http://www.forbes.com/sites/melikkaylan/2014/04/16/why-cia-director-brennan-visited-kiev-in-ukraine-the-covert-war-has-begun/



*4/16/2014 @ 4:30PM **|**2,002 views *

*Why CIA Director Brennan Visited Kiev: In Ukraine The Covert War Has Begun*

Ukraine is on the brink of civil war, Vladimir
Putin<http://www.forbes.com/profile/vladimir-putin/>has said, and he
should know because the country is already in the midst of
a covert intelligence war. Over the weekend, CIA director John Brennan
travelled to Kiev, nobody knows exactly why, but some speculate that he
intends to open US intelligence resources to Ukrainian leaders about
real-time Russian military maneuvers. The US has, thus far, refrained from
sharing such knowledge because Moscow is believed to have penetrated much
of Ukraine’s communications systems – and
Washington<http://www.forbes.com/washington/>isn’t about to hand over
its surveillance secrets to the Russians.

If you have any doubts that the battle is raging on the ‘covert ops’ front
just consider today’s events in Pcholkino where Ukrainian soldiers from the
25th Airborn Division handed over their weapons and APC’s to pro-Russian
militiamen and pretty much surrendered. The Ukrainian commander was quoted
as saying “they’ve captured us and are using dirty tricks”. This is the
kind of morale-busting incident that can spread quickly. It doesn’t happen
spontaneously and it often begins with mixed messages, literally – messages
purporting to come from the chain of command but actually originate from
the enemy’s dirty tricks department.

So what kind of conversations did Brennan have during his visit? There’s no
way of knowing for sure of course. But, according to my sources, and based
on my experience of reporting on the Russian invasion of Georgia, the
US-Ukraine information exchange would go a lot further than simply tracking
numbers and motions of Russian tanks and soldiers. The operative term here
is ‘non-lethal’ help – that remains Washington’s official position. But in
today’s digital and virtual battlefield, the game can be over before the
first shot gets fired. And if Moscow’s mastery over the digital domain can
be countered, Putin might think twice about risking the expensive hardware
that he has invested billions in upgrading since the Georgian war.

In that conflict, the US refused to sell air-cover missiles (Manpads) to
Tbilisi while the Israelis deactivated the ones they’d sold after Putin
threatened them with retaliation by selling Hezbollah comparable weapons.
So Georgia was left with the Ukraine-made missiles it had purchased, which
proved effective but not numerous enough. The Russians have undoubtedly
rectified that vulnerability, especially as they and Ukraine share the same
weapons systems. In effect, Russian warplanes have likely found ways to jam
targeting vectors or to create illusory electronic clusters to decoy the
manpads.

So Brennan might have shared data on how to get past the jamming. The same
kind of forensic struggle applies to aerial combat, a rare thing these days
but one that may become decisive if ground-based missiles prove
ineffectual. Since the Russians can hack into any kind of long-distance
chatter about such details between the US and Kiev, Brennan probably had to
physically hand them over to his Ukrainian interlocutors. That is, to fully
vetted individuals, because as we’ve seen repeatedly during the current
crisis, not least in the Maidan, Russian spies masquerading as Ukrainian
patriots are not uncommon. Ukraine’s politicians and military personnel
(though not nearly as much) have a long history of divided loyalties.

Digital conflict, by its very nature, is a shadow conflict and therefore
fundamentally psychological. If you lose touch with central command or you
suspect the enemy is messing with your communications, you become isolated.
You fire at your own side, shoot down your warplanes. In fact, you’re
likely to stop shooting altogether, out of confusion and paralysis, as
happened in some military bases in Georgia. And now is happening in
Ukraine. You don’t know if the coded messages telling you to refrain from
firing are a feint or genuine. In a modern war between two sides with
hardware i.e. not a guerilla war, line-of-sight engagements occur less
often than you’d think. Tanks and planes and artillery get knocked out from
afar. Digital certainty is everything. The absence of it spells disaster.

So Brennan needed to reassure his hosts above all on that matter. Or
perhaps vice-versa. They might need to reassure the US that Ukraine’s
military position is not hopeless. If the US assessed the Ukrainian armed
forces as too electronically compromised to use heavy weapons systems, then
Washington might discourage a confrontation, might refuse to help in
crucial ways, as happened in Georgia. Or Washington might suggest alternate
methodologies, low-tech or asymmetrical alternatives, to create enough
confusion or humiliation as to tarnish Putin’s popularity. The Russian side
has clearly initiated such tactics already. Brennan will try to shore up
the security of Ukraine’s military signals systems. He will suggest ways to
retaliate in kind by hacking into the pro-Moscow militia’s comms.

To get an idea of how crucial is this stage of the confrontation, just
witness how images of Ukrainian armored vehicles now driven by militias
have gone global. Moscow will trumpet the news, claiming that even
Ukrainian soldiers don’t want to fight, that the US is stoking artificial
hatred. The government in Kiev will find itself snookered – either to admit
that its signals channels are hopelessly compromised and therefore cannot
mount a convincing military operation or that such incidents are
spontaneous but limited. A tough position either way. One thing is certain,
the war has begun.




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