The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Pentagon plan on cyber split draws strong Hill criticism

- By Robert Burns

WASHINGTON » The Pentagon is proposing to end an arrangemen­t in which a single military officer leads two of the nation’s main cybersecur­ity organizati­ons, a move that a leading Democrat said Saturday makes him “profoundly concerned” amid a large-scale hacking campaign on U.S. government computer systems.

Rep. Adam Smith, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said in a letter to acting Defense

Secretary Christophe­r Miller that he objects to the way the Pentagon is going about splitting off U.S. Cyber Command from the National Security Agency.

Both organizati­ons currently are headed by Army Gen. Paul Nakasone, an arrangemen­t know as “dualhattin­g.”

“Any action to sever the dual-hat relationsh­ip could have grave impacts on our national security, especially during a time that the country is wrestling with what may be the most damaging cyberattac­k in our country’s history,” Smith wrote.

Smith was referring to revelation­s that elite hackers gained access to U.S. government computer systems and likely purloined a trove of delicate secrets over a monthslong period before being detected. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Friday that Russia was “pretty clearly” behind the hack, which is ongoing. On Saturday, President Donald Trump suggested without evidence that China — not Russia — may be behind the hack and tried to minimize its impact.

A U.S. official confirmed Saturday that the Pentagon has a plan for separating the National Security Agency and Cyber Command. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss an internal matter not publicly announced.

In his letter to Miller, Smith said the Pentagon has not met conditions set by the 2017 defense bill for severing the NSA from Cyber Command. Those conditions include certificat­ion by the secretary of defense and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff that ending the “dual-hat” arrangemen­t will not hurt national security.

Smith sent a similar letter to Gen. Mark A. Milley, the Joint Chiefs chairman.

A spokesman for Milley, Col. Dave Butler, said Milley has “not officially reviewed or endorsed the proposal” for splitting the two organizati­ons.

The notion of splitting NSA from Cyber Command goes back to the Obama administra­tion, which proposed to elevate the status of Cyber Command by making it a unified military command, taking it from under the purview of U.S. Strategic Command. The move reflected growing concern about cyber security.

That move was approved by President Donald Trump in 2017, and it was foreseen that at some point Cyber Command would split away from the NSA, although such a move had strong opponents in Congress.

It’s not clear who the Trump administra­tion might install as head of the NSA if it were split from Cyber Command before President-elect Joe Biden takes office Jan. 20.

Smith questioned the legality and timing of the Pentagon’s proposal to split the organizati­ons.

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