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Ron Paul See other Ron Paul Articles Title: Why the US Probably *Is* Planting Weapons Code in Russia’s Power Grid The DoD calls it "Preparation of the Battlespace" Checkpoint Asia is an excellent new site by a former deputy editor of ours. Great news and commentary ranging from Russia, to China, to Imperial misadventures in the Middle East. Smart, incisive, and with an anti-Empire bent. Walrus has already started an engaging conversation on this subject. As someone deeply involved in the early development of DoD cyber operations, I wanted to add my two cents from a different angle. I am not as horrified by this development as many here are. But I am very uneasy with the apparent involvement of Bonkers Bolton. That creature is as dangerous as a malfunctioning Dalek. Im pretty sure he doesnt understand these things. Even if he did, he wouldnt care. The U.S. is stepping up digital incursions into Russias electric power grid in a warning to President Vladimir Putin, the New York Times reported, citing current and former government officials. While the U.S. has probed the Russian grid since at least 2012 and theres no evidence it has turned off power, the Trump administrations strategy has shifted more toward offense with the deployment of U.S. computer code inside the grid and other targets, the newspaper said. The effort has gotten far more aggressive over the past year, the Times quoted an unidentified senior intelligence official as saying. The administration declined to disclose specifics, according to the report. However, National Security Adviser John Bolton said publicly on Tuesday that the U.S. is taking a broader view to say to Russia, or anybody else thats engaged in cyberoperations against us, You will pay a price, the Times said. (Bloomberg) This is a far cry from our early attempts at preparing to conduct offensive cyber operations. I remember attending several briefings at one of these early organizations at the NSA. The control of offensive tools was as restrictive as the control of nuclear weapons. The way Cyber Command sees it triggering the code would be war and would require an order by the president, but simply planting the code is just what they do now It was obvious these things scared the crap out of DoD and NSA back then. Its equally obvious DoD and now CYBERCOM have learned to stop worrying and love the Cyber-Bomb. Our use of the Stuxnet worm to sabotage Iranian centrifuges was proof of our growing comfort with these things. However, Stuxnet was used against Iran. Were comfortable with raining all kinds of death and destruction throughout the Middle East. Now were taking actions to disrupt Russias power grid. Thats playing with raining death and destruction upon a nuclear capable peer competitor. Hacking the grid is one thing. Weve all done that for many years. Thats just part of the intelligence preparation of the battlespace (IPB). Implanting weapons to disable the Russian grid is a leap beyond that. Seems CYBERCOM has embraced the concept of operational preparation of the battlespace (OPB), a concept widely practiced in JSOC and in other parts of the special operations community. MG Michael Repass, a former 10th Group Commander, wrote a paper in 2003 describing these things. Advanced Force Operations consists of US SecDef-approved military operations such as clandestine operations. It is logically part of Operational Preparation of the Battlespace (OPB), which follows the Intelligence Preparation of the Battlespace, a concept well-known in U.S. and NATO doctrine, OPB is seldom used outside of SOF channels. OPB is defined by the U.S. Special Operations Command as Non-intelligence activities conducted prior to D-Day, H-Hour, in likely or potential areas of employment, to train and prepare for follow-on military operations. Support Russia Insider - Go Ad-Free! I dont think this was ever official policy, but OPB was widely viewed as a powerful tool to break the CIAs stranglehold on covert action, at least on the operational level. Given that CYBERCOM is a unified combatant command finally gaining independence from NSA and the IC in general, this embrace of OPB is a natural progression. What else CYBERCOM copies from JSOCs authorities and tactics, techniques and procedures (TTP) will be interesting. It could also be quite dangerous. Cyber operations are here to stay. They are becoming more effective for reconnaissance and attribution, for disrupting a targets networks and infrastructure and for perception management. The inhibitions against engaging in these operations are relaxing. An interesting point in the NYT story is that it appears Trump has not been briefed on this stuff. Perhaps CYBERCOM and DoD dont consider this level of OPB rising to the level of Presidential decision making. Pulling the trigger on grid disruption certainly should. Why wouldnt they brief the President? Is it to keep him in the dark out of a lack of trust? Thats disheartening. Now with the story published all over the world, DoD should feel impelled to fully brief the President. The best outcome would be Trump pushing for negotiations with Russia, China and maybe others to develop a de-escalation/non-proliferation treaty on cyber operations with the same vigor and earnestness that we once approached nuclear weapons. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
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