The Capital

US intelligen­ce center still on hold

Entity targeting foreign influence beset by infighting

- By Nomaan Merchant

WASHINGTON — As Russia was working to subvert U.S. elections and sow discord among Americans, Congress directed the creation of an intelligen­ce center to lead efforts to stop interferen­ce by foreign adversarie­s.

But two years later, that center still is not close to opening.

Experts and intelligen­ce officials broadly agree the proposed Foreign Malign Influence Center is a good idea. The U.S. has lacked a cohesive strategy to fight influence operations, they say, with not enough coordinati­on among national security agencies. Adversarie­s that tried to interfere in the last two presidenti­al elections continue to bombard Americans with disinforma­tion and conspiracy theories.

But the intelligen­ce community and Congress remain divided over the center’s mission, budget and size, according to current and former officials. While separate efforts to counter interferen­ce continue, a person identified this year as a potential director has since been assigned elsewhere.

“It really is just giving a gift to Russia and China and others who clearly have their sights set not only on the midterm elections but on ongoing campaigns to destabiliz­e American society,” said David Salvo, deputy director of the Alliance for Securing Democracy and a senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund.

The nation’s top intelligen­ce official had advocated for the center before taking office. Director of National Intelligen­ce Avril Haines last year co-chaired a German Marshall Fund task force supporting it. In a statement, spokeswoma­n

Nicole de Haay said the director’s office “is focused on creating a center to facilitate and integrate the Intelligen­ce Community’s efforts to address foreign malign influence.”

But some lawmakers are concerned about further expanding the mission of the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce. ODNI was originally envisioned as a small coordinati­ng body to address the intelligen­ce-sharing failures preceding the Sept. 11 attacks. It has several centers that critics say are well-meaning attempts to solve problems but end up causing unnecessar­y duplicatio­n.

Senate Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Mark Warner of Virignia said that while he supports the center, there were “legitimate questions about how large such an organizati­on should be and even about where it would fit” with existing government efforts to fight foreign interferen­ce.

It’s unclear who would lead the center. Separately, there is also a vacancy for a new election threats executive after the previous executive, Shelby Pierson, ended her term and returned to another intelligen­ce post. Pierson had been in the spotlight last year after giving lawmakers a closed-door briefing on Russia’s efforts to intervene in the 2020 election in favor of former President Donald Trump. That angered Trump, who berated the then-director of national intelligen­ce and later replaced him.

Experts on democracy have long warned that what the government refers to as “malign influence” is a national security threat. Social media has helped make disinforma­tion a cheap and powerful tactic for adversarie­s who can push false or altered stories, videos and images, and amplify falsehoods already circulatin­g among Americans

to promote their own interests and create chaos.

U.S. and other Western authoritie­s have accused Russia of spreading disinforma­tion about the coronaviru­s and vaccines, stealing data from local and state election servers, and pushing false stories intended to exploit divisions over race and civil rights. Intelligen­ce agencies have found that Russia used influence operations to interfere with the 2016 presidenti­al election in favor of Trump’s campaign and conducted operations in Trump’s favor in 2020.

The U.S. assessed China ultimately did not interfere in the 2020 election, but Beijing has been accused of promoting false theories about the COVID-19 pandemic and trying to sway businesses and government. Iran was accused of sponsoring emails intended to intimidate Democratic-leaning voters into supporting Trump.

Experts say the new center can warn Americans about interferen­ce and produce better informatio­n for policymake­rs. While the FBI, the National Security Agency and several other government agencies have long worked on foreign interferen­ce, “we are not organized in a way where we are building a coherent threat picture,” said Jessica Brandt, an expert on foreign interferen­ce and disinforma­tion at the Brookings Institutio­n.

But there are risks in the intelligen­ce community ramping up its monitoring of what Americans see and read. The FBI and NSA have been accused of unlawfully spying on Americans. That contribute­s to many Americans’ distrust of the intelligen­ce community, as do Trump’s attacks on intelligen­ce profession­als and what he has derided as the “deep state.”

Opponents note the U.S. also has a history of covert interferen­ce in other countries and has helped overthrow government­s seen as anti-American. A column published by the Kremlin-backed RT.com alleged the proposed center “is just official cover for American intelligen­ce interferen­ce in domestic politics.”

The center “is going to have to figure out this enormous challenge to convey threats to American elections, American democracy, at a time when there seem to be two completely different realities,” said Salvo of the German Marshall Fund.

Congress authorized the center in late 2019 and directed ODNI to create it. Several people who worked in intelligen­ce matters at that time, speaking on condition of anonymity to describe confidenti­al discussion­s, say they didn’t know of any effort by the Trump White House to stop the center. Instead, leaders within ODNI disagreed on how to structure the new center or whether it should be a “virtual center” without an office.

According to one of the people, William Evanina, the former chief of ODNI’s counterint­elligence center, offered to take the malign influence center under his authority, but the office ultimately did not choose that option. Evanina declined to comment.

After President Joe Biden took office, ODNI presented a plan for a small center with a few dozen staff members to the intelligen­ce and appropriat­ions committees in the House and Senate. But even as Congress required the center’s creation, key lawmakers from both parties have expressed concerns about the plan.

A proposal to fund the center this summer failed and it is unlikely to be completed while the government is operating with temporary funding. The center may now be included if a full spending plan is approved in early 2022.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/AP ?? Director of National Intelligen­ce Avril Haines co-chaired a task force supporting the creation of the center.
SUSAN WALSH/AP Director of National Intelligen­ce Avril Haines co-chaired a task force supporting the creation of the center.

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