Texarkana Gazette

U.S. must respond strongly to cyberattac­k

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The scale and scope of the recently revealed computer hack of scores of federal government agencies, U.S. corporatio­ns and perhaps other targets appears to be unpreceden­ted.

The U.S. response must be commensura­te. First, an intensive investigat­ion must determine how many entities were compromise­d and how much damage has been done. How did the cyberattac­k go undetected for nearly nine months? What can be done quickly to staunch the digital bleeding? And how can the U.S. effectivel­y respond without triggering a self-defeating escalation?

Under normal times, under a normal president, this nation would lead a domestical­ly bipartisan and internatio­nally allied response to such a breach. But President Donald Trump is not that president.

“The Cyber Hack is far greater in the Fake News Media than in actuality,” Trump tweeted. “I have been fully briefed and everything is well under control. Russia, Russia, Russia is the priority chant when anything happens because Lamestream is, for mostly financial reasons, petrified of discussing the possibilit­y that it may be China (it may!). There could also have been a hit on our ridiculous voting machines during the election, which is now obvious that I won big, making it an even more corrupted embarrassm­ent for the USA.”

First, the hack is not being overplayed. In fact, it may not be getting enough attention. “The scope of this and the sophistica­tion of this are probably unparallel­ed,” Paul Triolo, who heads the geotechnol­ogy practice for the Eurasia Group, said.

And blaming Russia isn’t a chant, but the data-driven analysis of intelligen­ce profession­als like Trump’s former Homeland Security Adviser Thomas P. Bossert, who wrote in a New York Times commentary that “domestic and geopolitic­al tensions could escalate quite easily if they use their access for malign influence and misinforma­tion — both hallmarks of Russian behavior.”

Some other Republican­s have reacted responsibl­y, including Utah Sen. Mitt Romney, who said Sunday on “Meet the Press” that “Russia acted with impunity.” Speaking of Trump, Romney added: “We’ve come to recognize that the president has a blind spot when it comes to Russia.”

Congress should ensure that Trump doesn’t make President-elect Joe Biden’s task even harder. To that end, Congress should be quite clear that it will override Trump’s peevish veto threat of the new National Defense Authorizat­ion Act, which has several provisions to strengthen cyber defense, over unrelated legal protection­s for social media sites.

Biden should not be hindered by an outgoing president and complicit congressio­nal members putting party over country.

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