After five years of detention investigations, United States President Eisenhower has argued that the information that Chanseisen now has is not as valuable as we thought.
Finally, under domestic and Chinese pressure, he decided to return home with money.
This proved to be the biggest miscalculation of his life.
Pasadena, near Los Angeles, is a beautiful little town, where one of the best universities in the world, the California Institute of Technology, sits.
One day in June 1955, a scene on the street shocked people who were used to quiet: several black men who looked like FBI agents in a movie suddenly came out of nowhere, freaked out and looked to the east.
They asked each other, “Why is it gone? “Where have you been?” It seems to have just lost something by negligence and is looking for it with regret.
They complained to each other in an agitated manner, talked about a few things and rushed to split up, and in just a few seconds, it was like a raindrop pouring into a river and disappearing.
What the black men do not know is that, in a small, invisible café around the corner, a yellow-skinned middle-aged man is watching their every move far away from the window with a watchful look.
He knew that the black people looked like the FBI, and they were the FBI.
When the FBI leaves, the middle-aged are relieved and write on a piece of paper. The paper was stolen from the cigarette box. He wrote it in Chinese:
Mr. Tonta-sensei: No communication since September 1947.
This middle-aged guy is exactly the one the FBI is following.
In the eyes of the powerful FBI, he is a more dangerous actor than a missile, an enemy of a nation whose head hurts.
Now, he finally finished writing what he wanted to write and put it in the middle of an ordinary home book and stuffed it in an envelope with an address.
He walked out of the café and threw the letter into the mailbox outside the door in the fastest possible way, while others were unaware.
It will be sent to Belgium, and if everything goes well, it will also take him and his family back to his country.
In that letter, he finally wrote the name of a Chinese man: Chan Shengsen.
It doesn’t look like a criminal.
He is a scientist, the most important field of research is aeroengineering, i.e. rockets and missiles.
But it’s not just a “scientific” thing.
In 1935, 24-year-olds came from China to study in the United States, following the world-renowned academic Taedu Vong Carmen.
After more than a decade, Chan has become a successful scientist like a mentor.
He is a member of the United States Scientific Advisory Council and has access to state secrets at the highest level, has direct access to the Supreme Commander of the United States Air Force for updates on scientific progress and frequents military bases.
He also provided advisory services to the United States Aviation Jet Engines, which provided ready access to confidential contracts with the United States military.
He was the youngest professor in the history of MIT at the age of 35, and the most authoritative, talented and pioneering leader in the United States aviation industry.
He married Chiang Ying, the beautiful soprano singer and Chiang Kai-shek military adviser’s daughter, Chiang Ying, and his children, both of whom lived in a mansion and earned a high salary.
Chiang Ying, Chan Seok-sun’s wife
What’s his income level?
In 1949, the California Institute of Technology dug up the money with a three-foot high pay, giving him a life-long teaching position in jet propulsion.
Instead of a normal salary, an annual subsidy from the college alone would have been three times the average annual income of the American family at the time, and that had not been added to the additional research costs.
Even ordinary Americans know him. Because he painted the blueprint for the intercontinental transport of rockets to the public, he also predicted that the goal of landing on the moon would be achieved within 30 years, with a full name.
What do you want?
So, when the 1950s came, the money scientists in the United States came to their pleasure.
How could he not have thought that he was about to fall into his own hands with the wind and that this great change would change his life and the history of a nation.
Because the FBI is following him.
Bad day started on June 6, 1950.
That day, a small rain and a heavy rain seemed to be a sign of the future of Chan.
Two FBI agents visited Chansyson’s office at Caltech.
Have you ever been in the Communist Party?
It’s hard to believe. He’s a pure scientist. He’s not very interested in politics. How can he be politically active?
The FBI went on to ask him, do you know a man named Robert Weinbaum?
I remember that name.
It was 1938, about 12 years ago. Shortly after he arrived at Caltech, he was dragged by friends to an occasional family meeting attended by college teachers.
Weinbaum is a teacher at the Department of Chemistry, and his home is the place where everyone goes most. The two were subsequently acquainted, and Chan was also recommended for a new position by Winbaum.
The FBI told Chansyson that since you’re friends, you should know that Wienbaum is the American Communist Party, and that you were at his family’s party, the American Communist Party meeting in Pasadena.
Well, Winnbaum is a communist? For his own protection of his friends, Cheickson sincerely told the FBI that he was not sure if Wiinbaum was a communist, but he believed that Wiinbaum was loyal to the United States and loyal to the United States Government, yes, and sometimes he spoke a little bit harshly, but in those years, many young people were “left.”
The FBI took a good look at him and said, “What about you, you’re a communist?” Why else would your name be on the party list?
Money’s lost. Your name is on it? Impossible.
The FBI told him that his name was next to a name named John Decker, so they had reason to suspect that this “John Decker” was actually his alias.
This is even more ridiculous. I’ve never heard the name before.
He categorically denied it.
F.B.I. didn’t expect Chan to admit everything right away. They just knocked on the mountain tiger.
At the same time, another network was being opened to Chansheng — just on the same day, the United States military officially signed a notice banning Chansheng from access to confidential projects and revoked his confidential research licence.
It seems that the measures imposed on Chen Sheng-sun look like a insidious trap, specially designed to wait for him to drill.
In fact, the FBI came to the door, sent a letter from the military, and it wasn’t a rush, it was a long plan.
It’s not surprising that, as a foreigner, he was able to participate in a classified military project and must have been subjected to a very strict “faith review”.
Such a review began in 1944, with several rounds in 1946 and 1947, and left with the CIA material on his mass file, so it can be said that there is no secret in front of them from inside to out.
Rounds and rounds of reviews have been tested.
But don’t forget, that was before!
By 1950, the world had completely changed:
First, the fact that the first atomic bomb of the Soviet Union exploded successfully in August 1949 and became the second nuclear-weapon State in the world after the United States of America was a matter of tension;
Second, the establishment of the People ‘ s Republic of China in October 1949 and the drive to Taiwan of its ally, Chiang Kai-shek, also left the United States uneasy;
And, just in June 1950, the Korean War broke out.
As a result, the United States was plunged into a total “red fear” of paranoia.
They began to arrest communists or pro-communists in the country. I’d rather kill 3,000 by mistake than miss one.
In such an atmosphere, it is only natural that money-scientists, who are Chinese and are exposed to high military secrets, become the focus of attention.
He must again be subjected to rigorous scrutiny and subject to a presumption of guilt.
The files of Chan Shengsen are again being carefully studied. On the look of the magnifying glass, they found that Viinbaum, the organizer of a communist group, was closely associated with Chansheng.
The discovery immediately opened the eyes of a large number of the military, the FBI, the CIA, and the Justice Department, as if to the point where they had been able to…
Good, you’re a rich man.
On May 18, 1950, half a month before the FBI came to the door, the U.S. Department of Safety and Security (SAS) met to discuss two issues:
First, do you want to order California Polytechnic to dismiss the money scoundrel?
Secondly, should we get the money out of the military’s secret project?
The discussion concluded that the evidence at hand was not sufficient to require Chan to be suspended from Caltech, but that it was enough to deny him access to confidential items.
The reason is simple, because he is now a member of a “subversive communist organization identified by the Ministry of Justice” and has a close relationship with the Communist Party and a sympathetic attitude towards them.
In fact, since then, in the eyes of the United States of America, Moneycaster has been a guilty man.
Six months later, the boots landed, and the persecution against Chen Shengsen began to blow up like an automatic machine.
To be sure, what happened to Chancheng was not a special case in that time. If he resists, it is estimated that four or five more years will make it through the dark days in which McCarthyism prevails, and the rest of his life remains in the United States as a professor.
However, in the face of the suspected dilemma, Chen Hak-sun has taken an unexpected response.
His situation and fate have been dramatically reversed.
After sending off the impassioned guests of the FBI, Moneycaster felt a bad spot. He said to his friend that the hand of doubt was reaching him.
But he didn’t expect things to get so bad.
On 16 June, Wienbaum, who had been implicated in the money, was arrested at his home.
On the same day, the Caltech Institute finally received a letter from the United States Army ‘ s Sixth Army headquarters informing Chan Kyusen that his eligibility to participate in a confidential project had been revoked by the military.
Our colleagues at the College found it incredible, but sent the letter to Chan.
The self-esteem of Chan Kyu-sun is deeply stinging. To be sure, he likes life in the United States, where he has studied, taught and spent his life in a pure academic life.
But suddenly the Americans treated him this way, which made him completely incomprehensible and unacceptable.
He took over the letter from the military, wrote a signed confirmation, and then put a statement to their superiors at Caltech to shock them: He’s resigning from Caltech and returning to China.
This move made the FBI’s initial suspicion of him more credible.
In the eyes of those who did not trust him, he was becoming more like a communist and, worse still, more like a spy.
The news of the resignation of Chan Hak-sun is coming to the FBI there. The FBI immediately called him to ask him what was going on, and he said that he had proposed to the Dean of the Faculty the idea of resigning, that the Head of the Department was not in a position to do so, and that he was not aware of any permission, but that “he had no other choice than to do so”.
The FBI asked him what he was going to do if his resignation was approved.
He was given an unexpected answer: “I intend to return to China.” I’m sorry.
This answer upsets the FBI, and just two days later, June 19, they came to the office of Chansheng. However, they were greeted by a written statement that was written long ago.
I have been a welcome guest for more than a decade. I am also proud to say, honestly and even without exaggeration, that I am confident that my visit will benefit both sides, particularly during the Second World War. I have contributed significantly to the scientific development of the country, both during and after war. But the status that was initially welcomed no longer exists, with a cloud of suspicion over its head. The only thing a gentleman can do next is get out of here. I’m sorry.
There’s no one left here. Go!
I don’t think anyone would have thought that.
He didn’t just say that. After that statement was dropped, Chen Seng began to actively prepare for his return to his country, including booking of tickets and shipment of luggage.
In addition, he is scheduled to fly to Washington on 23 August to attend his hearings under the auspices of the College.
If the complaint is successful, he will be re-entitled to a derelict confidential research licence.
It’s his East California Institute of Technology. The College did not want to lose such a high-level talent, who thought that, if it was clear that there was a misunderstanding, everything would be back to normal, and that maybe he would change his mind and stay at Caltech.
But Chanshin doesn’t care much about it. He only wanted to settle this mess as soon as possible and return home early.
At the end of July, he approached a moving company to help him transport his luggage back to China.
In late August, the manager of the moving company took a man to his house and then to his office, where he put the pre-packaged items of the money in a waterproof box and took them back to the moving company ‘ s warehouse for packing.
The manager saw what he was taking away, and the first feeling was that he was not coming back.
A piano, home, discs, bedding, books, desks, radios, dishwashers are all to be taken away.
It’s a long way to go. I’m sure he’s from China.
The manager began packing as his client, thinking, while directing his men to take the goods back to the warehouse.
The next day, the guy in charge of packing came to him, nervously, and reported a situation that left them unconscious: this man who looks like a good family, most likely a Chinese spy!
Because they found that some of the items that Chen Shen had to bring back to China were printed in the words “internal”, “highly secret”.
While they look at it as a book, at that special time when it could be called “class struggles,” every American is holding on to the string of class struggles, and the best way to do it is of course we’re familiar with it — reporting.
On 21 August, the manager reported to Los Angeles Customs. The customs officers arrived that afternoon, and more than customs, the FBI, the Navy Intelligence Department, the Air Force Intelligence Department, the Army Armaments Department and the Department of State came together in huge numbers.
They examined that information, which consisted of eight large boxes covering the fields of atomic energy, rockets, missiles, jet propulsion, etc.
To be honest, they don’t understand what these sophisticated technologies are about, how high they are, how high they are and what they have to do with it. They can read, nothing but the cover’s secret warning.
But that’s enough.
The inspectors agreed at the scene: this information is important! We can’t return them to Chan Sheng-sun. We have to put them under our control. No one can contact them without our permission!
After all this, the inspectors were relieved. We almost let Chan Kyu-sun succeed in sending this vital information back to Communist China. Thinking about it, everybody’s sweating.
Intel won’t get away, and no one will.
Now it’s time to think about getting caught.
It’s all in the bag.
As his belongings turned upside down, he flew to Washington, D.C., under the arrangement of the California Institute of Technology, to meet with Deputy Navy Minister Dan Kimbor.
He told Kimbor what had happened to him, talked about the excitement, and he cried. But Kimber did not make any useful recommendations other than to introduce him to a lawyer.
I’m tired of being kicked and kicked around, and he seriously stressed his determination to go back to China when he met Kimber for the second time.
Kimber’s answer was, “You can’t leave, you’re too valuable.” I’m sorry.
Another, more famous comment he made about Chan, is familiar to us: “Whereever he is, he is worth five divisions. I’m sorry.
It was precisely because he understood his value that, as soon as he left Washington, Kimber called the Department of Justice, warning them that he knew too much and could never leave the United States.
At this point, Chanshin is flying from Washington to Los Angeles.
On the night of 23 August, at around 21.30 p.m., he landed at Los Angeles airport and was detained.
A judicial officer stopped him and showed him an order signed by the United States Government prohibiting him from leaving the country.
Money’s a shock. This was followed by great anger.
He knew that it was impossible to break up peacefully with the United States “gentleman.”
If you can’t go, the family can go. Cheong Ying and the two kids were thinking about going back, and he stayed and watched.
Not even that.
Customs applied to the court for the detention of his 8 boxes of documents on the grounds that he had violated the Export Administration Act, the Neutral Act and the Spy Act. The application was granted.
Immediately thereafter, on 25 August, the Migration Board signed an arrest warrant against Chan Shengsen. But they haven’t done it yet. It just increased surveillance of Chan Shengsen. He was followed everywhere by agents.
Until then, he was unaware that the problem was in the luggage shipment. For the first time, he realized why the United States prohibited him from leaving the country.
He said to the journalists, “I don’t know why they checked my luggage. I have no idea about the whole thing. I’m sorry.
So, what’s with all the classified documents?
He assured him that he had looked closely at the documents he was taking away, that all the secrets were sealed in his office, locked in a locker, and that he had given the key to someone else.
The rest is not a secret document at all, but only sketches and most common logarithmic tables, and the teaching notes he himself has written over the years.
“There is no codebook, no codebook, no design drawings. “I am very sure that I never tried to take away any classified documents or to leave the country in a way other than legally. I’m sorry.
But he couldn’t convince those who took power.
Government investigators have spent countless hours and manpower reviewing Chansheng ‘ s documents, including over 100 books, a large number of academic papers, government documents and industry reports in Chinese, English, German and Russian.
The investigators took three days to take micrograms of these documents, took 12,000 copies and then sorted them out, with 26 pages in the catalogue alone.
However, it is beyond the competence of the investigators to judge whether the information is confidential, even if it involves expert advice.
After all, isn’t it normal for a world-class tech expert like Chen Hak-sun to have so much information?
However, they found nine large clippings in it, all of which contain information from Chansheng Sam’s usual collection on the American Atomic Energy Program and the nuclear spy case.
That’s a little sensitive.
Moreover, it has been maintained that, in order not to benefit the potential enemy (that is, of course, the newly established People ‘ s Republic of China), all the information in his possession, even his head, should be considered confidential.
Well, the easiest way, of course, is to keep the money in the United States.
On 7 September 1950, the Immigration Service sent two agents to the home of Chan Shengsen.
The agents first questioned him about his basic personal circumstances. He officially stated that he had never joined the U.S. Communist Party and that he had returned to China in 1947 only to visit his father and mother-in-law.
However, the agents arrested Chen Shengsen for illegal entry in 1947 on charges of concealing his communist identity.
Seeing his father taken away, the son of Chan Sheung Sen was hiding in the corner of the wall and shivering. Several friends arrived in time to support Chen Shengsen, but they were unable to do so and could only watch him drive to the prison while he was stuck in a car by agents.
This is the most disgraceful moment of his life.
After many years, the agent who arrested him recalled that he had not shown fear at that moment, and that he had only a relieved look on his face as if, “Well, it’s over.”
But he was wrong. Instead of ending it, it’s more like beginning.
For the next 15 days, Chen Sheung-sheng was kept in a small single room, unable to speak to anyone. Every night, the guards turn on the light every 15 minutes to see if he is alive or has committed suicide.
He lost more than 20 pounds in the last six months.
Six months later, he was finally released. His bail was up to $15,000, a rich friend who generously contributed. After his release, his friends were confident that he would soon be acquitted.
However, strange things have happened.
In October 1950, the U.S. Immigration Service made a decision against Chen Shengsen that caused a huge loss. They believe that he was a communist when he last entered the United States, so under the newly enacted Subversive Activities Control Act and the Immigration Act 1918, which was just amended under the Internal Security Act, he was not facing detention, but rather –
Expulsion!
Two months ago, he was prevented from leaving, and two months later, he was expelled; the Department of State prohibited foreigners whose technical background could be used by hostile countries to the detriment of the United States. Money is in the middle of it, and it feels like it’s a toy that nobody can play with.
But in any case, it is for his dignity to fight. Before I wanted to go, you wouldn’t let me just go, and now you’re gonna kick me out in a humiliating way? Well, then I’ll stay and get an explanation.
It’s hard to fight like this. Over the next five years, he has experienced the treatment that most dishonoured a scientist.
He participated in deportation hearings against himself and tried to prove over and over again that he was not a communist. When he was asked which side he supported, he said that I cared about the Chinese people.
The immigration prosecutor also asked him whether he would fight for the United States in the event of a conflict between the United States and China.
Moneykison has fallen into a long silence.
His defence counsel protested that it might take him six months to consider the issue. The prosecutor laughed and said that I would wait six months for that.
In the end, Moneycaster gave him his answer. He said, “I have already said that I am loyal to the Chinese people, and if there is a war between the United States and the Communistly ruled China, and if it is in the interest of the Chinese people — and I think it is possible — then I will stand on the American side, and it is no problem. I’m sorry.
The prosecutor asked him whether it was up to him to decide whether the war was in the interest of the Chinese people. Moneyson says yes. He has to make that decision himself.
The Prosecutor also asked whether the United States Government could not be allowed to decide the matter for him.
He said, “No, of course not. I’m sorry.
Obviously, such a statement is not satisfactory to the other party. Despite the lack of evidence that Chansheng is really a communist party, the Immigration Service ruled on 26 April 1951 that he was “a foreigner who had been a member of the American Communist Party” and that he had to be deported.
This was followed by another round of appeals and another round of psychological torture.
On 8 February 1952, the Ministry of Justice decided to expel Chen Shengsen, but his execution was suspended. Later, it was changed to parole, requiring Chan to report to the Ministry of Justice every month.
His travel was restricted to Los Angeles, and many scientific meetings held in the field were not possible.
He was also teaching students, writing papers and publishing a popular textbook on communication and control systems. But he can no longer have access to any work that requires confidentiality.
He was under constant surveillance. A car is often parked outside the house for hours. The home phone rings dozens of times a day, often as soon as it is connected, the other party hangs up. Chiang Ying later recalled: “We were very nervous during those years. I’m sorry.
Whether you like it or not, the Chansyson family is moving away from the original life cycle and becoming the marginal of Caltech. A lot of professors hide from him, fearing trouble.
The College helped him, but it didn’t help, and it was suggested that the College “may well let this go”.
This means that Moneycaster is beginning to be abandoned by his most important community of scientists.
He has become more and more isolated, more angry and less patient.
Even though his men were outside prison, how could that not be another form of punishment and torture?
If, after 1954, his hopes were dashed by futile attempts day after day, year after year, to restore his reputation, work and daily life.
This sentiment erupted in a letter sent to a friend by Chanseisen: “Can you believe in history when you know that history is always rewritten? Do you think there is justice and honesty in the world? Do you expect to be famous in the United States without self-public relations or without hiring a public relations officer to serve you? Dear friend, let’s not believe this fiction anymore! I’m sorry.
He had to accept the harsh fact that he would never return.
In that case, what he should consider was a new way of life.
But what can he do?
No one expected the answer. He was given the opportunity to read a magazine in order to learn about boredom.
In May 1955, Chen Shui-sheng accidentally read a Chinese newspaper, The People ‘ s Paintings, which included a report on five sections. A familiar name jumped into his eyes.
Uncle Chan.
Uncle Chan.
He recognized it at first sight. It was his Hangzhou hometown, his father’s. The more important message is that Uncle Chen is now the deputy chairman of the nation’s people and is entitled to stand with the party and national leaders upstairs in Tiananmen City to watch the parade.
He’s down in meditation. Is it possible to set up this line and let the Chinese government rescue him? But how do we get to Uncle Chan? It was impossible to write directly because he was still under surveillance by agents.
Well, only the curve saves the country.
Cheong Yingseng thought that Chiang Ying ‘ s sister lived in Belgium and could hide the information given to Uncle Chen in a letter to Chiang Ying ‘ s sister so that she could receive it and forward it to the country. So, as long as we get rid of the agents and send the letters to Belgium…
So, the first scene of the article.
In his letter he wrote: “But now that the papers say that it is possible for China to exchange detainees with the United States, and the United States lies that all Chinese students will return home have been released, and we are in a hurry. My Government must not trust them when they come back and the Americans cannot release them. Of course my Government understands that the United States Government cannot lie. But we are waiting for liberation for so long that we may miss the opportunity. Forgive the old man and the government! I’m sorry.
He did everything he could. The rest depends on fate.
But he didn’t know that he cared about his fate and decided to bring him back to China. He believed that much more, and that the power and confidence behind it would go beyond his imagination.
The letter was sent to Belgium and safely to China, and to Uncle Chen. In less than a week, Deputy Prime Minister Chen Yi, representing the highest level of the Council of State, was in possession of Chen Shengsen.
Prior to that, the fate of Chen Shengsen had long been of domestic concern. When Chan was first arrested in 1950, 189 Chinese scientists protested and the Chinese Foreign Ministry has been discussing what to do.
Now the time seems ripe. The Chinese Government has decided to take the opportunity of the talks held between China and the United States in Geneva, Switzerland, to resolve the plight of Chenxi.
Why did China and the United States come to the Geneva talks at this time?
This is to resolve the issue of prisoners of war on both sides of the Korean war. At that time, there were about 155 Americans still in China, and in 1954, China agreed to start negotiations with the United States on prisoners of war. The United States wanted to release all Americans imprisoned in China, including military personnel and ordinary citizens, while China demanded that Chinese scientists who remained in the United States be allowed to return home.
But the United States is very cautious about the departure of Chinese scientists from the United States, who are afraid to let go of a man who will pose a danger to them in the future. They know clearly how much he weighs.
In June 1954, during the Geneva conference, United States Secretary of State Dulles sent a telegram to the United States Mission stating that the Attorney General had allowed Chinese students who wished to return to the mainland to leave gradually, but that “according to an informal review, the Department of Defense has so far found only one person unable to leave”.
Of course. That’s Money.
However, the United States Government was under increasing pressure at home, and the families of prisoners of war appealed to the Government to do its utmost to bring their loved ones back home. Moreover, China has released 15 United States military pilots who have been detained, and has given good faith to the United States.
United States President Eisenhower and Secretary of State Dulles talked about Money Learner on June 10. Eisenhower said all Chinese should go back.
Mr. Dulles said that two people, one of them, were unable to leave, because they had very high levels of classified information.
Eisenhower said, “This should not be an obstacle. The information they have is no longer as valuable as we thought. I’m sorry.
It makes sense for him to think so. It’s been almost five years since Chan was excluded from the classified project.
As a laterer, we have to say that this is the biggest miscalculation of Eisenhower’s life.
For the United States, this misjudged a formidable opponent.
That’s the story.
Now that the President has spoken, the Secretary of State has nothing to say. Thus, on the eve of the Chinese-American Ambassadorial talks, the United States reached a principled opinion as to whether or not to release Chansheng.
Chan Kyu-sun, let go!
On 4 August 1955, the United States Department of Justice signed a notice of permission to return to China.
On 8 August, Wang Bingnan, China ‘ s chief negotiator, who had received instructions from the highest levels of the country, referred to Chen Sheng Sen during the talks. This was the only named person mentioned throughout the negotiations.
Yes, that’s how important it is.
The Ambassador of the United States replied: “The United States Government has already taken the decision to agree to the return of Chensheng. I’m sorry.
In Geneva, which is thousands of miles away from the United States and China, Cheon Hak Sen has finally been pulled out of fate. Leaving the United States, he will devote the rest of his life to an unknown future, but in any case, he gets what he wants most.
With the speedest he could be, he fled the United States, a place that greatly harmed him.
On September 17, 1955, Chen Shengsen and his wife and children boarded the Cleveland presidential cruiser at the port of Los Angeles.
The money learned from the family back home.
He said to the journalist: “I am not going to come back.” I have no reason to come back. I’ve been thinking about it for a long time. I am prepared to do my utmost to help the Chinese people build a country that will make them happy and dignified. I’m sorry.
He also said, “I do not hate the American people. When you are bitten by a dog, you can only hate the owner of that dog. I’m sorry.
On 8 October, the cruise ship arrived in Hong Kong. They boarded the boat and landed at Tsim Sha Tsui and immediately arrived at Kowloon railway station in Shenzhen that afternoon. Since then, Chan has never been separated from his country.
After many years, Kimbor, who believes that he is worth five divisions, remains concerned. He believed that it was the stupidest thing the United States had ever done to force money away. He said he said he was a communist. I’m a communist!
Kimber did look right. CHASON did not bring back any of the classified documents, but he brought back his mind, his knowledge and experience, his judgement and his leadership.
His return brought the Chinese missile and rocket age at least 20 years ahead. It is precisely because of the fact that the nuclear bombs that China has developed have been able to insert wings and become a deterrent weapon.
It is only in China that the bottom line of the international scene has truly been reached.
CHASON loved the United States and loved everything it gave him, knowledge, achievements, honour and a rich life. But the United States failed him, and during that dark day he was ashamed and angry at being called “American scientists”.
He hates America.
After many years, Chen Sheng Sen’s reputation was crowned by the State Council and the Central Military Commission of China as the only “scientific scientist of outstanding national contributions”. Perhaps by then, his hate for America will have been abated, but you know, since he left 1955 until he died in 2009, he has never been on American soil again.
Chanshin used to want to be a common American, a stable scientist. But times do not allow him to choose this path of life. His gifted mind is destined to make him the focus of competition for the great Powers, and his life is destined to be a great one.
He is destined to be a sinner of a country or a hero of another.
Whether he wants to or not.
Is it his luck or his misfortune?
References:
“Josees – Money Learner.” Zhang Zhang Jun, Ruyt, 2011 edition
“The beginning and end of Chen’s secret letter to Uncle Chan” Wang Joon-hyeong, “The Source” July 2011
“Chang Hae-sun’s Return Chronicle” Zhang, “Chan Hae-sun’s Study” #1 2016
“The Hard Homecoming Road to Chen Hak-sun” Zhang, No. 2 of Yellow Spring and Autumn 2020: YXA1DKrKJUp5OJLDRUM8Mj
I don’t know.
Keep your eyes on the road.