It’s not ordinary Chinese people buying America’s farmland. It’s the Chinese Communist Party.
🔸 Introduction
Much has been made of Chinese investors purchasing American farmland. But what many Americans still fail to realize is this:
> **It’s not Chinese people who are behind these purchases. It’s the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).**
Through layers of shell companies, offshore financial routes, and white-glove proxies, the CCP has already acquired hundreds of thousands of acres across the United States—including parcels alarmingly close to sensitive military installations.
What looks like farmland is, in many cases, a strategic foothold.
What appears to be commerce is often a disguised form of conquest.
Let’s break down the facts by examining five high-profile examples.
🔸 Case 1: Sun Guangxin – CCP Military Asset Near Laughlin AFB
Sun Guangxin is not a self-made billionaire—he’s a CCP operative, funded and empowered by the regime. He is a former captain in the People’s Liberation Army (PLA)—which, crucially, is not a national army, but the military arm of the Chinese Communist Party.
In China, there is no such thing as a neutral military background.
If you served the PLA, you served the CCP.
And if you remain loyal and act in alignment with the regime’s goals, you are still part of its machinery.
Sun is also the founder of Guanghui Industry Investment Group, a massive conglomerate closely aligned with the Party’s goals, especially in Xinjiang and abroad. His company has described itself as operating “like a state-owned enterprise.”
In recent years, Sun acquired over 130,000 acres of land in Val Verde County, Texas, through opaque shell companies such as Brazos Highland Properties LP and Harvest Texas LLC.
The land is located just a few miles from Laughlin Air Force Base, a vital training facility for U.S. military pilots.
Sun claimed the purpose was a “green energy” wind farm.
But both Texas lawmakers and U.S. national security experts quickly saw through the façade.
Why would a former CCP military officer need that much land right next to an air base?
The Texas Legislature passed the Lone Star Infrastructure Protection Act to halt the project, and federal review soon followed.
However, the land itself was never repossessed.
Though the initial wind farm plan was stopped, Sun Guangxin retained ownership—and has since leased or transferred operations to other affiliated companies.
The face of the project may have changed,
but the hand behind it remains the same.
In effect, the CCP still holds a strategic foothold near Laughlin Air Force Base—just wearing a different mask.
🔸 Case 2: WH Group / Smithfield Foods – Controlling the Food Chain
In 2013, WH Group (formerly Shuanghui International), a Chinese meat processing conglomerate, acquired Smithfield Foods—the largest pork producer in the United States—along with over 146,000 acres of American farmland.
But this wasn’t just farmland anywhere.
Much of it is located near sensitive U.S. military installations, including sites in North Carolina and Virginia—regions home to military bases, weapons depots, and intelligence infrastructure.
At first glance, it looked like a simple business deal.
But as whistleblower Miles Guo has revealed, WH Group is not a private company in any real sense. It is an extension of the Chinese Communist Party, operating under state funding and policy alignment.
In the CCP’s authoritarian system, no enterprise—especially one of national strategic value—operates independently.
There is no private sector. There is only the Party.
So what does this mean for America?
🔸 Twofold Threat: Espionage and Food Control
Espionage & Proximity to Defense Assets
With vast agricultural holdings near military bases, the CCP now has physical access to key geographic regions—perfect for surveillance, infrastructure disruption, or concealed operations under the cover of “livestock logistics.”
Control Over the American Table
Smithfield supplies 1 in every 4 hot dogs and pork products in America.
Through this acquisition, the CCP has gained direct influence over what Americans eat, how it’s processed, and how it’s distributed.
Imagine this: The same regime that threatens America’s national security now plays a hidden role in the food served at your dinner table.
This is not just economic penetration—it is life-level infiltration.
🔸 Case 3: Walton Global – The Mask of a “U.S. Family Business”
Walton Global, a land investment firm, owns tens of thousands of acres across the U.S., including parcels less than 15 miles from Joint Base Andrews—one of the nation’s most critical military installations. What’s more, these holdings repeatedly overlap with locations where the CCP has been officially flagged as owning land in the U.S., according to USDA data.
The company presents itself as a U.S. family-owned business, but its global footprint and operational behavior tell a different story.
Walton’s growth follows a path well-known to CCP-linked capital:Canada → Hong Kong (1992) → Singapore/Taipei → United States.It’s the same route favored by red capital fronts and state-backed shell companies—beginning with Hong Kong just five years before its handover to CCP rule (at a time when the CCP still publicly promised “50 years of no change” and full autonomy for Hong Kong. But in reality, it had already begun asserting control through underground influence operations. The CCP’s specialty has always been covert infiltration long before overt rule—especially through informal and hidden channels while maintaining an outward appearance of compliance.)
Today, Walton’s international operations are managed from Singapore, where a local executive team directs global strategy. And as whistleblower Miles Guo has repeatedly warned, Singapore is no longer neutral—it has become one of the CCP’s most loyal offshore hubs for money laundering, shell companies, and covert financial influence.
The USDA once designated Walton as “Chinese-controlled,” a label the company later appealed. Yet even as it denied CCP ties, Walton promoted military-adjacent land to Chinese investors via WeChat—citing proximity to U.S. air bases as a selling point.
When a company quietly amasses strategic land near sensitive installations,runs its operations from a CCP-loyal finance hub,and follows the Party’s favorite investment blueprint—you’re not looking at a family business.
You’re looking at a Trojan horse.
🔸 Case 4: Fufeng Group – The Spy Balloon Was Just the Beginning
In 2022, Fufeng Group, a major Chinese corn-processing firm listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, purchased 370 acres in Grand Forks, North Dakota, to build a “corn mill.”
But that land lies just 12 miles from Grand Forks Air Force Base, a sensitive U.S. military site responsible for drone, satellite, and space communications.
Although Fufeng presents itself as a private company, it is intertwined with state-aligned personnel and falls under China’s 2017 National Intelligence Law—a law demanding all Chinese companies fully cooperate with CCP intelligence agencies
This ensures: if the CCP orders espionage, these firms must comply.
The U.S. Air Force warned the project posed a “significant threat to national security”, sparking bipartisan concern and official intervention. Senators John Hoeven and Kevin Cramer, along with Senator Marco Rubio, demanded a full CFIUS review, though CFIUS later stated it lacked jurisdiction.
Fufeng’s CEO denied any government ties, but U.S. oversight bodies raised clear red flags about CCP connections.
This was not an agricultural investment—it was a strategic incursion.
Even worse: this was not an isolated case. USDA figures for 2021 show Chinese interests control nearly 384,000 acres of American farmland, often close to military sites.
👉 To seal the linkage: We need to examine whether Fufeng’s ownership structure includes state-owned entities, CCP-aligned shareholders, or state-commissioned corporate officers. Early evidence already shows ties to China’s People’s Congress and state accolades —investigating deeper could reveal the full extent of CCP influence.
🔸 Final Warning: The Strategy Is the Evidence
Let’s not be fooled.
Whether a land deal is signed by a “private citizen” or a “private company,” it is often a white-glove operation of the Chinese Communist Party.
Under CCP rule, there is no such thing as a truly private business.
Success must either be handed over—or it will be taken.
And those who resist end up like Miles Guo: exiled, imprisoned, and hunted.
Now, with Hong Kong, Macau, and Singapore falling under deep CCP influence, there are no longer any neutral financial fronts either.
What looks like private capital is often state-directed infiltration.
Just look at the pattern:
Sun Guangxin, a former PLA officer, bought 130,000 acres near a U.S. Air Force base.
WH Group, tied to CCP state funding, controls America’s largest pork producer—along with 146,000 acres of farmland.
Walton Global, run through Singapore and seeded in Hong Kong, owns land near sensitive military sites.
Fufeng Group, a Chinese company bound by China’s intelligence law, tried to build a “corn mill” just 12 miles from a base handling space and drone operations.
Primavera Capital, tied to Ping An and Lufax (both arms of red capital), now owns 350 elite private schools across the U.S.—educating the next generation of American leaders.
These are not isolated cases.
They are coordinated steps in a long game.
It always starts with a “private company.”
It always flows through CCP-linked financial zones.
It always ends up near critical infrastructure—military bases, food systems, supply chains, or ideological strongholds.
This is not business.
This is strategic positioning.
What looks like farmland is a territorial foothold.
What looks like education is ideological influence.
What looks like a clean contract is a decades-old infiltration blueprint.
And the deeper you look, the clearer it becomes:
It’s not ordinary Chinese people buying America’s land.
It’s the Chinese Communist Party—using proxies, shell companies, and patient hidden maneuvering.
The paperwork may be clean. The names may change.
But the master behind it all remains the same.
The CCP doesn’t need to fire a single shot.
They’re already planting flags—acre by acre, school by school—across the United States.
So the next time someone asks,
“Why would farmland near a base matter?”
The answer should be obvious:
Because it’s not just farmland anymore. It’s the front line.

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