Over 20,000 professionals in the UK alone have been approached by suspected Chinese intelligence operatives on LinkedIn, according to a joint warning from the FBI, MI5, and their Five Eyes allies. If you’ve got a security clearance or work anywhere near defense, your inbox might be the next battlefield in this digital recruitment war.
The Fake Job Pipeline
How a simple career opportunity becomes an intelligence operation.
The scheme starts exactly like legitimate recruiting—polished job postings, professional-looking company profiles, and enthusiastic HR representatives reaching out about exciting opportunities. After virtual interviews that feel surprisingly normal, targets get asked to write a “trial report” on seemingly innocuous policy topics.
That’s where things get expensive. Payments reportedly range from hundreds to thousands of dollars per report, with requests gradually escalating toward classified material. Think of it as the espionage equivalent of a subscription service nobody signed up for.
LinkedIn’s Whack-a-Mole Problem
Platform detection struggles against sophisticated state actors.
LinkedIn says misrepresenting identity violates their terms and they’re focused on detecting state-sponsored abuse. But fake profiles backed by intelligence agencies aren’t your typical catfish operation.
They come with realistic professional histories, genuine-looking company affiliations, and the patience to build relationships over months. According to officials, Chinese military intelligence officers create entire fake consultancies and think tanks to provide cover for their recruiting efforts.
Five Eyes See Everything
Unprecedented intelligence warning signals serious escalation.
When the FBI, MI5, Canada’s CSIS, Australia’s ASIO, and New Zealand’s NZSIS issue a joint bulletin, you know someone’s paying attention. This marks an unusual public warning about tactics that agencies say have been evolving for years.
China’s Foreign Ministry dismissed the allegations as “ironic” given the Five Eyes alliance itself. But the 2018 conviction of former CIA officer Kevin Mallory—initially approached through LinkedIn—suggests the concern isn’t theoretical.
Your professional networking habits just became a national security consideration. The red flags agencies mention?
- Unsolicited job offers from companies you can’t easily verify
- Requests for trial work involving policy analysis
- Gradual escalation toward sensitive topics
Trust your instincts when that dream consulting gig feels too good to scroll past.




























