Call & Times

Authoritar­ians want to shape the Internet

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China’s top diplomat had an interestin­g reMoinder to Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s call in Anchorage this month to ³strengthen the rules-based internatio­nal order.´ Such an order already exists, answered Politburo member

0any people have grown used to thinking of the United 1ations in recent decades as an annoying talk shop, created with the noblest intentions but increasing­ly a morass of bureaucrac­y and mutual back-scratching. But for China and Russia, the United 1ations is increasing­ly the venue for unsubtle power plays ± ± often ignored by the United States ± ± that could shape the new world order that’s emerging.

The United 1ations can be a pain, like one of those community meetings that become dominated by die-hards who are willing to stay later and talk louder than their neighbors. But it’s a game that the United States has to play, and skillfully, lest our adversarie­s hiMack global institutio­ns that retain some legitimacy.

Cyberspace is the best example of a domain where authoritar­ian nations, led by China and Russia, are using the United 1ations to craft new rules that could undermine Western norms of openness and democracy.

Here’s how the process works: In December 2019, while a Donald Trump-distracted world was looking the other way, Russia won approval from the U.1. General Assembly to begin drafting a global treaty to combat cybercrime. The United States said back then that it had ³very serious concerns´ that such a treaty would ³stand against fundamenta­l American freedoms,´ but it lost the vote, 79 to 60.

Work on the new U.1. treaty hasn’t started yet because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. The first drafting meeting is scheduled for 0ay. If completed and ratified, the treaty would replace the 2001 Budapest Convention on Cybercrime. That document was crafted by the Council of Europe and ratified by 65 nations, including all the leading democracie­s ± ± but never endorsed by Russia or China because they considered its provisions too intrusive.

Another example of gaming the U.1. system is Russia’s creation with Chinese support of a U.1. cyber discussion body called the Open-Ended Working Group OEWG , with all 193 U.1. member states, intended to work in parallel with the smaller, 25-member Group of Government­al Experts that had been issuing reports on complex tech issues.

Andrei .rutskikh, a top cyber adviser to Russian President Vladimir Putin, crowed at an OEWG meeting last month that the group represente­d ³the triumphant success of Russian diplomacy,´ according to a 0arch 13report by Tass, the state-owned Russian news service. He accused unnamed nations of ³whipping up of the internatio­nal situation in the field of informatio­n´ ± ± presumably a reference to American allegation­s about Russian hacking in the 2016, 2018 and 2020 U.S. elections and 0oscow’s role in the devastatin­g SolarWinds hack.

Russia may hope that the Open-Ended Working Group eventually supplants the smaller experts group, which could turn what should be technical discussion­s about Internet and telecommun­ications security into a political stalemate.

The Russians again with Chinese help had tried to take over Internet governance through the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ication Union ITU back in January. This putsch to depose the private consortium of experts known as the Internet Corporatio­n for Assigned 1ames and 1umbers, or ICA11, was backed by former Russian president Dmitry 0edvedev, who claimed in an Aug. 12, 2020, statement that ³the U.S. fully controls the Domain 1ame System used to resolve IP-addresses.´ The ITU, thankfully, ignored the Russian proposal.

On such obscure U.1. battlegrou­nds lies the dreary but essential work of protecting the ³rules-based order´ for promoting an open and secure Internet. The raiders are mobili]ing. In a little-noticed 0arch 26 statement, Putin announced Russia’s intent to dominate oversight of cyberspace.

³/argely thanks to our efforts, informatio­n security has become an item on the U.1. General Assembly’s agenda,´Putin boasted in a statement to Russia’s Security Council. ³We believe it is necessary to conclude universal internatio­nal legal agreements designed to prevent conflicts and build a mutually beneficial partnershi­p in the global cyberspace.´ That language is chilling, when you reali]e he’s talking about rules written largely by China and Russia.

It’s breathtaki­ng, really. The nations that have subverted the Internet most aggressive­ly now want to police it, setting their own standards. )ighting back in this case reTuires patience and persistenc­e ± ± and a willingnes­s to sit through endless meetings where the order that the United States and its global partners created a generation ago is under slow, relentless attack.

± ± Contact David Ignatius on Twitter #IgnatiusPo­st

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