from Your News:

Property beside Whiteman Air Force Base, home to the nation’s stealth nuclear bombers, is tied to a convicted Chinese tycoon with past intelligence connections.
By yourNEWS Media Newsroom
The B-2 stealth bombers that launched the June 2025 strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities took off from Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri — a base that, according to a Daily Caller News Foundation investigation, shares a fence with a foreign-owned trailer park connected to a convicted fraudster with ties to Chinese intelligence.
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The Knob Noster Trailer Park, located less than a mile from Whiteman’s runway — home to the world’s only nuclear-capable stealth bomber — is owned by shell companies ultimately controlled by Esther Mei and Cheng Hu, a Canadian couple linked to disgraced Chinese businessman Miles Guo. Guo, who has described himself as a former Chinese Communist Party (CCP) intelligence affiliate, was convicted in 2024 of orchestrating a $1 billion fraud conspiracy and awaits sentencing.
Web of Shell Companies Near U.S. Military Installations
Property filings show that Property Solutions 3603 LP, registered in Missouri in 2017, purchased the 25-acre Knob Noster park just four days after its formation. Three months later, it began operating under the trailer park name. The company was later transferred to a Georgia firm controlled by Mei and Hu, who are linked to multiple entities holding properties near U.S. military and defense sites in Missouri, Georgia, and Michigan.
“This is classic Chinese intel ops — a thin veneer of legitimacy masking deeper objectives,” said Bryan Dean Wright, a former CIA operations officer. “There’s zero chance a Chinese couple from Canada rolled into Knob Noster and saw a strictly financial investment in a dumpy plot of land.” Wright warned that the proximity could allow for surveillance, signal interception, or cyber intrusion targeting Whiteman’s command and communications systems.
A Google Maps video shows a B-2 bomber landing just beyond the trailer park’s fence line. “This is a five-alarm fire for foreigners tied to Chinese intelligence to own the RV park that’s essentially off Whiteman’s runway,” said Michael Lucci, CEO of the national security nonprofit State Armor, which supplied research for the investigation.
Potential Intelligence Threats
Former Air Force intelligence analyst L.J. Eads noted that the property’s closeness to the base’s satellite communications (SATCOM) systems creates dangerous exposure. “Those dishes tie directly into the 509th Communications Squadron — the network responsible for global strike command and control,” Eads told the DCNF. “Line-of-sight proximity could enable surveillance or even electronic warfare interference.”


