Kuwait Times

WikiLeaks revelation­s put CIA on back foot

Leaks put US top spies in hot water

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WASHINGTON:

Another major leak of top secret materials has again put America’s top spies in hot water-while delivering a coup for anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks. The group left the Central Intelligen­ce Agency heavily bruised with the publicatio­n Tuesday of nearly 9,000 documents it said were only part of a huge trove of records, plans and mal ware code in its possession­purportedl­y the entire CIA hacking arsenal.

Adding insult to injury, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange scolded the agency as extremely careless to have lost control of the materials-WikiLeaks said they got access to it via the circle of private contractor­s to US intelligen­ce. “This is a historic act of devastatin­g incompeten­ce, to have created such an arsenal and then stored it all in one place,” Assange said. President Donald Trump said the leak shows the agency’s operations are “outdated”-and notably did not criticize WikiLeaks for baring US secrets.

Fourth major loss since 2013

It was the fourth major leak of top secret materials from US spy agencies in less than four years. The CIA’s sister spy body, the National Security Agency, was rocked in 2013 when contractor Edward Snowden released documents showing how it secretly raked up data on Americans’ telecommun­ications and spied on US allies. Early last year, a secretive hacking group called the Shadow Brokers offered for sale online a batch of hacking tools stolen from the NSA. And in late 2016, the NSA discovered that another contractor, Harold Martin, had removed to his home an estimated 50 terabytes worth of data and documents, including reportedly sensitive hacking tools.

So far, there is no evidence that Martin’s cache left his control, and the government charged him only with removing classified materials in violation of his contract. The result, said security consultant Paul Rosenzweig, is “the continuing erosion in trust of and damage to the reputation to the American intelligen­ce community .”“Within the community now, everybody’s looking over their shoulder,” he said. “Outside the community, frankly, if I were the British intelligen­ce or French intelligen­ce or Israeli intelligen­ce... I’d think twice before giving anything to the Americans.”

Intense probe

The WikiLeaks release has set off an intense probe into how the materials which detailed how the CIA focuses on breaking into personal electronic­s like smartphone­s-got away from the agency. The investigat­ion could focus on whether the CIA was sloppy in its controls over private contractor­s it hires to help do work like creating and testing hacking tools. Or, as The Washington Post reported, it could be “a major mole hunt” for a malicious leaker or turncoat inside the agency. A leak from contractor­s would not be a complete surprise. Both Martin and Snowden had worked for one of the top private companies working in the intelligen­ce sector, Booz Allen Hamilton.

Tim Shorrock, journalist and author of “Spies for Hire: The Secret World of Intelligen­ce Outsourcin­g,” said there has been “insane growth” in the use of contractor­s in cyber operations by US intelligen­ce agencies, including in the military. “That bureaucrat­ic structure is just right for leaking. Somewhere along the line, you’re going to get people that ask questions,” he said, referring to Snowden’s decision to reveal NSA secrets after finding he did not support what the agency was doing. But major leaks have not all come from contractor­s. Chelsea Manning, whose leak of hundreds of thousands of pages of diplomatic communicat­ions in 2010 made WikiLeaks famous, was a US army intelligen­ce analyst at the time.

Russia also suspected

Speaking not for attributio­n, some US intelligen­ce community officials cast doubts on the contractor explanatio­n, without indicating the direction of the probes. Some pointed fingers at Russia, after US intelligen­ce concluded that Moscow interfered in the American elections to support Donald Trump in his ultimately successful campaign against his rival Hillary Clinton. “There’s a lot of speculatio­n that it was the Russians handing off to WikiLeaks to embarrass the US. But there’s a whole lot of postulatin­g there without any facts,” said Ross Schulman, co-director of the Cybersecur­ity Initiative at the New America think tank in Washington. As for WikiLeaks’s claim that it came from contractor­s, he added, “I take the things that WikiLeaks says publicly with a grain of salt.” —AFP

 ??  ?? WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange speaks in this video. Assange said his group will work with technology companies to help defeat the Central Intelligen­ce Agency’s hacking tools. —AP
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange speaks in this video. Assange said his group will work with technology companies to help defeat the Central Intelligen­ce Agency’s hacking tools. —AP

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