Isabel Hilton, editor at China Dialogue, told BBC News that Chinese state agents would typically look to target "members of the House of Lords or prominent business people, or people who have a voice in the community".
She added that it was "quite ambitious" to target a royal and "quite unwise for a member of the Royal Family to allow himself to be targeted".
Security chiefs feared Beijing was attempting to run an "elite capture" operation to influence the Duke of York because of the pressure he was under, a tactic which aims to appoint high profile individuals to Chinese businesses, think tanks or universities.
H6 was subsequently informed that he was believed by UK authorities to be associated with the United Front Work Department (UFWD), an arm of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) tasked with conducting influence operations.
The ruling said MI5 director general Ken McCallum had expressed concern about the threat posed to the UK by political interference by China and that bodies such as the UFWD were "mounting patient, well-funded, deceptive campaigns to buy and exert influence".
The Home Office said they believed H6 had been engaged in covert and deceptive activity on behalf of the CCP and that his relationship with Prince Andrew could be used for political interference.
Suella Braverman has now called for H6 to lose his anonymity and she told The Daily Telegraph that "disclosing the identity of this person will have a deterrent effect".
However, when asked whether the anonymity should be lifted, the home secretary said: "We always respect the decisions of the courts and also don't comment on individual cases."
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