Los Angeles Times

Biden faults Trump over hack, plans broader COVID relief bill

-

WILMINGTON, Del. — President- elect Joe Biden on Tuesday assailed the Trump administra­tion for failing to fortify the nation’s cybersecur­ity, calling on President Trump to publicly identify the perpetrato­r behind a massive breach of U. S. government agencies — a hack some of Trump’s top allies have blamed on Russia.

Biden, who is being briefed on high- level intelligen­ce in preparatio­n for taking office next month, said planning for the hack began as early as 2019. Several federal agencies, including the Treasury Department, have said they were targeted.

“There’s still so much we don’t know,” Biden said during a news conference in Wilmington, Del. “But we know this much: This attack constitute­s a grave risk to our national security. It was carefully planned and carefully orchestrat­ed.”

The U. S. government has not made a formal assessment of who was behind the attack, but Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo and Atty. Gen. William Barr have said all signs point to Russia. Trump, who has long sidesteppe­d blaming Moscow for its provocatio­ns, has not followed suit and has instead suggested — without evidence — that China carried out the hack.

The breach of the Treasury Department began in July, but experts believe the hacking operation got underway months earlier, when malicious code was slipped into updates to software that monitors computer networks of businesses and government­s.

“The truth is, the Trump administra­tion failed to prioritize cybersecur­ity,” Biden said. “This assault happened on Donald Trump’s watch, while he wasn’t watching.”

Given Trump’s reluctance to publicly blame Russia, it appears likely that any formal U. S. retaliatio­n for the hacking will fall to Biden. The president- elect said he would work with allies to set up internatio­nal rules to hold nation- states accountabl­e for cyberattac­ks and vowed that his administra­tion would make cybersecur­ity a top priority.

Biden spoke a day after Congress passed a $ 900- billion coronaviru­s aid bill, which includes direct payments to many Americans and aid for struggling small businesses. He called the bill a “down payment” on a broader relief bill he plans to introduce after taking office in January.

“Like all compromise­s, this is far from perfect,” Biden said. “Congress did their job this week, and I can and I must ask them to do it again next year.”

The president- elect expressed empathy for those who have struggled through the pandemic and resulting economic uncertaint­y, singling out front- line workers, scientists, researcher­s, participan­ts of clinical trials and those who have deployed family members during the holiday season.

“Our hearts are always with you — keep the faith,” said Biden, even as he warned that the nation faces a “dark winter” as coronaviru­s cases are expected to rise. More than 322,000 people in the United States have died of COVID- 19.

Biden urged Americans to continue to take precaution­s, particular­ly during the holidays. Noting the ways the pandemic has altered his own celebratio­ns, which typically include up to two dozen relatives, Biden said: “Not this year.”

On Monday, Biden was vaccinated on live television as part of an effort to reassure the public that the COVID- 19 vaccine is safe.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States