Biden is 'deeply concerned' about the release of secret documents on
Israel's possible attack plans
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[October 22, 2024]
By AAMER MADHANI and DAVID KLEPPER
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden is “deeply concerned” about the
unauthorized release of classified documents on Israel's preparation for
a potential retaliatory attack on Iran, a White House spokesman said
Monday.
The Biden administration is still not certain if the classified
information was leaked or hacked, White House national security
spokesman John Kirby said. Officials don’t have any indication at this
point of "additional documents like this finding their way into the
public domain,” he said.
Kirby added that the Pentagon is investigating. U.S. officials on
Saturday had confirmed an investigation by the administration.
“We’re deeply concerned, and the president remains deeply concerned
about any leakage of classified information into the public domain. That
is not supposed to happen, and it’s unacceptable when it does,” Kirby
said.
The documents are attributed to the National Geospatial-Intelligence
Agency and National Security Agency, and note that Israel was still
moving military assets in place to conduct a military strike in response
to Iran’s blistering ballistic missile attack on Oct. 1. They were
sharable within the “Five Eyes,” an intelligence alliance comprised of
the U.S., Great Britain, Canada, New Zealand and Australia.
Marked top secret, the documents first appeared online Friday on the
Telegram messaging app and quickly spread among Telegram channels
popular with Iranians.
Analysts at the SITE Intelligence Group, a consultancy that monitors and
analyzes online threats from extremist groups, tracked the release of
the documents to a Telegram channel popular with Iran-backed militias.
The channel contained posts from an anonymous user with a long history
of posting other supposedly top-secret content who said they had access
to the leaked documents. The user also wrote that they had sold some of
the material and provided it to the Iranian military.
The release comes at a pivotal time in the Middle East, as Israel
considers its response to Iran’s attack.
“The smallest item — even something like the leak of this relatively
innocuous document — could move things in new directions,” said Rita
Katz, SITE's co-founder and executive director.
Rep. Mike Turner of Ohio, the Republican chairman of the House
Intelligence Committee, said the unauthorized release of the information
was concerning, especially given the “high stakes of what’s going on in
the Middle East right now.”
While it remains possible the information was obtained through hacking,
“if this has been a leak, it is criminal and it is certainly espionage,“
Turner said Monday on the BBC.
The Telegram channel identifies itself as being based in Tehran, Iran’s
capital. It previously published memes featuring Iran’s Supreme Leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and material in support of Tehran’s
self-described “Axis of Resistance,” which includes Middle East militant
groups armed by the Islamic Republic.
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President Joe Biden, right, talks with Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, left, in the Oval Office of the White House in
Washington, July 25, 2024. U.S. officials say the Biden
administration believes it has won assurances from Israel that it
will not strike Iranian nuclear or oil sites as it looks to strike
back following Iran’s missile barrage earlier this month. The
officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private
diplomatic discussions, cautioned that the pledge is not iron-clad
and that circumstances could change. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)
One of the two documents resembled the style of other material from
the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency leaked by Jack Teixeira,
an Air National Guardsman who pleaded guilty in March to leaking
highly classified military documents about Russia’s war on Ukraine
and other national security secrets.
The U.S. has urged Israel to take advantage of its elimination of
Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar and press for a cease-fire in Gaza and has
likewise urgently cautioned Israel not to further expand military
operations in the north in Lebanon and risk a wider regional war.
However, Israel’s leadership has repeatedly stressed it will not let
Iran’s missile attack go unanswered.
The investigation into the release of the documents may take some
time as authorities look for digital or physical clues that could
reveal how the information got out, and what implications it may
have for information management and intelligence sharing with U.S.
allies, according to Gavin Wilde, a senior fellow in the Technology
and International Affairs Program at the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace.
“I imagine they'll eventually get to the bottom of it,” said Wilde,
who formerly worked on the National Security Council. “The
intelligence community has gotten a lot better at digital chain of
custody — who has seen a particular document, how many times it's
been shared, and with whom.”
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre on Monday declined to
comment on what changes the government has made to better safeguard
top secret information in the aftermath of the Discord leak. She
added that Biden has “complete confidence” in the Pentagon, Justice
Department and intelligence community following the latest
unauthorized disclosure.
The nation's spy agencies have worked to bolster cybersecurity since
the Discord leak and the conviction of former NSA contractor Reality
Winner. Accounting for human behavior, however, can be a harder
challenge, according to Shawnee Delaney, a former officer at the
Defense Intelligence Agency who is now CEO of the Vaillance Group, a
private threat analysis firm.
“Cybersecurity isn’t just a technological issue," Delaney told The
Associated Press. “It’s a human one, and humans are wholly
unpredictable.”
Spokespeople for the Pentagon and the NSA said officials were aware
of the incident but had no further comment.
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