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Home - Technology - China’s Scam Crackdown: The US Victims They Choose to Ignore
Technology

China’s Scam Crackdown: The US Victims They Choose to Ignore

By Admin11/04/2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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China Is Cracking Down on Scams. Just Not the Ones Hitting Americans
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Governments around the world have been struggling to address the rise of industrial-scale scamming operations based in countries like Laos, Myanmar, and Cambodia that have cost victims billions of dollars over the past few years.

Key Takeaways:

  • **Escalating Global Threat:** Industrial-scale scamming, rooted in Southeast Asia and tied to Chinese organized crime and forced labor, represents a multi-billion dollar problem with no clear solution in sight.
  • **China’s Selective Enforcement:** While China has aggressively cracked down on scams targeting its own citizens, this selective approach has inadvertently incentivized criminal syndicates to pivot and increasingly victimize Americans and other foreign nationals.
  • **International Cooperation Deficit:** The lack of comprehensive collaboration, particularly between the U.S. and China, is a major impediment to dismantling these sophisticated, transnational criminal enterprises and protecting global victims.

The insidious expansion of industrial-scale scamming operations has become a global crisis, with sophisticated criminal syndicates operating primarily out of Southeast Asian nations like Laos, Myanmar, and Cambodia. These illicit enterprises, frequently linked to Chinese organized crime, leverage forced labor to execute their sophisticated schemes and rely on vast, intricate money laundering networks to convert their ill-gotten gains into profit. The sheer scale and embedded nature of these operations have rendered even major international law enforcement efforts largely ineffective, failing to stem the relentless tide of financial losses for victims worldwide.

The Staggering Cost to Americans

The financial toll of these “cyber-enabled” scams on Americans alone is staggering. The FBI reported that U.S. citizens lost more than $17.7 billion to these schemes last year. This figure, significant as it is, likely represents a considerable undercount, given that many victims, often due to shame or a lack of awareness, do not report their experiences to authorities. This mounting financial drain underscores the urgent need for a more robust and unified international response.

China’s Dual Approach: Protection at Home, Blind Eye Abroad?

A critical barrier to comprehensively addressing this transnational crime wave, according to some U.S. officials, is the perceived lack of full collaboration from Chinese authorities. While China has indeed undertaken significant efforts to combat industrial scamming, these efforts, critics argue, appear to be primarily aimed at mitigating the impact on Chinese citizens rather than eradicating the activity to protect victims globally. Reva Price, a member of the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission, articulated this concern at a recent Senate hearing, stating, “To its credit, China has cracked down on these operations, but it has done so selectively, largely turning a blind eye to scam centers victimizing foreigners.” She concluded that this selective enforcement has inadvertently “incentivized the Chinese criminal syndicates to shift toward targeting Americans.”

Research published by Price’s commission in March corroborates this assessment, suggesting that Beijing’s targeted strategy has emboldened certain Chinese scammers, even those operating within China’s borders, to continue their illicit activities so long as their victims are exclusively foreign nationals. This dynamic creates a perverse incentive structure for criminal organizations.

The “Squeezed Balloon” Effect: Shifting Targets

Other U.S.-based researchers have arrived at similar conclusions, providing compelling data to illustrate this concerning trend. Jason Tower, then Myanmar country director for the US Institute of Peace’s Program on Transnational Crime and Security in Southeast Asia, testified to Congress last year that while China reported a commendable 30 percent decrease in the money its citizens lost to scams from 2023 to 2024, the United States simultaneously suffered a more than 40 percent increase. Tower explicitly linked this divergence to Beijing’s enforcement dynamics, noting that “the scam syndicates are increasingly pivoting to target the rest of the world, and especially Americans.”

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) further observed last year that scam centers have diversified their recruitment pools. Initially relying heavily on trafficked Chinese nationals and other Chinese speakers, these operations now entrap individuals from a broader array of countries and linguistic backgrounds. UNODC researchers attributed this shift partly to attackers broadening their target demographics worldwide. However, they also highlighted that this diversification appears to be a direct reaction to Chinese enforcement initiatives and Beijing’s concerted efforts to shield its own citizens from these crimes. This “squeezed balloon” effect—where pressure in one area causes expansion in another—is a recurring theme in the fight against highly adaptable criminal networks.

Gary Warner, a veteran digital scams researcher and director of intelligence at the cybersecurity firm DarkTower, offers a nuanced perspective that aligns with this observation. He acknowledges China’s substantial efforts, stating, “China is doing more to fight fraud—like orders of magnitude more—than any other country.” Yet, he concurs with the prevailing sentiment that “the crackdown by China on people scamming China has squeezed the balloon so to speak and led to more international and American targeting.”

Cultural Reinforcement and National Campaigns

The Chinese government has spent years investing heavily in national safety campaigns, explicitly warning its citizens about the pervasive threat of scams and educating them on preventative measures. These public awareness efforts often tap into a sense of national solidarity. A widely recognized meme in China, 中国人不骗中国人 (Zhōngguó rén bù piàn Zhōngguó rén), literally translating to “Chinese people don’t deceive Chinese people,” is commonly used to signal trust in various social contexts, from sharing restaurant recommendations to job leads. In the realm of digital fraud, a variant has emerged: “Chinese don’t scam Chinese.” While fostering trust internally, this cultural narrative, coupled with selective enforcement, may inadvertently contribute to the outward shift in scamming targets.

The challenge posed by these industrial-scale scam operations is not merely financial; it’s a humanitarian crisis, fueled by forced labor, and a testament to the complexities of global law enforcement in an interconnected world. Without a concerted, truly international strategy that transcends national interests, these sophisticated criminal enterprises will likely continue to evolve, adapt, and inflict devastating losses on victims across the globe.

The Bottom Line:

The global fight against industrial-scale scamming is at a critical juncture. While China has commendably protected its own citizens from fraud, its selective enforcement has created a vacuum, compelling sophisticated criminal syndicates to pivot their operations and increasingly target foreigners, especially Americans. Effectively dismantling these multi-billion dollar, forced-labor-backed enterprises demands an unprecedented level of international collaboration, moving beyond national self-interest towards a unified front against a common, evolving enemy.


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