http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/07/20/team-obama-knows-china-is-behind-the-opm-hack-why-won-t-they-say-so.html
TEAM OBAMA KNOWS CHINA IS BEHIND THE OPM HACK. WHY WON’T THEY SAY SO?

[image: Description: U.S. President Barack Obama listens to a response from
Chinese President Xi Jinping at The Annenberg Retreat at Sunnylands in
Rancho Mirage, California June 7, 2013. Obama said on Friday he welcomed
the "peaceful rise" of China and that, despite inevitable areas of tension,
both countries want a cooperative relationship, as he and Xi kicked off two
days of meetings. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque (UNITED STATES - Tags: POLITICS) -
RTX10G2E]

The Obama administration’s top intelligence and law enforcement officials
have concluded that China was almost certainly responsible for the massive
hack
<http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/06/24/hackers-stole-secrets-of-u-s-government-workers-sex-lives.html>
that exposed highly sensitive information on millions of U.S. government
employees.

But the Obama administration has so far refused to publicly accuse Beijing,
despite their private conclusions. According to individuals familiar with
internal deliberations on the subject, the White House has been reluctant
to offend the Chinese in the midst of sensitive international negotiations.
And there are concerns that exposing China could compromise U.S.
intelligence-gathering techniques.

Naming China would likely lead to calls for the administration to produce
evidence of its claims. In that case, “there could be an issue with
revealing sources and methods” of intelligence-gathering, James Lewis, a
top computer security expert who has spoken to senior administration
officials about the hack against the Office of Personnel Management, told
The Daily Beast.

Intelligence agencies jealously guard their techniques for monitoring
China’s armies of hackers and tracing attacks back to them, fearful that
were they exposed, streams of valuable intelligence could dry up. Revealing
technical details of how the U.S. has attributed the breach of OPM to
Chinese actors could tip off hackers to the ways that American intelligence
agencies track them, said Lewis, a director and senior fellow at the Center
for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. Lewis added that in
the OPM case, attributing the hack to China has been a less complicated
matter than deciding when to point the finger.

Computer security firm CrowdStrike, whose executives have close ties to
U.S. law enforcement, has already traced
<http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/07/09/security-firm-china-is-behind-the-opm-hack.html>
the breach to hackers it says are “affiliated with the Chinese government,”
using forensic information from the OPM hack provided by the government.

Questions of political timing have also complicated the question of when to
call out China, according to two more individuals who have discussed the
OPM attack with U.S. officials and asked not to be identified. On July 9,
the administration released more details about the scope of the cyber
breach, revealing for the first time that more than 22 million people’s
records were compromised
<http://www.thedailybeast.com/cheats/2015/07/09/21-5m-affected-by-opm-hack.html>.
But blaming China then, amid final negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program
to which China was a party, would have been a significant distraction.
Those talks have now concluded, but Chinese President Xi Jinping is also
scheduled to come to Washington in September, and opening a public spat
over the OPM hack could overshadow his visit.

President Obama met
<http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/06/24/us-usa-china-obama-idUSKBN0P42MO20150624>
with top Chinese leaders at the White House last month and raised his
concerns over the country’s “cyber and maritime behavior,” according to an
official statement. But openly linking China to the OPM hack would escalate
tensions and immediately raise the question of how the United States would
respond. After accusing North Korea of hacking Sony Pictures Entertainment
last year, Obama slapped new sanctions on the country. The U.S. launched
<http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/03/24/did-vigilantes-knock-north-korea-offline.html>
targeted cyber attacks on North Korean computer networks.

Administration officials have previously said that they don’t rule out
imposing sanctions against individuals or organizations responsible for the
OPM hack. After the Sony hack, the White House trumpeted a new sanctions
regime designed to punish hackers and the countries, companies, and people
who benefit from information they steal.

But retaliating economically against China could pose its own set of
problems.

“The real question is a strategic one,” Zachary Goldman, a sanctions expert
and a former senior official in the Treasury Department, told The Daily
Beast. “The U.S. government has worked hard to cultivate a norm against
commercially-motivated cyber espionage.” State-on-state digital spying,
however, is largely considered part of the global espionage game. “If this
hack was motivated by reasons of state, we still might find it
objectionable, and might indeed retaliate in ways that are outside the
public eye. But we might not want to vocally argue that this kind of
espionage should never take place.”

Administration officials have previously said that they don’t rule out
imposing sanctions against those responsible for the OPM hack. But
retaliating economically against China could pose its own set of problems.

Indeed, the nation’s top intelligence official, who said China was “the
leading suspect” in the OPM hack, has doffed his hat to the country’s cyber
spies for exploiting such a valuable and obvious target.

“You have to kind of salute the Chinese for what they did," Clapper told
<https://twitter.com/noahshachtman/status/614090381391572992> an
intelligence conference, adding the U.S. would have hacked them the same
way if it could. There’s an obvious hypocrisy in sanctioning China for an
intelligence operation that the top American spy has said he’d like to
mount.

Clapper’s remarks aren’t an official statement of the administration's
position. When asked if China was in fact responsible for the personnel
records hack, spokespersons for the National Security Council, the FBI, and
the OPM all said they weren’t ready to identify a culprit.

So far, the only hard line the administration has taken publicly with China
over its cyber spying is the indictment of five Chinese military officers
in 2014 for hacking into U.S. corporations and stealing proprietary
information. In that case, Justice Department officials said the Chinese
had crossed a line, stealing trade secrets and pricing data from American
companies and giving it to their Chinese competitors. That’s one kind of
spying that intelligence officials insist the U.S. doesn’t do.

Similarly, the Obama administration justified retaliations against North
Korea by describing the Sony hack as outside the bounds of traditional
espionage. The regime purportedly attacked Sony in part to dissuade the
movie studio from releasing a satirical film about North Korean leader Kim
Jong Un.

“We cannot have a society in which some dictator someplace can start
imposing censorship here in the United States,” Obama said at the time,
adding, “That’s not who we are. That’s not what America is about.”



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