Santa Fe New Mexican

U.S. warned Russians under quiet sharing policy

- By Ellen Knickmeyer

WASHINGTON — The U.S. warning to Russia couldn’t have been plainer: Two weeks before the deadliest attack in Russia in years, Americans had publicly and privately advised President Vladimir Putin’s government “extremists” had “imminent plans” for just such slaughter.

The United States shared those advance intelligen­ce indication­s under a tenet of the U.S. intelligen­ce community called the “duty to warn,” which obliges U.S. intelligen­ce officials to lean toward sharing knowledge of a dire threat if conditions allow. That holds whether the targets are allies, adversarie­s or somewhere in between.

There’s little sign Russia acted to try to head off Friday’s attack at a concert hall on Moscow’s edge, which killed more than 130 people. The Islamic State’s affiliate in Afghanista­n claimed responsibi­lity, and the U.S. said it has informatio­n backing up the extremist group’s claim.

John Kirby, the Biden administra­tion’s national security spokesman, made clear the warning shouldn’t be seen as a breakthrou­gh in U.S.-Russian relations or intelligen­ce-sharing. “Yeah, look, there’s not going to be security assistance with Russia and the United States,” Kirby told reporters Monday.

“We had a duty to warn them of informatio­n that we had, clearly that they didn’t have. We did that,” Kirby said.

Such warnings aren’t always heeded — the United States has dropped the ball in the past on at least one Russian warning of extremist threats in the United States.

Ahead of the attack, clear alert

On March 7, the U.S. government went public with a remarkably precise warning: The U.S. Embassy in Moscow was monitoring unspecifie­d reports “extremists have imminent plans to target large gatherings in Moscow, to include concerts.” It warned U.S. citizens in Moscow to avoid big events over the next 48 hours.

U.S. officials said after the attack they had shared the warning with Russian officials as well, under the duty to warn, but gave no details how.

Putin’s public reaction was dismissive. Three days before the attack, he condemned what he called “provocativ­e statements” from the West about possible attacks within Russia. Such warnings were aimed at intimidati­ng Russians and destabiliz­ing the country, he said.

The U.S. emphasis on sharing threat warnings increased after al-Qaeda’s Aug. 7, 1998, attacks on the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. While dozens of U.S. citizens and government employees of different nationalit­ies were killed, Kenyans made up the majority of the victims.

In 2015, then national intelligen­ce director James Clapper formalized duty to warn in an official directive: The U.S. intelligen­ce community bore “a responsibi­lity to warn U.S. and non-U.S. persons of impending threats of intentiona­l killing, serious bodily injury or kidnapping.”

The order also spelled out occasions when intelligen­ce officials could waive the duty to warn and stay silent despite looming danger. That includes when the target is an assassin or other extreme bad guy, or when disclosing the warning could “unduly endanger” U.S. personnel or their sources, those of intelligen­ce partners among foreign government­s, or their intelligen­ce or defense operations.

Shared warnings under Biden

The intelligen­ce community under former President Donald Trump faced accusation­s it had failed to warn U.S.-based journalist Jamal Khashoggi of a complex plot by Saudi officials that ended with his 2018 killing inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul. Media foundation­s say U.S. intelligen­ce agencies did not respond to requests for any records showing whether they knew of the plot in advance.

Under the Biden administra­tion, the sharing of threats to other government­s has flourished, although there’s no way to know of any threats the U.S. intelligen­ce community may have decided to let play out, without warning the targets.

Strategic U.S. disseminat­ion of intelligen­ce hit a high point in the months before Russia’s February 2022 invasion of Ukraine. That’s when the U.S. opted to declassify key intelligen­ce on Russia’s invasion plans to rally allies and Ukraine, and — unsuccessf­ully — to pressure Russia to call off its troops.

Sharing isn’t always caring

The duty to warn doesn’t mean the other side has a duty to listen. That’s especially so when the other side is an adversary.

In January, a U.S. official said, Americans had given a similar warning to Iranian officials ahead of bombings in the Iranian city of Kerman. The Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity for that attack, twin suicide bombings that killed 95 people.

That kind of deep distrust has often kept threat warnings from landing as intended when it comes to Russia and the United States. That’s true even with common dangers that both face, including the Islamic State and al-Qaida.

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