U.S.-China relations have become, and how wary American officials still are of foreign election meddling after 2016, when Russian intelligence agencies hacked the Democratic National Committee and released emails to damage Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign.

Since then, Iranian, Cuban and Chinese agents have all been active in trying to influence U.S. elections, according to public U.S. intelligence reports. Though none of those efforts have been as aggressive as the 2016 Russian operation.

Even if China refrains from interfering in the 2024 election, Beijing’s hackers are still a potent force, with a foothold in key U.S. infrastructure. For several months, U.S. national security officials have publicly warned that Chinese cyber operatives have burrowed into computer networks in the maritime and transportation sectors — access that Beijing might use to disrupt any U.S. military response to a Chinese invasion of Taiwan.

The FBI and the Justice Department used a court order to try to mitigate the impact of the Chinese hacking operation, CNN reported on Monday, but the threat remains.

The White House National Security Council declined to comment on whether election interference came up in the Biden-Xi and Sullivan-Wang meetings. CNN has reached out to the Chinese Foreign Ministry for comment.

China has traditionally taken a more passive role in trying to influence U.S. elections than Russia, focusing on shaping a handful of congressional races, according to U.S. intelligence officials. There are indications, however, that Chinese operatives have become more aggressive in targeting U.S. voters and political candidates.

Since 2020, senior Chinese officials have issued broad directives to Chinese operatives to “intensify efforts to influence U.S. policy and public opinion in China’s favor,” and senior Chinese officials have aimed to “magnify U.S. societal divisions,” according to a U.S. intelligence assessment declassified in December. Those influence efforts have included using fake social media accounts to attack U.S. politicians online.

Those directives likely gave Chinese operatives “more freedom to operate” ahead of the 2022 midterms, according to the U.S. intelligence document.

Microsoft warned in September that Chinese operatives had used AI-generated images of the Statue of Liberty and other symbols of American life to mimic U.S. voters online and provoke discussion on divisive political issues.

Last week, a senior National Security Agency official told reporters that the agency had not yet seen signs of any notable new foreign influence operations aimed at the 2024 election. But U.S. officials are preparing for the possibility that Russia, Iran, China and other foreign actors will try to sow discord among voters through propaganda, hacking or some other means.

“Between expanding geopolitical turmoil and the chaotic domestic political environment, there will be plenty of motivations and opportunities for a wide range of threat actors to interfere in this year’s election,” said Chris Krebs, who led the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency’s work to protect elections from foreign interference in 2020.

“Throw in AI-powered influence campaigns and 2024 might be unlike any prior election,” Krebs told CNN.

Any signs of Beijing attempting to interfere with the 2024 U.S. elections could disrupt the painstaking work that American and Chinese officials have put into stabilizing U.S.-China relations over the last year.

The Biden-Xi summit in Woodside, California, in November produced the re-establishment of military-to-military communications between Washington and Beijing which had been severed over tensions related to Taiwan, a commitment for the two countries to work together on curbing fentanyl production, as well as an agreement for the two countries to continue talking at the highest levels.

Despite Xi’s attempt to personally reassure Biden on the matter, it’s an open question for some U.S. officials the extent to which the Chinese leader has full visibility over the vast array of agencies and bureaucrats that make up the Chinese national security apparatus. That means U.S. officials will be watching closely to see if Xi adheres to his promise not to interfere in U.S. elections, one of the sources said.

Biden told attendees of a private fundraiser last June that Xi was “embarrassed” when the U.S. military shot down an alleged Chinese surveillance balloon flying over the continental U.S. because the Chinese leader was unaware the balloon was a Chinese asset. Last year’s balloon incident rankled U.S.-China relations and even delayed a trip to Beijing by U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken by several months.

CNN’s Natasha Bertrand contributed to this report.

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