The U.S. Embassy in China issued three advisories on consecutive days recently, warning U.S. citizens of Chinese descent and with ties to U.S. companies or the government of being targeted by the Chinese communist regime for possible detention, arrest, and exit bans.
Analysts said the series of warnings shows that the U.S. government is more concerned about the framework of the Chinese regime’s arbitrary law enforcement and willful detention of U.S. citizens amid U.S.-China strategic competitions instead of individual cases.
The notice said that “individuals on U.S. government-funded programs and those with past or present connections to the U.S. government” might be at risk as well.
The latest warning follows two other notices issued over the weekend, after the arrest on espionage charges of Chinese American scholar Min Zin in Kunming, Yunnan Province.
Min’s case has political and geopolitical connotations, Sun Kuo-hsiang, a professor of international affairs and business at Nanhua University in Taiwan, told The Epoch Times.
As to the latest warning, Sun said that Beijing may view people with Chinese heritage and U.S. institutional ties through a security and loyalty lens rather than as ordinary foreign visitors.
“Under China’s expanded counter-espionage and national security framework, academic research, policy work, business disputes, data access, or prior government employment can be reinterpreted as security risks,” he told The Epoch Times.
U.S. citizens with Chinese heritage face a high risk now if visiting China, Shen Ming-shih, research fellow at the Division of National Security Research at Taiwan’s Institute for National Defense and Security Research, said of the U.S. travel warnings.
The primary reason is the strategic competition between China and the United States, he said. “The Chinese regime suspects that the United States wants to suppress or defeat China all the time.”
Taiwan

Shen said that the risks of U.S. citizens traveling to mainland China now are certainly related to the cross-strait relations between China and Taiwan.
“As the cooperation between Taiwan and the United States is becoming increasingly closer, the Chinese regime has become more suspicious of people coming from the United States, including scholars and others who don’t have any political motives,” Shen said.
For those U.S. citizens of Chinese descent who use Chinese identification documents to enter China, it will arouse more suspicion from the CCP, he said. “[They will say] you are clearly U.S. citizen, why do you use a Chinese ID to enter China? Do you have ulterior motives?”
Chinese Americans Caught in an Intersection
There is also a U.S. intelligence-security context, Sun noted: Washington has accused Chinese intelligence-linked actors of trying to recruit current and former U.S. government and military personnel through fake consulting or job platforms.
That makes anyone with Chinese heritage plus U.S. government experience more politically sensitive in both directions, he said.
Sun concluded that the latest U.S. embassy’s warning reflects a U.S. judgment that, “amid intensifying U.S.-China rivalry, Beijing may increasingly use exit bans, questioning, detention, or consular-access restrictions against individuals who sit at the intersection of Chinese ethnicity, American citizenship, and U.S. state connections.”
The U.S. Embassy’s warnings have proven once again that mainland China under the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) rule is a high-risk area for foreigners, Shen said.
“It doesn’t matter what’s the purpose of your visit or how you interact with local people, in mainland China, if the CCP wants to detain you, they don’t need any reason, they can just fabricate a charge against you,” he said.






