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15 Oct 2025

Cummings claims China obtained ‘extremely secret’ government data

Cummings claims China obtained ‘extremely secret’ government data

Dominic Cummings has claimed that China breached high level systems to obtain “vast amounts” of classified government information for years.

Boris Johnson’s former adviser said he and the then-prime minister were told about the breach in 2020 and that it involved so-called Strap material, a government classification for highly sensitive intelligence material.

He said that fundamental infrastructure for transferring sensitive data around the British state was compromised “for years”.

He did not say how the system had been breached but that he would be willing to share what he knew with MPs if they were to hold an inquiry.

Mr Cummings told The Times: “What I’m saying is that some Strap stuff was compromised and vast amounts of data classified as extremely secret and extremely dangerous for any foreign entity to control was compromised.

“Material from intelligence services. Material from the National Security Secretariat in the Cabinet Office. Things the government has to keep secret. If they’re not secret, then there are very, very serious implications for it.”

It comes as Sir Keir Starmer promised to publish key evidence that forms part of the collapsed China spying case.

The Crown Prosecution Service said the case collapsed because the Government’s evidence did not show that China represented a threat to national security at the time of the alleged offences.

But Sir Keir insisted the “substantive” evidence was submitted under the Conservatives and supplementary statements handed to the CPS subsequently reflected the Tory administration’s position.

Mr Cummings called it “absolutely puerile nonsense” to suggest that whether to define China as a threat is a “difficult semantic question”.

“Anyone who has been read in at a high level with the intelligence services on China knows that the word threat doesn’t even begin to cover it,” he said.

A Government spokesperson said: “We don’t comment on national security matters.”

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