Democracy Dies in Darkness

Deception has changed in the digital era, and spies are adapting

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Tourists visit the “Broken Bridge” over the Yalu River in northeast China in 2006. The bridge was bombed by U.S. forces during the Korean War, and Chinese officials have maintained the twisted ruins as a symbol of American aggression and intelligence failures. (Ng Han Guan/AP)
7 min

In the 1980s, when I lived in northeastern China, I used to visit a famous old railway bridge that spanned the Yalu River between the Chinese city of Dandong and Sinuiju, a town in North Korea.

During what the Chinese call the Great Fatherland Liberation War, what we call the Korean War, U.S. bombers blasted the bridge, and for decades, Chinese authorities have kept it just as it was — frozen in a crippled state of twisted metal and crumbling concrete.