1 big thing: The CIA's new license to cyberattack

In 2018, President Trump granted the CIA expansive legal authorities to carry 
out [covert actions in 
cyberspace](https://link.axios.com/click/20914074.53225/aHR0cHM6Ly9uZXdzLnlhaG9vLmNvbS9zZWNyZXQtdHJ1bXAtb3JkZXItZ2l2ZXMtY2lhLW1vcmUtcG93ZXJzLXRvLWxhdW5jaC1jeWJlcmF0dGFja3MtMDkwMDE1MjE5Lmh0bWw_dXRtX3NvdXJjZT1uZXdzbGV0dGVyJnV0bV9tZWRpdW09ZW1haWwmdXRtX2NhbXBhaWduPW5ld3NsZXR0ZXJfYXhpb3Njb2RlYm9vayZzdHJlYW09dGVjaG5vbG9neQ/5c53a81cfbd297039763bbe6B2c819b08),
 providing the agency with powers it has sought since the George W. Bush 
administration, former U.S. officials directly familiar with the matter told 
Yahoo News.

Why it matters: The CIA has conducted disruptive covert cyber operations 
against Iran and Russia since the signing of this presidential finding, said 
former officials.

Driving the news: According to the Yahoo News story, of which I am the lead 
author, the 2018 covert action finding gives the CIA much more power to 
undertake such operations without needing prior approval from the National 
Security Council.

- Under the Obama administration, U.S. officials would discuss proposals for 
specific potential covert actions for months, or even years, before signing off 
on them, former officials said.
- Now they can go “from idea to approval in weeks,” a former U.S. official told 
Yahoo News. And many proposals can now circumvent the NSC entirely, said former 
U.S. officials. “Trump wanted to push decision-making to the lowest possible 
denominator,” said another former U.S. official — which means many of these 
decisions are now being made in-house within the CIA, said former officials.

Of note: These new powers are not related to the CIA’s ability to hack for the 
purpose of mere intelligence-gathering, said former officials.

- Instead, they are about creating real-world effects like degrading or 
destroying adversaries’ infrastructure or exposing rival intelligence services’ 
secrets, said these officials.
- The CIA’s new authorities have allowed it to more freely engage in 
“hack-and-dump” operations of the sort popularized by Russian intelligence via 
WikiLeaks, where pilfered data is leaked to journalists or released online via 
personas like Guccifer 2.0, the online front used by Russian operatives to 
publicize the 2016 hack of the DNC, said former U.S. officials.
- The CIA has already dumped Russia- and Iran-related tranches of data online, 
said former officials.

Other impacts of the 2018 finding:

1. Financial institutions. It loosens prior restrictions on disruptive or 
destructive targeting of financial institutions, former U.S. officials said.

- In prior administrations, wiping or dumping hacked banking data was 
considered an uncrossable line because of the potential effects of retaliation 
by foreign states on the U.S. banking system, said former officials.
- Treasury Department officials were always particularly vociferously opposed 
to such measures in the past, said former officials.
- “These were “things CIA always knew were an option, but were always a bridge 
too far," a former official told Yahoo News. “They had been bandied about at 
senior levels for a long time, but cooler heads had always prevailed."

2. "Cut-outs." The presidential authorization makes it much easier for the CIA 
to target “cut-outs” believed to be working surreptitiously for hostile foreign 
intelligence services at media organizations, charities, religious institutions 
or other nonstate entities for disruptive or destructive cyber actions, said 
former officials. In the past, the burden of proof for targeting such entities 
was high; now, standards have been made far more lax, said former officials.

3. The "big four." The finding explicitly enables the CIA to use these new 
powers against the “big four” U.S. adversaries — China, Russia, Iran and North 
Korea. But even though the CIA already had more legal maneuverability on covert 
operations against Iran than other U.S. foes, the Trump administration was 
particularly focused on escalating its activities against Tehran, said former 
officials.

- These new CIA authorities, as well as a capacious interpretation of prior 
ones, have contributed to the administration’s “maximum pressure” campaign 
against Iran, say former officials, with the CIA conducting disruptive 
cyberattacks against Iranian infrastructure throughout Trump's term.
- This maximum pressure campaign has been tantamount to a “regime 
destabilization” strategy for some senior Trump-era national security 
officials, aiming to weaken the Iranian government in order to force it to 
retreat to its own borders — and even hopefully collapse entirely, say former 
officials.

The big picture: Some officials emphasize that Trump-era shifts in U.S. 
offensive cyber operations are part of a natural evolution in U.S. policies in 
this arena and that many changes would have been granted under a new Democratic 
administration as well.

- “It’s not like some cabal of folks who had been sort of outside the national 
security establishment ... were then brought in and hijacked” this process, a 
former senior official told me.

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