CNN and the Wall Street Journal, among others, report the
hack of personal email addresses and Twitter accounts, of high-ranking government
officials like CIA’s John Brennan and Homeland’s Jeh Johnson.
This is not rocket science hacking, of course, no matter who is doing
it, but the pile of public officials having their email and personal
correspondence read by other countries is getting bigger every day. Hillary Clinton said she wasn’t the only one
doing it, and that should have been a cause for concern.
The investigative fallout from Clinton’s email has been
interesting because so many people were doing government business on those personal
accounts, both in this administration and in previous ones. Our government needs to stop that right now,
and do an impact analysis on the potential loss of information by doing
business on private email. “Everybody
does it” is not a good excuse, because not everybody does. Most have common sense. We don’t need more policy, but we might need
more security education for our executives.
It seems to have fallen by the wayside.
Operational Security seems to
have gone with it.
That is quite a bit different than having a Twitter account
or a private email address. I may just
want to keep up with the kids emails, Facebook postings, and Twitters. Lots of press people and bloggers are going
to make a big deal out of these kinds of leaders having accounts on social
media, when it probably is not such a big deal. It just depends on how that
information is being used.
The downside of it is a foreign intelligence service can
discover who our leaders communicate with and monitor them. It makes a web of associations and that web
is of interest because it leaks information.
We used to find that hairdressers knew when our operational deployments were
taking place because wives gathered there to discuss being alone for a few
weeks or getting together for a shopping trip. We had
security education classes for spouses after that. The cooperation we got from relatives was
better than we hoped for. It is harder
to do with influence peddlers who attach themselves to so many government
officials.
Our political leaders have a lot of friends. Map those friends and you find that some of
them are influential with several leaders.
Influence those few and there is a better chance of influencing the
leaders without ever getting close to the target. Businesses understand it when they hire
relatives of public officials, or people with prior government experience. Their influence spreads like a web. Their influence - and job longevity - do not last very long, once those associations
end.
Doing business on private email and social media makes that
influence easier to get, and improves the quality of intelligence any one
country can get from us. That is a
direct benefit that allows them to determine how we might respond to a given
situation. This is Information War as it
is practiced today. Watching what the
kids do on Twitter and Facebook is not going to have that same kind of impact.
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