Posted on 05/01/2019 2:47:49 PM PDT by NoLibZone
Then Brennan turned to an even more sensitive issue: Russias interference in the American election. Brennan now was aware that at least a year earlier Russian hackers had begun their cyberattack on the Democratic National Committee. We know youre doing this, Brennan said to the Russian.
He pointed out that Americans would be enraged to find out Moscow was seeking to subvert the election and that such an operation could backfire. Brennan warned Bortnikov that if Russia continued this information warfare, there would be a price to pay. He did not specify the consequences.
This was the first of several warnings that the Obama administration would send to Moscow. But the question of how forcefully to respond would soon divide the White House staff, pitting the National Security Councils top analysts for Russia and cyber issues against senior policymakers within the administration.
It was a debate that would culminate that summer with a dramatic directive from President Barack Obamas national security adviser to the NSC staffers developing aggressive proposals to strike back against the Russians: Stand down.
Brennan spoke with FBI Director James Comey and Admiral Mike Rogers, the head of the NSA, and asked them to dispatch to the CIA their experts to form a working group at Langley that would review the intelligence and figure out the full scope and nature of the Russian operation.
As these deliberations were underway, more troubling intelligence got reported to the White House: Russian-linked hackers were probing the computers of state election systems, particularly voter registration databases. The first reports to the FBI came from Illinois. In late June, its voter database was targeted in a persistent cyberattack that lasted for weeks. The attackers were using foreign IP addresses, many of which were traced to a Dutch company owned by a heavily tattooed 26-year-old Russian who lived in Siberia. The hackers were relentlessly pinging the Illinois database five times per second, 24 hours a day, and they succeeded in accessing data on up to 200,000 voters. Then there was a similar report from Arizona, where the username and password of a county election official was stolen. The state was forced to shut down its voter registration system for a week. Then in Florida, another attack.
At this point, a group of NSC officials, committed to a forceful response to Moscows intervention, started concocting creative options for cyberattacks that would expand the information war Putin had begun.
Michael Daniel and Celeste Wallander, the National Security Councils top Russia analyst, were convinced the United States needed to strike back hard against the Russians and make it clear that Moscow had crossed a red line.
Daniel and Wallander began drafting options for more aggressive responses beyond anything the Obama administration or the US government had ever before contemplated in response to a cyberattack.
One day in late August, national security adviser Susan Rice called Daniel into her office and demanded he cease and desist from working on the cyber options he was developing. Dont get ahead of us, she warned him.
The White House was not prepared to endorse any of these ideas.
Daniel and his team in the White House cyber response group were given strict orders: Stand down. She told Daniel to knock it off, he recalled.
Daniel walked back to his office. That was one pissed-off national security adviser, he told one of his aides.
At his morning staff meeting, Daniel matter-of-factly said to his team that it had to stop work on options to counter the Russian attack: Weve been told to stand down. Daniel Prieto, one of Daniels top deputies, recalled, I was incredulous and in disbelief. It took me a moment to process. In my head I was like, Did I hear that correctly?' Then Prieto spoke up, asking, Why the hell are we standing down? Michael, can you help us understand? Daniel informed them that the orders came from both Rice and Monaco. They were concerned that if the options were to leak, it would force Obama to act. They didnt want to box the president in, Prieto subsequently said.
Dems, Russians... no difference
reads like a bad novel. is a bad novel.
It would be hard to find a bigger source of #FakeNews than Mother Jones. Even the Onion has more reliable content in its satire.
It would be harder to find a more left leaning source.
That’s the beauty of this story.
This old article was written by a hardcore Marxist, David Corn (The Nation, Yahoo, etc). and his leftist (and possibly something deeper) buddy Michael Isikoff, once of Newsweek and I think even a contributor to the Wash. Post.
I wouldn’t trust CORN to clean up dog shit of a sidewalk.
This could be a different type of DISINFORMATION operation to take scrutiny off of Obama’s DEEP STATE operations.
Just saying!
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