
Chinese baby factories are sparking U.S. traitor concerns. Source: MEGA
Chinese baby factories are sparking U.S. traitor concerns. Source: MEGA
Chinese leaders are using U.S. birthright laws to build a secret army. Their weapon? A shady “rent-a-womb” scheme creating thousands of American-born babies loyal to China’s communist regime.
Experts say the operation has already produced 30,000 children and these kids are reportedly sent to China for training, then returned to the U.S. to act as spies.
Former Army Maj. Gen. Paul Vallely warns the threat is real. He claims China may already have 15,000 soldiers living inside the U.S.
The most shocking part? The U.S. has no counter-intel operation tracking this.
Sources say Chinese nationals are paid $100,000 to enter the country and have babies. These children gain automatic citizenship, giving China a silent foothold on American soil.
“China has exploited birthright citizenship for years,” said retired Army Maj. Gen. Paul Vallely. “Once these kids grow up, their leaders can use them for whatever purpose they want.”
Vallely revealed that China runs the same operation in other countries that offer birthright citizenship—including most of the Americas.
Insiders believe this covert threat is why Donald Trump signed an executive order to end birthright citizenship in the U.S.
Nearly two dozen states and Washington, D.C. sued to block the move. Their lawsuit put the order on hold, pending a ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court.
Acting U.S. Attorney Joseph McNally shared a chilling example. A child born to Chinese parents in California returned to China at 20—then joined the Chinese military.
“That’s a huge national security gain for China, and a serious threat to the U.S.,” McNally warned.
Experts say this isn’t an isolated case.
China has planted spies in American universities, posing as students and researchers. Their mission? Steal U.S. technology, health data, and defense secrets—all while flying under the radar.
Since 2000, there have been 224 known cases of Chinese espionage targeting the United States.
One recent example? A former veteran and two active-duty soldiers at Joint Base Lewis-McChord near Tacoma, Washington. Authorities arrested them for selling stolen military secrets to China.
“Once they gain U.S. citizenship, they move freely between both countries,” warned Maj. Gen. Paul Vallely.
He blasted the lack of oversight.
“Our State Department’s passport office doesn’t track them,” he said. “They don’t know who poses a threat.”
Vallely added, “It’s a massive national security burden.”