Bangkok Post

TOP US SPY AGENCIES TURN TO SCIENCE FOR HELP

Spooks tap outside expertise as they wrestle with coronaviru­s, UFOs.

- By Julian Barnes

The nation’s intelligen­ce agencies are looking for ways to increase their expertise in a range of scientific discipline­s as they struggle to answer unexplaine­d questions — about the origins of the coronaviru­s pandemic, unidentifi­ed phenomenon observed by Navy pilots and mysterious health ailments affecting spies and diplomats around the world.

Traditiona­l spycraft has failed to make progress on those high-profile inquiries, and many officials have grown convinced that they require a better marriage of intelligen­ce-gathering and scientific examinatio­n.

Intelligen­ce officials in the Biden administra­tion came into office pledging to work on areas traditiona­lly dominated by science, like studying the national security implicatio­ns of climate change and future pandemics. But as the other issues have cropped up, the spy agencies have had to confront questions that are as much scientific mysteries as they are challenges of traditiona­l intelligen­ce collection.

The White House has given the intelligen­ce community until later this summer to report the results of a deep dive into the origins of the coronaviru­s, including the theory that it was accidental­ly leaked from a Chinese lab studying the virus as well as the prevailing view that it was transmitte­d from animals to humans outside a lab.

The administra­tion has also pledged to Congress to make progress on determinin­g the cause of mysterious health ailments of diplomats and intelligen­ce officers, known as Havana syndrome. And finally, a preliminar­y inquiry into unidentifi­ed flying objects and other phenomena failed to explain almost all of the mysterious encounters by military aviators that intelligen­ce analysts had scrutinise­d, prompting intelligen­ce officials to promise a follow-up in the next three months.

To bolster the role of scientific expertise, the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce brought an experience­d public health researcher from the State Department’s intelligen­ce and research division to serve on the National Intelligen­ce Council, according to officials. The office has also created two national intelligen­ce manager posts, one to look at climate change and the other to examine disruptive technology.

The National Security Council, working with the CIA and the director of national intelligen­ce, has created a pair of outside panels to study Havana syndrome, whose symptoms include dizziness, fatigue and sudden memory loss. Scientists will be able to view intelligen­ce to better understand what may have caused the brain injuries. The work reflects “a broader priority on science and technology,” a White House official said.

One panel will focus on possible causes. The other is charged with helping develop devices that could better protect personnel.

Scientific might has been important to modern US intelligen­ce agencies since their beginnings. Throughout the Cold War, scientists paired with intelligen­ce analysts to examine adversarie­s’ nuclear missile developmen­t and chemical and biological weapons programmes. The agencies have also cultivated deep engineerin­g talent as they built spy satellites and reconnaiss­ance aircraft and devised tools to intercept a wide range of communicat­ions.

But the recent intelligen­ce challenges have required a different range of scientific expertise, including some areas that agencies have invested fewer resources in over the years. “This is a really interestin­g moment where the national security interests have changed from some of the Cold War interests,” said Sue Gordon, a former top intelligen­ce official. “Priorities are changing now.”

Faced not only with the immediate unsolved security questions but also with the longer-term challenge of improving intelligen­ce collection on climate change, Avril Haines, director of national intelligen­ce, has pushed agencies to more aggressive­ly recruit students with an extensive range of scientific knowledge.

“The DNI believes the changing threat landscape requires the intelligen­ce community to invest in a talented workforce that includes individual­s with science and technology background­s,” said Matt Lahr, a spokesman for Ms Haines. “Without such expertise, we will not only be unable to compete, we will not succeed in addressing the challenges we face today.”

Officials are also trying to make broader use of existing initiative­s. For example, Ms Haines’ office has been more aggressive­ly questionin­g its science and technology expert group, a collection of some 500 scientists who volunteer to help intelligen­ce agencies answer scientific problems.

Officials have asked those scientists about how coronaviru­ses mutate as well as about climate change and the availabili­ty of natural resources. While the scientists in the expert group do not perform intelligen­ce analysis, their answers can help such analysts inside agencies draw more accurate conclusion­s.

In other cases, the efforts to bring in outside expertise is new. During the Trump administra­tion, the State Department asked the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine to examine Havana syndrome. Its report found that a microwave weapon was a likely cause of many of the episodes but was hampered in part because of a lack of access to informatio­n; scientists were not given the full range of material collected by the intelligen­ce agencies, officials said.

Outside scientists on the two new panels will have security clearances enabling them to look at the full range of material. The “driving purpose” of the panels is to give them access to classified informatio­n denied under previous studies, a White House official said.

The administra­tion will also bring in medical experts in traumatic brain injury and technical experts on weapons systems and directed-energy devices to examine the health episodes. The government is examining some 130 episodes, though officials concede that some could eventually be set aside if their causes appear unrelated to Havana syndrome.

 ??  ?? REACHING OUT: Avril Haines, director of national intelligen­ce, wants to bolster the role of scientific expertise in the intelligen­ce community.
REACHING OUT: Avril Haines, director of national intelligen­ce, wants to bolster the role of scientific expertise in the intelligen­ce community.

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