黑料百科

黑料百科 Magazine The Consequences of Disruption: Current Threats to U.S. Security

Michael Hayden speaking at 黑料百科

Former intelligence chief Michael Hayden offers his perspective on world affairs.

General Michael Hayden, an expert on domestic and foreign affairs and a retired director of the Central Intelligence Agency andNational Security Agency, offered his personal lens to view our complex and dangerous world at the 13th annual 黑料百科 President鈥檚 Breakfast February 9 at Fess Parker鈥檚 DoubleTree Resort. The crowd of about 625 guests included dozens of local emergency and government officials who received a standing ovation when President Gayle D. Beebe recognized them. A brief video focused on Professor Tom Walters and his experience evacuating from the Montecito mudslide with his wife and young daughters.Hayden, a retired four-star Air Force general who was the nation鈥檚 highest-ranking military intelligence officer, said how encouraging the local community has been in the wake of the tragedy. 鈥淚鈥檓 the intel guy,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 never bring good news. I have nothing uplifting. I鈥檓 the guy who leaves you worried at the end of the presentation, and I promise to not disappoint.鈥

He started by outlining a way of thinking about all the data that constantly barrages us. 鈥淎s bad as the world seems right now, most of the people in this room have lived in a more dangerous time,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut we鈥檝e never seen it more complicated and more immediate.鈥

He calls 2017 the year of disruption with the United States shocking its foreign partners by markedly changing direction in its policies and beliefs, such as the North American Free Trade Agreement, Trans-Pacific Partnership, Paris climate agreement and the Iran nuclear deal. 鈥淰ote however you want, but that鈥檚 a lot in the first 12 months of the administration, and we鈥檙e not done,鈥 he said. He also mentioned the president鈥檚 lack of support for NATO鈥檚 Article 5, moving the U.S. embassy in Israel to Jerusalem and the Muslim travel ban. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a different image of America than 鈥榞ive us your poor, your tired, your huddled masses,鈥欌 he said.

Additional disruptions include changes in foreign policy strategy in Syria and North Korea, supplying arms to the Ukrainians and the defeat of the Islamic State at the capital of Raqqa.

鈥淚f 2017 was the year of disruption, 2018, I think, is the year of consequences,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e lit three or four fuses. Those fuses are going to burn in 2018, and I think some of them are going to hit powder.鈥

He identified one of those fuses as North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. 鈥淗e is a bad man, but he鈥檚 not crazy,鈥 he said. 鈥淗e is coldly rational, and what the North Koreans are doing is exactly what a logical actor would do in his circumstances. He would be crazy if he were to give up his nuclear weapons because they are the only thing that guarantees the survival of not just his government but of him and his family.鈥

Hayden noted that both Saddam Hussein and Muammar Gaddafi lacked nuclear weapons and were killed by U.S. forces. 鈥淎nd the short subject in between was called the Ukraine,鈥 he said, 鈥渨ho, you鈥檒l remember, gave their nuclear weapons back to the Russians in the 1990s in return for territory guarantees in perpetuity. He (Jong Un) sees what happens when you don鈥檛 have this stuff. He鈥檚 never going to give that up. The problem is that our president says he鈥檚 got to.鈥

Another fuse, according to Hayden, is Iran, which has dismantled most of its nuclear program for the lifting of sanctions as part of the Iran nuclear deal. 鈥淧resident Trump seems the most enthusiastic about foreign policy when he can undo something his predecessor did,鈥 he said.

Hayden added other concerns about Iran, including an aggressive expansion into the territories of Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. 鈥淭he American success in defeating ISIS has created circumstances for the Iranians to come in behind us and expand their control of those areas,鈥 he said.

He shared some positive news about terrorism. Hayden explained we鈥檙e relatively safe, stressing the limits in the amount of damage terrorists can inflict as well as the limits to the intelligence community鈥檚 ability to prevent an attack.

Finally, Hayden examined Vladimir Putin and Russia, defining the country as a revanchist rather than a resurgent power. He downplayed their importance (Russia鈥檚 gross domestic product is half the size of California鈥檚), while noting their nuclear arsenal.

An expert on cybersecurity, Hayden examined Putin鈥檚 motives and the steps taken to interfere with the U.S. presidential election, including the stolen emails from the Democratic National Convention sent to WikiLeaks and other sources then used by Russian bots and computer farms to push the messaging to social media and the news.

He discussed more recent American social media trends, highlighting a period when #releasethememo was by far the most popular topic. 鈥淭hat gets picked up by the alt-right media in this country,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here is an amazing parallel to the Russian bot nets and the alt-right media. It鈥檚 on display, then Sean Hannity picks it up for his broadcast, the most popular show on cable news, and then it gets picked up by 鈥淔OX and Friends鈥 the next morning, and guess who tweets that everyone should believe it? That鈥檚 the Russian influence.鈥

U.S. officials have not been able to agree that the Russians are messing with the nation in a way that disrupts American democracy. 鈥淚f you don鈥檛 believe me, channel surf tonight FOX, CNN and MSNBC, and you鈥檒l get it,鈥 he said.

Hayden reminded the audience that former FBI Director Robert Mueller will release his report on the Special Counsel Investigation this year. 鈥淣o matter what director Mueller determines, it will be explosive,鈥 Hayden said. 鈥淣o matter which way he goes, how big, how small, how against, how for, it will be an explosive item inside America.鈥

In conclusion, Hayden asked if we can all agree it鈥檚 bad foreign policy to become unpredictable to our friends and allies. 鈥淚n 20 years, we鈥檝e gone from a bipolar world to a bipolar superpower,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou need to fret about North Korea. You need to fret about Iran. You need to fret about terrorism. You need to fret about the Russians. But most of all, you need to fret about America. We鈥檝e got to have an adult conversation with ourselves to reach a national consensus about how America should think about and what America should do about all those things we see out there.鈥

After the breakfast, Hayden traveled to 黑料百科 to answer questions from a panelist of four students during Convocation: Kennedy Mahdavi 鈥18 (psychology/neuroscience major), Matthew Coffman 鈥19 (mathematics and computer science double major), Jenna Catalon 鈥18 (English and political science double major) and Hugh Grant-Chapman 鈥18 (political science major). They read Hayden鈥檚 book, 鈥淧laying to the Edge: American Intelligence in the Age of Terror,鈥 and worked with computer science professor Don Patterson to prepare for their time with Hayden.

Some of their questions focused on cybersecurity. In 1997, Hayden was reassigned as commander of the Air Intelligence Agency in San Antonio, Texas. At the time, the Air Force was at the cutting edge of thinking about cyberspace. He quickly grasped that cyber was a domain just like land, air, sea and space鈥攁 place where the U.S. will fight.

This domain possesses unique characteristics. 鈥淚t鈥檚 inherently global, inherently strategic, inherently characterized by great speed, inherently characterized by great maneuverability鈥 and hard to defend,鈥 Hayden said. 鈥淎utomatically, you know all the advantage goes to the offense.

鈥淭his domain was so awesome, so convenient, so powerful, so immediate, and had such great scale that we began to take things we used to keep down here in our pockets, wallets, desk drawers or safe and begin to put them up here. It was the golden age of espionage.鈥 This transfer to cyberspace has created massive vulnerabilities for society that still require a great deal of work to resolve.

Hayden described cyberspace as a global commons and not just a theatre of conflict. That raises ethical challenges and illustrates the difficulty of determining what national sovereignty means there. A thief who steals corporate or government data usually stores it on a server in another country or place, making it difficult to retrieve. 鈥淒oes a server in Malaysia enjoy as much Malaysian sovereignty as the building in which the server is located?鈥 Hayden asked. The server is a physical thing in a physical place, but the data exists in a place with no national boundaries. 鈥淲e haven鈥檛 figured that out yet. We don鈥檛 know what norms apply in the cyber realm. I鈥檓 not sure national governments are the ones to answer the question. The owner of Facebook may have more to do with the 21st century definition of reasonable privacy by what he chooses to put into settings or not put into settings.鈥

When asked about the line between legitimate espionage and invasion of privacy, Hayden said, 鈥淚t鈥檚 complicated; it moves. This is not a debate between the forces of light and the forces of darkness; this is not good versus evil; this is not freedom versus security or privacy versus safety. This should be a mature conversation amongst a free people as to how they balance things they would prefer to have in full measure but they can鈥檛.鈥

Hayden said that the United States, unlike other democracies, makes oversight of its intelligence services a team sport. 鈥淐ongress is involved, the courts are involved. That really doesn鈥檛 exist elsewhere. We鈥檝e spread oversight amongst all three branches. We need to be careful as a people as we strengthen the authority of the executive even in times of danger because these are not personalized authorities; these are abilities and authorities we are giving to the office.鈥

Hayden opposed asking Apple to break into the iPhone of a terrorist who attacked and killed people in San Bernardino. Apple鈥檚 Tim Cook responded that the company doesn鈥檛 do that and actually can鈥檛 because they didn鈥檛 build a back door into the system. While he considered the FBI鈥檚 request to get into the phone legitimate, Hayden thought the security risk too great. 鈥淚f Apple creates a hole in that operating system, there is now a hole in every operating system of that phone, and I鈥檓 coming through it and so will our adversaries. There is no way you can argue that Cook can create a hole in the system and that doesn鈥檛 make the system more vulnerable than it used to be.鈥

At CIA headquarters, the agency identifies itself as the nation鈥檚 first line of defense. 鈥淲e accomplish what others cannot accomplish; we go where others cannot go,鈥 Hayden said. 鈥淎n awful lot of things we do are out there where the ethical, legal and operational path forward is unclear. I never made a decision as director that I felt violated my personal code, but I made a bunch of decisions out there I wish I didn鈥檛 have to make.鈥

Hayden then discussed making difficult personal decisions with the same kind of ambiguity. 鈥淟et whatever is facing you ripen to let the clarity present itself through prayer or study or advice or just maturing,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut at some point, you鈥檙e going to have to make a decision and it鈥檚 still going to be unclear and the outcomes are not just unknown, they are unknowable. In that case you just have to decide because you realize not deciding is a very decisive act.鈥