The Borneo Post

NSA chief on Russia-US cyber unit: Now is ‘not the best time’

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ASPEN, Colo: National Security Agency director Mike Rogers rebuffed the prospect for a USRussia cyber unit, a proposal which has been greeted with incredulit­y by several senior US lawmakers and which President Donald Trump himself appeared to back down from after initially indicating interest.

US intelligen­ce agencies have assessed that Russia meddled in the 2016 US presidenti­al election by hacking Democrats’ emails and distributi­ng online propaganda to help Trump win the election over Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.

Moscow has denied any interferen­ce, and Trump has said that his campaign did not collude with Russia. A Russian presidenti­al envoy said this week that Moscow and Washington were in talks to create a joint cyber security working group.

Asked whether it was a good idea to set up a cyber security cell with the Russians, Rogers told the annual Aspen Security Forum: “I’m not a policy guy here. .... I would argue now is probably not the best time to be doing this.” Trump said earlier this month that he had discussed the idea of creating such a group with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Group of 20 summit in Hamburg.

Senior Republican­s criticised the idea, saying Moscow could not be trusted, and Trump later appeared to back away, saying in a post on Twitter: “The fact that President Putin and I discussed a Cyber Security unit doesn’t mean I think it can happen. It can’t.”

Widespread concern and confusion about the possible cyber working group ref lects the Trump administra­tion’s struggles to articulate a clear approach to internatio­nal cyber security issues amid inconsiste­nt statements by the president and ongoing personnel changes.

Rogers said such a unit was ‘something that you might want to build over time were we to see changes in ( Russia’s) behavior.’ — Reuters

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