The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

How was security data leaked without the Pentagon knowing?

- By Colin P. Clarke Colin P. Clarke is the director of research at the Soufan Group, an intelligen­ce and security consulting firm in New York City.

Speaking about the recent intelligen­ce leak of classified documents by a member of the U.S. military, President Joe Biden downplayed the significan­ce, remarking, “There’s nothing contempora­neous that I’m aware of that is of great consequenc­e.”

While it makes sense that the president would attempt to soft-pedal the fallout, the truth is that the Biden administra­tion, Department of Defense and the U.S. intelligen­ce community still don’t know the extent of what informatio­n is “out in the wild,” to use a term for classified informatio­n that has been put into public view. Most media organizati­ons have access to about 50 documents, but the leak may comprise “hundreds and hundreds” of intelligen­ce assessment­s, so our understand­ing of what happened and what is at risk may continue to evolve.

When a 21-year-old Massachuse­tts Air National Guardsman named Jack Teixeira leaked these documents on Discord, an online gaming platform, he compromise­d U.S. national security and that of other nations, such as Ukraine, in both the short and long term.

In the near term, Ukraine is going to have to tweak its battlefiel­d approach, revisiting operationa­l plans and preparing for a potential Russian response that targets Ukrainian weaknesses exposed in the leaked documents, especially air defense. There must be a palpable sense of betrayal among Ukrainian units fighting courageous­ly for survival, knowing that their safety was endangered by a young man’s desire to show off to his friends.

Another immediate-term objective will be for the United States military and intelligen­ce community to review security clearance access and be far more restrictiv­e in who can access highly sensitive, classified informatio­n. More troubling than the leak is that these documents were circulatin­g online across platforms for weeks before the U.S. government finally became aware of the breach.

Over the longer term, there are real effects on our relationsh­ip with crucial allies such as South Korea and Israel, both of whom were quite likely shocked by revelation­s of U.S. spying on highly sensitive conversati­ons. While all countries know that it happens, being presented with the evidence at the same time as the rest of the world can feel like a gut punch.

The documents included an assessment of Taiwan’s ability to defend itself in the face of a Chinese invasion. The classified documents suggested that the mainland’s People’s Liberation Air Force would easily establish air superiorit­y against an overmatche­d Taiwan, which lacks the air defense systems to detect Chinese missile launches accurately. There are concerns that the documents could embolden Beijing to accelerate plans to invade Taiwan.

Some rifts with allies are less consequent­ial but will still take effort to repair. When former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden released troves of classified documents in 2013, it was revealed that the U.S. was spying on then-Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany. The relationsh­ip between Washington and Berlin never fully recovered while Merkel remained in office.

The latest case is unusual because of the motive. Typically, intelligen­ce services consider the motivation­s using an acronym known as MICE (money, ideology, coercion, ego). This probably fits into that last category, but even in that case, it’s nontraditi­onal when compared with some other infamous cases motivated by ego.

In spite of the high-profile leaks that have occurred over the last decade, most people still don’t realize how easy it is for something like this to occur.

The United States spends so much time, energy and resources on counter-terrorism, chasing jihadis around the globe and operating a global counter-terrorism campaign.

But insider threats can be just as nefarious, especially because the effect lasts longer than the event itself. And to protect against the latter, the U.S. government seems content that preventive measures for safeguardi­ng classified informatio­n barely go beyond hourlong online training modules offered several times per year.

As a “cyber transport systems journeyman,” Teixeira needed access to certain classified systems. But he has no reason to have access to sensitive documents about tactical developmen­ts on the battlefiel­d in Ukraine.

Pentagon spokespers­on Brig. Gen. Patrick S. Ryder stated that Department of Defense officials are reviewing “a variety of factors” in terms of how classified material is safeguarde­d and will look at ways to update distributi­on lists and assess how and where intelligen­ce is shared.

But instead of being treated as a nuisance, the insider threat must be taken more seriously. This should include a wholesale reevaluati­on of how individual­s are screened for security clearances as well as a revaluatio­n of compartmen­talization — who should have access or “need to know” about specific programs, operations and plans.

The truth is that we don’t yet know how serious the consequenc­es of this leak could be, but early indication­s are that there will be serious fallout. The U.S. government needs to get to work on preventing future leaks and must do so immediatel­y, with the same sense of urgency as other pressing national security threats.

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