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Communications Privacy United States Technology

Russia Carried Out a 'Stunning' Breach of FBI Communications System, Escalating the Spy Game on US Soil (yahoo.com) 104

Zach Dorfman, Jenna McLaughlin, and Sean D. Naylor, reporting for Yahoo News: On Dec. 29, 2016, the Obama administration announced that it was giving nearly three dozen Russian diplomats just 72 hours to leave the United States and was seizing two rural East Coast estates owned by the Russian government. As the Russians burned papers and scrambled to pack their bags, the Kremlin protested the treatment of its diplomats, and denied that those compounds -- sometimes known as the "dachas" -- were anything more than vacation spots for their personnel. The Obama administration's public rationale for the expulsions and closures -- the harshest U.S. diplomatic reprisals taken against Russia in several decades -- was to retaliate for Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election. But there was another critical, and secret, reason why those locations and diplomats were targeted.

Both compounds, and at least some of the expelled diplomats, played key roles in a brazen Russian counterintelligence operation that stretched from the Bay Area to the heart of the nation's capital , according to former U.S. officials. The operation, which targeted FBI communications, hampered the bureau's ability to track Russian spies on U.S. soil at a time of increasing tension with Moscow, forced the FBI and CIA to cease contact with some of their Russian assets, and prompted tighter security procedures at key U.S. national security facilities in the Washington area and elsewhere, according to former U.S. officials. It even raised concerns among some U.S. officials about a Russian mole within the U.S. intelligence community. "It was a very broad effort to try and penetrate our most sensitive operations," said a former senior CIA official.

American officials discovered that the Russians had dramatically improved their ability to decrypt certain types of secure communications and had successfully tracked devices used by elite FBI surveillance teams. Officials also feared that the Russians may have devised other ways to monitor U.S. intelligence communications, including hacking into computers not connected to the internet. Senior FBI and CIA officials briefed congressional leaders on these issues as part of a wide-ranging examination on Capitol Hill of U.S. counterintelligence vulnerabilities.

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Russia Carried Out a 'Stunning' Breach of FBI Communications System, Escalating the Spy Game on US Soil

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  • Clicking the story. The summary is the entire thing.

  • Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday September 16, 2019 @10:13AM (#59199082)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • What have they done to J Edgar's beautiful monstrosity?
      • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

        by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday September 16, 2019 @10:59AM (#59199276)
        Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Hoover regularly took civil rights cases away from the local police, and scuttled them. He was convinced that the civil rights movement was run by Communists and Soviet agents, and he was determined to destroy them - no matter what it took.
          That's why his FBI framed black civil rights leaders for crimes, or blackmailed them, or allowed the KKK and other white-supremacist organizations to attack them. He even had an effort devoted to attempting to destroy Martin Luther King Jr!

          And that's besides his absolut

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      The "most sensitive operations" got listed on "computers not connected to the internet".
      The "mole" was able to work for the FBI and read from that computer as part of their job?

      Some kind of background investigation as part of a "security clearance" might help with that...
      Before granting access to the "most sensitive operations" and "computers".
      Re "decrypt certain types of secure communications"
      Who is making the "secure communications" and doing the crypto math for the US gov?
      If the Russians are liste
    • Apparently, as TFS states, they know their shit ... ;)
    • Isn't it a different three-letter's job to protect against foreign adversaries?
    • >They should be disbanded and replaced by competent investigators.

      Not sure where you are going to find a large number of patriotic, principled investigators these days. And if they disband the FBI, there would suddenly be a pool of cheap investigators just lying around Wash. D.C., who would immediately apply for work at whatever bureau replaced the FBI. I think we're screwed.

  • Really? when I see those claim it always ended up in a backdoor at client or server side. That's not decryption!
    • by Jaime2 ( 824950 )
      Maybe the Russians were taking advantage of the Dual_EC_DRBG debacle? The timing is pretty close.
      • Maybe the Russians were taking advantage of the Dual_EC_DRBG debacle? The timing is pretty close.

        If they were, could they be darlings and tell us magic number?

        The NIST curves are backdoor targets also.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Staff gave the crypto keys to Russia due to their decades of Communist politics that never got looked for?
      Staff gave the crypto keys to Russia for cash.
      The gov crypto is using math from Russia. Made in the USA. Designed in Moscow.
      Staff walked the secrets out to Russian spies and their meetings with Russians went undetected?
      The US gov buys crypto from contractors and Russia just has to listen in TEMPEST style?
      The crypto is great but it ends in a computer that makes it all plain text to share with o
      • "more polygraphs" dumbest two words I've read on slashdot in a long time. You could train Donald Trump to pass one at will in a few hours. They're completely worthless. It's a wonder that the government still uses them at all. It's just security theatre at best.

        • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
          Got to find all the Communists :)
          The "polygraph" is like a full background investigation for the questions needed.
          Education, history, politics, past... life, lifestyle... loyalty to the USA.
          The short chat down before and after the polygraph is the part most people dont fully understand.
          Anything to talk about that the machine will detect? Before its offical.
          Anything that the machine detected that needs clarification after the questions? Its all offical now, but... the test is now over...
          People t
        • by Megol ( 3135005 )

          They are unreliable and should not be allowed in criminal investigations however they are useful - especially against those that don't understand them. Many of the classic tricks to pass them can be detected and using them can be suspicious in itself.

        • Polygraphs are not completely worthless!

          They work great at "catching" honest people, people with nervous tics, people that think too much, and people that are too calm.

          That means only the sociopaths, the good liars, and the complete idiots get through. So, from the FBI's perspective, it works great!

  • "the Kremlin protested the treatment of its diplomats, and denied that those compounds -- sometimes known as the "dachas" -- were anything more than vacation spots for their personnel."
    Maybe another word like "accusation" should have been added in there, now it's just a double negative.
  • spies...
    CIA getting Russians to spy on Russia is .... Good.
    2016 election... no a few Russian diplomat did not drive out all over the USA and vote many, many, many times in different states... That was actual citizens all over the USA doing the voting...
    "hacking into computers not connected to the internet"
    By hand? In person? As an international art student walking around wanting to sell art to the US gov?
    "raised concerns among some U.S. officials about a Russian mole"
    First rule of a real FBI mole
  • by skogs ( 628589 ) on Monday September 16, 2019 @10:58AM (#59199264) Journal

    Spying happens. Interference in operations is a little different. Twisting the public story to escalate fears of illegitimacy of our elected officials is the big win for the Kremlin. Not even they could have shaken the faith in the system that hard or that fast. Instead of simply toying with it, they damn near divided us to civil war....and the regular people are too fucking stupid to know why.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 ) on Monday September 16, 2019 @11:16AM (#59199382) Journal
      Real stories take 40 years to get approval to publish for academics.
      With parts missing to protect methods... 50 years later...
      Reading about real spies 2 years later is pure fiction.
      • Real successes take a long time. Real, massive, public failures, .... not so much.

        • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
          No 5 eye security service talks of methods to the media 2 years later. Pure fiction.
          Historians cant even get to approval to "read" about project names, staff names, locations 40 and 50 years later.
          Thats before then even get the needed approval to publish.
          Yet we see methods and CIA projects in Russia mentioned?
    • than anything the Kremlin could have done. Then there's voter suppression. The voters of Florida passed a law to give 1 million ex cons their voting rights back after decades of blocking anyone from getting them and the state legislature & Governor have stymied implementation at every turn in direct opposition to the will of the people. Meanwhile 1700 polling places have been closed in predominately black communities since 2013 when the Supreme Court ruled Congress must act to update the Voting Rights a
    • Civil War between 5 people??? Most Americans didn't a rats ass over Russia-gate.
    • Russia just gave nature a nudge. The US is too large to be a unified country without government coercion. The problem began with the Civil War because the aftermath forced primitive superstitionist pro-slavers into the overall fabric of the US instead of expelling them from the North.

      Right and Left should live in separate countries. The weaker nation would not be the collective globalist warmongering menace the US is today.

  • by Archtech ( 159117 ) on Monday September 16, 2019 @11:03AM (#59199296)

    "The operation, which targeted FBI communications, hampered the bureau's ability to track Russian spies on U.S. soil at a time of increasing tension with Moscow, forced the FBI and CIA to cease contact with some of their Russian assets..."

    Note the final three words of the quoted excerpt. An intelligence asset is not an intelligence officer - an employee of the government's intelligence agencies.

    An asset is a citizen of a foreign nation, subverted and employed by another government to spy on his own country. While the CIA, whose mandate is to spy on foreign nations, naturally employs many assets, it comes as a surprise to learn the the FBI has assets of its own. The FBI's role is to enforce the law within the USA and its foreign possessions. That role includes counter-intelligence - thwarting foreign spying. I did not know that the FBI also spies on foreign nations.

    But I suppose I should have known.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Re 'the FBI has assets of its own"

      Is the CIA bringing Russian gov/mil staff to the USA for a holiday as a cover story and the FBI finds out about random Russians with mil/gov rank on tourist "holiday" in the USA.
      Who from Russia get visits by US "officials" in US hotel room? FBI sees it all.
      That would be one way the FBI finds out about Russians spying for the CIA in Russia in a very legal US domestic setting.
      The FBI is then told to stop investigating and by default has a list of CIA spies in Russia on
    • by Megol ( 3135005 )

      You are reading much into something very little. FBI works with CIA in cases where their responsibilities overlap and if FBI communications aren't safe...

    • A police/FBI asset is nicknamed a snitch or informant. We've always known such individuals exist. Not nefarious.

      Likewise, gathering information internally is also known as 'police investigation'. Also, not nefarious by default.

      FBI works internally. CIA works externally. It's really not nefarious for the FBI to work internally to support monitoring or investigation activities that might be done by CIA if in another country.

  • by jafac ( 1449 ) on Monday September 16, 2019 @11:13AM (#59199360) Homepage

    When they SAY they're going on vacation, they're really invading Ukraine.

  • The article discusses radios and push-to-talk cellphones used by the FBI. So what kind of encryption do such devices use and how big a deal is it generally to have that type of encryption cracked?

    Since its all out in the open, they could have just given the information to the rest of the public.. Unless of course wanting to spy on the said public themselves..

    • Wouldnâ(TM)t surprise me if theyâ(TM)ve cracked the newer GSM or CDMA ciphers. The old ciphers have known flaws. It would explain why FBI is being so cagey about what crypto was cracked as they probably have cracked it themselves (which would explain their lack of complaints about cell phones being too secure).
  • Do these 3 letter agencies even bother to block all IP addresses coming from Russia, China, and North Korea. Block them at the firewall.
  • Funny how your people are "assets" while theirs are "spys".
  • "The 1980s called; they want their foreign policy back." -- Barack Hussein Obama

  • Seems like this should be gold for the writers of that show!

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