The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Behind the ‘home team’ factor in Trump’s fight with U.S. intelligen­ce

- Jim Galloway Political Insider

On the last day of November, only weeks after a tumultuous presidenti­al election, Secretary of the Army Eric Fanning offered a widely ignored observatio­n on a highly current topic.

“Cyberspace can be considered the ultimate high ground — which means that in modern conflict, ceding cyberspace invites defeat,” he said. “We’ve seen Russian forces employ offensive cyber and advanced electronic warfare capabiliti­es with a new degree of sophistica­tion.”

Where the Army secretary made his remarks is just as important as what he said.

The occasion was a ground-breaking at Fort Gordon near Augusta. Over the next several years, the U.S. Army will be consolidat­ing its cybersecur­ity operations on acreage just off the Savannah River. Army Cyber Command will join a highly secretive National Security Agency intelligen­ce-gathering operation on the base, as well as the U.S. Army Signal School.

Augusta is on its way to becoming a major hub for cybersecur­ity in the United States, perhaps second only to Fort Meade in Maryland. To the point that Fort Gordon ultimately will leave the power grid that supplies electricit­y to the surroundin­g community.

All of which means that, in the current flap over Russia’s election-year hacking, between President-elect Donald Trump and the U.S. intelligen­ce community, Georgia Republican­s might ought to show some caution when it comes to choosing sides.

Lining up behind Trump, in this instance, could mean rooting against the home team.

For it is possible, perhaps even likely, that much of the evidence of Russian handiwork used in Friday’s briefing for the president-elect originated with one of your friends or neighbors in Augusta.

“To some extent, it’s a witch-hunt,” Trump told The New York Times just before that session with intelligen­ce gatherers.

Trump’s is not a widely held view among those who have been there. “This is, as far as I can tell, just Trump being Trump. Who knows why he’s picking a fight with folks he’s going to have to rely on to make some very critical decisions?” Saxby Chambliss said.

Chambliss, a Republican, left the U.S. Senate in 2015. During his 20-year career in Congress, he served on intelligen­ce committees in both the House and Senate. He considers the consolidat­ion of cyber-intelligen­ce operations in east Georgia — the Army made its decision three years ago — to be one of the highlights of his Senate tenure.

Chambliss is now a partner with DLA Piper law firm, and remains engaged on the periphery of U.S. intelligen­ce matters.

In Trump’s clash with America’s spies, the former senator wished upon the president-elect “a greater understand­ing of the difficulty of the job they have to do, and the decisions and conclusion­s that they come to — based upon, often times, facts that may not be as clear as black and white.”

Chambliss disagrees with Trump’s incredulit­y when it comes to Russian trespasses on computers in the United States.

“The Russians, the Iranians and the Chinese have always been the top state actors. And we’ve seen activities from all three of those nation-states on a fairly regular basis,” the former senator said.

Nor does he doubt the ability of U.S. intelligen­ce agencies to figure out what’s going on. “They knew what was being hacked and when it was being hacked. The Senate got hacked. The House got hacked. And any number of agencies got hacked. We would know it, and we would know what informatio­n was obtained,” Chambliss said.

But the former senator sides with Trump on at least a pair of issues. The role of the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce, a White House post created to coordinate intelligen­ce-gathering among military and civilian entities after 9/11, probably should be pared down. (Chambliss would return the lead-dog status to the Central Intelligen­ce Agency.)

He also agrees with Trump on the ultimate vulnerabil­ity of every American computer — outside the U.S. Department of Defense. “If a very sophistica­ted group puts their mind to it, there are not many computers they can’t get into,” Chambliss said.

That’s why what’s happening in Augusta is necessary, the senator would contend. It has an economic payoff, of course. “I can’t give you the exact number, but there are lots and lots of employees there, civilian and military. We run a lot of sophistica­ted operations out of NSA Georgia,” Chambliss said.

High-end defense contractor­s have begun to establish offices in the area. Augusta University, recognizin­g an employment opportunit­y when it sees one, already offers a four-year degree in cybersecur­ity, and is now creating a graduate program.

“Every infantry officer at some point in time goes through Fort Benning (in Columbus),” Chambliss said. “Now, everybody involved, from a military or civilian standpoint, with U.S. cybersecur­ity at some point in time will come through Fort Gordon. We’re the epicenter.”

Chambliss said Trump’s dispute with the cyber-intelligen­ce community has had the benefit of focusing attention on one all-important issue.

“A decision has got to be made,” the former senator said, “over what constitute­s an act of war in the space of cybersecur­ity. We still don’t have that decision made yet.”

U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., has said that Russian hacking of Democratic National Committee computers — then leaking that material to influence a presidenti­al election — amounts to such an act. Chambliss isn’t so sure.

“The other decision that has to be made is when we go on the offensive. And the two are pretty well tied together,” Chambliss said.

That’s right. A cyberwar could very well be in our future. And many of the decisions that lead us into it — or away from it — will be made by the home team in Augusta.

 ?? AP ?? Army Secretary Eric Fanning, shown at a 2016 hearing before his confirmati­on, has warned about the security threats in cyberspace. The Army Cyber Command will be in Georgia.
AP Army Secretary Eric Fanning, shown at a 2016 hearing before his confirmati­on, has warned about the security threats in cyberspace. The Army Cyber Command will be in Georgia.
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 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Donald Trump has raised questions about the level of cybersecur­ity threats to the U.S.
GETTY IMAGES Donald Trump has raised questions about the level of cybersecur­ity threats to the U.S.

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