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Tag: national security

  • Biden’s campaign joins TikTok, even as administration warns of national security concerns with app

    Biden’s campaign joins TikTok, even as administration warns of national security concerns with app

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    WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden’s 2024 campaign is now on TikTok, even though he has expressed national security concerns over the platform and banned it on federal devices.

    Biden isn’t expected to personally join the platform, aides said, nor the others in his administration. The account will be run entirely by the campaign team in an effort to reach voters in an ever-fragmented American population, particularly as younger voters gravitate away from traditional platforms. The inaugural post featured the president being quizzed on the Super Bowl — and included a reference to the latest political conspiracy theory centering on music superstar Taylor Swift.

    Both the FBI and the Federal Communications Commission have warned that TikTok owner ByteDance could share user data — such as browsing history, location and biometric identifiers — with China’s authoritarian government. Biden in 2022 banned the use of TikTok by the federal government’s nearly 4 million employees on devices owned by its agencies, with limited exceptions for law enforcement, national security and security research purposes. The secretive and powerful Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States has been reviewing the app for years.

    Campaign officials said they were taking advanced security precautions and incorporating security protocols to ensure safety, but they did not detail the measures — or provide information on whether the measures were meant to protect campaign data or voters’.

    A law implemented by China in 2017 requires companies to give the government any personal data relevant to the country’s national security. There’s no evidence that TikTok has turned over such data, but fears abound due to the vast amount of user data it, like other social media companies, collects.

    Biden’s campaign said the BidenHQ account would be posting content regularly on the platform.

    Biden’s campaign maintains a presence on Meta’s Threads, Instagram, Facebook, X, formerly Twitter, and Truth Social, the platform backed by Republican front-runner Donald Trump.

    The president’s campaign has been prioritizing social media engagements, as well as smaller events featuring the president, to reach target voters who they believe don’t tune in to traditional outlets. The campaign and the White House have also stepped up outreach to social media influencers who they believe can amplify the president’s message.

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  • Mary Rose McCaffrey to Join SIMS Software’s Board of Advisors

    Mary Rose McCaffrey to Join SIMS Software’s Board of Advisors

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    SIMS Software, the leading provider of security information management software to the government and defense industries, is pleased to announce that Mary Rose McCaffrey has joined the company’s distinguished board of advisors, which is comprised of national security thought leaders and influencers.

    SIMS Software, the leading provider of security information management software to the government and defense industries, is pleased to announce that Mary Rose McCaffrey has joined the company’s distinguished board of advisors, which is comprised of national security thought leaders and influencers. In this advisory role, Ms. McCaffrey will provide strategic guidance to the SIMS Software executive management team and help to increase awareness of the company’s differentiated product capabilities to the national security community. 

    SIMS Software is committed to being at the forefront of supporting customers’ evolving security needs, supporting government compliance, and developing advanced technologies to help protect the United States and its allies’ critical assets and vital information.

    Ms. McCaffrey has an acute understanding of the growing security threats and challenges that affect both the government and private sector. Throughout her career she has demonstrated expertise in the delivery of security programs, risk and crisis-management, program execution, insider threat programs, alliance building, and stakeholder communication to discover innovative solutions. 

    SIMS Software’s CEO, Michael Struttmann stated, “Mary Rose had an exemplary career in public service and the defense industrial base, working in critical capacities in the intelligence community and national security. We are incredibly fortunate to have her onboard as a company advisor, bringing her wealth of knowledge and expertise in our space. She will provide significant value-add to our product roadmap and customer base.”

    “I am very excited to join the SIMS Software board of advisors. I have seen firsthand how SIMS has delivered innovative technology to harness data and enable mission solutions. SIMS Software is a crucial partner to the defense and national security community,” remarked Ms. McCaffrey.

    Ms. McCaffrey was the Vice President of Security for the Northrop Grumman Corporation for seven years, enabling personnel and security to meet the ever-evolving needs of customers worldwide within the defense, aeronautics, space, and cyberspace verticals. She was responsible for the protection of their employees, facilities, and their proprietary and sensitive information. During her tenure, she received the ISOS Resilience Award for the creation of a world-class crisis management organization. 

    Prior to her time at Northrop Grumman, Ms. McCaffrey held an extensive career at the Central Intelligence Agency spanning over thirty years which culminated with her appointment as the first female Director of Security. She held numerous assignments across the Intelligence Community, the Department of Defense, Department of the Navy, the National Reconnaissance Organization, and the Office of Director of National Intelligence in senior security positions.

    At the NRO, she was responsible for combining the organizations of counterintelligence and security into a single entity to better serve the agency mission. At the ODNI, she participated in the creation of the original ODNI structure in 2003. She’s been widely regarded as a role model and trailblazer for women within national security, thanks to her exceptional leadership and groundbreaking professional accomplishments.

    Ms. McCaffrey has a bachelor’s degree from St. Michael’s College, Colchester, VT and has completed numerous leadership programs including the Kellogg School, Northwestern University, MIT, and government leadership programs. She’s the recipient of several awards including the DCIA’s Distinguished Career Intelligence Medal in June 2017, the Presidential Rank Award in October 2015, the National Intelligence Reform Medal in November 2008, and the National Reconnaissance Leadership Award in 2006.

    She is currently on the Board of Advisors for the Council on Intelligence Issues and is the President of the SIGNA Society, a CIA retiree association. She has served on numerous boards including the OSAC Board of Advisors, the INSA Security Policy and Reform and was a member of the Aerospace Industries Association, National Defense Industry Association, and the American Society of Industrial Security.   

    About SIMS Software:

    For over 40 years, SIMS Software has been the leading provider of security information management software to the world’s most renowned government agencies, defense contractors, high technology giants, academic institutions, and research facilities. SIMS Software helps security professionals centralize dispersed data sources to achieve operational efficiencies, government compliance, risk mitigation and visibility across their security domain.

    To learn more, visit www.SIMSsoftware.com

    Source: SIMS Software

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  • Beijing intensifies military pressure on Taiwan as U.S.-China talks resume

    Beijing intensifies military pressure on Taiwan as U.S.-China talks resume

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    Chinese President Xi Jinping meets with U.S. President Joe Biden at Filoli Estate in the U.S. state of California, Nov. 15, 2023.

    Li Xueren | Xinhua News Agency | Getty Images

    Beijing sent dozens of military aircraft and naval ships toward Taiwan on Friday, the same day of a low-profile meeting between U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi aimed at stabilizing U.S.-China relations.

    From 6 a.m. Friday to 6 a.m. Saturday local time, China sent 33 military aircraft and six naval vessels toward Taiwan, according to Taiwan’s Defense Ministry. Thirteen of the planes crossed over the Taiwan Strait.

    The intensified military pressure comes as the U.S. and China are attempting to steer relations back on track after an icy couple of years. For example, at their meeting, Sullivan and Wang confirmed the plan to launch a collaborative U.S.-China “Counternarcotics Working Group” on Tuesday to address the fentanyl crisis.

    “Mr. Sullivan underscored during the meeting that the United States and the PRC are in competition but the United States does not seek conflict or confrontation, and there are areas of cooperation in the relationship,” a senior administration official said Saturday.

    But China’s military moves over the past 24 hours could complicate hopes for cooperation.

    China’s approach to Taiwan, which it considers its territory, is a sensitive sticking point in its precarious relationship with the U.S., which believes in Taiwan keeping its self-governing status. The contentious issue comes up at nearly every U.S.-China meeting, including the high-profile talks between President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping in November.

    During their two-day meeting in Bangkok on Thursday and Friday, Sullivan and Wang talked about reopening military-to-military communications, curbing the flow of fentanyl and mitigating the risks of artificial intelligence.

    Sullivan also reiterated the U.S. stance on maintaining the status quo of Taiwan’s sovereignty. But China has repeatedly rebuffed the U.S. position and has been vocal about its intention to “reunify” Taiwan with the mainland.

    China’s military pressure on Taiwan comes during what senior administration officials have called “a period of higher tension.”

    Taiwan voters recently elected Democratic Progressive Party candidate Lai Ching-te to be their next president. Lai was China’s least favorite candidate due to his support of maintaining Taiwan’s status quo.

    Ahead of that election, the U.S. prepared for a range of responses from China.

    “Anytime we’re heading into a period of higher tension, there are of course always contingency conversations in the U.S. government,” a senior administration official said at the time.

    “I don’t want to get into specifics on those, but of course, we have to be prepared and thinking through any eventuality … ranging from no response to the higher end.”



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  • Former Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani raises less than $1 million from 13 donors in legal defense fund

    Former Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani raises less than $1 million from 13 donors in legal defense fund

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    Rudy Giuliani was able to raise less than $1 million from just 13 donors, among them his friends and a group of former President Donald Trump‘s allies, to help pay off his legal fees as he faces a $146 million defamation judgment and a criminal prosecution, a new Federal Election Commission filing reviewed by CNBC shows.

    Giuliani’s political action committee raised just over $727,000 from August through December, according to the FEC filing Thursday. His son Andrew Giuliani, who is helping run the PAC, did not return a request for comment on the haul.

    The single biggest donation came from a Corona del Mar, California, woman named Caryn Borland, who donated $300,000, more than 40% of the total donations to Giuliani, the filing shows.

    Borland, who also is known as Caryn Hildenbrand, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Last year, the Caryn L Hildenbrand Living Trust donated $1 million to a legal defense fund for Trump, which also was the single largest donation to that fund, which had raised $1.6 million, according to a disclosure filed to the Internal Revenue Service.

    Hildenbrand and her husband Michael, who donated more than $1 million in campaign-related contributions to Trump’ 2020 reelection bid, have shared memes and social media posts about the QAnon conspiracy theory according to The New York Times. The newspaper last month also reported that Trump’s vice president, Mike Pence, had once canceled a fundraiser with the couple because of their QAnon posts.

    Though the Giuliani PAC misspells Caryn Borland’s first name on their filing as “Garyn,” the address matches that of the mailing address listed on the IRS filing for the donation made to Trump’s defense fund.

    His PAC has spent over $500,000 on his legal fees so far and had $180,000 on hand entering 2024.

    The attorney is facing a litany of legal and financial struggles as a result of his work for Trump trying to reverse Trump’s loss in the 2020 election to President Joe Biden.

    In August, Giuliani, Trump and more than a dozen other defendants were criminally charged in Georgia state court with racketeering related to efforts to reverse Trump’s 2020 election loss in the state. He also is being sued for defamation by the voting machine manufacturers Dominion Voting Systems and Smartmatic.

    In December, a federal court jury in Washington, D.C., found Giuliani liable for $146 million in damages for defaming two Georgia election workers whom he falsely accused of ballot fraud in 2020.

    A week later, Giuliani filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, citing that judgment, and money he owes various law firms and attorneys.

    A court filing shows that Giuliani owes more than $1.3 million to the law firm Davidoff Hutcher & Citron. The lawyer Robert Costello sued Giuliani in September for $1.36 million in unpaid legal fees dating to 2019.

    Giuliani had planned to raise some of his legal defense money at two of Trump’s properties, Andrew Giuliani previously said.

    Donors were asked to each give $100,000 to the PAC to get access to a September event at Trump’s golf course in Bedminster, which featured a discussion between him and Giuliani.

    But just three people are listed on the filing as giving $100,000 or more to the PAC.

    One of them was Elizabeth Ailes, the widow of former Fox News CEO Roger Ailes, according to the filing.

    “Yes, I gave Rudy $100,000 for his legal defense PAC and I was happy to do so,” Elizabeth Ailes told CNBC.

    “I am upset by the way Rudy has been persecuted and I believe it’s important to push back against a politicized judicial system,” Ailes said.

    She called Giuliani a “friend” and noted that as mayor he had officiated at her wedding to Roger Ailes.

    Roger Ailes resigned from Fox News in 2016 after being accused by current and former Fox News employees of sexual harassment. Settlements based on those accusations reportedly cost Fox’s parent company millions of dollars.

    Before he was ousted from Fox, Roger Ailes’ conservative news network tried to bolster Trump’s candidacy in 2016.

    “They were friends for a very long time, way before Fox News,” Elizabeth Ailes told Newsmax last May. The only other person closest to Roger [besides Elizabeth] is Donald Trump.”

    Other Trump backers gave less to Giuliani.

    Businessman and longtime Trump supporter, Lewis Topper, gave $25,000 to the PAC, according to the filing.

    And the real estate investment firm Probity International, which is run by Trump donor Robert Zarnegin, gave $35,000 to the Giuliani PAC.

    Arnold Gumowitz, a veteran real estate executive, gave $50,000 to the PAC. He also donated to Andrew Giuliani’s failed gubernatorial run.

    Matthew Martorano, who donated $5,000 to the Trump Save America Joint Fundraising Committee last year, gave $100,000 to the Giuliani committee.

    Martorano could not be reached for comment.

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  • Feds arrest Los Angeles man accused of exporting microelectronics to Russia

    Feds arrest Los Angeles man accused of exporting microelectronics to Russia

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    A 66-year-old man was arrested in Los Angeles on Wednesday in connection with an alleged years-long scheme to export sensitive technology illegally from the United States to a business tied to the Russian military, according to federal prosecutors.

    The man, Ilya Kahn, is a citizen of the United States, Israel and Russia and has residences in Brooklyn, N.Y., and Los Angeles, federal prosecutors said Thursday in charging documents filed in New York.

    Kahn is the owner of Senesys Inc., a California-based company, and Sensor Design Assn., a New York-based company. The ventures are involved in developing security software and testing silicon wafers for military aviation electronics and space equipment, court documents say.

    Federal prosecutors allege that the two companies are actually the same entity, and that from 2017 through 2023 they shipped more than 290,000 microelectronics and other items out of the U.S.

    Kahn worked with a Russian semiconductor company called Joint Stock Company Research and Development Center Elvees, which was sanctioned by the U.S. government in February 2022 after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Elvees played a critical role in assisting the Russian military, court documents say.

    Between 2012 and 2022, financial records show, Kahn’s business received more than $37 million from Elvees and related entities, including more than $2.1 million in 2021 and 2022, prosecutors allege.

    Kahn is charged with conspiracy to violate the Export Control Reform Act, which regulates the export of goods, technology and software that have potential military use.

    Prosecutors allege that in 2019, Kahn exported U.S.-made microcontrollers to Elvees in Russia, and in 2022 he exported other equipment through a Hong Kong-based shipping company without the necessary licenses from the U.S. government. According to prosecutors, that equipment included network interface controllers and a radio frequency transmitter, whose exports are limited for national security and anti-terrorism reasons.

    Prosecutors accused Kahn in court papers of a number of other acts to support Elvees, including:

    • Arranging for Elvees to continue receiving semiconductors manufactured in Taiwan after Russia’s invasion.
    • Illegally shipping the items from Taiwan to the U.S. and then to Russian after the Taiwanese company refused to ship the Elvees-designed semiconductors directly to Russia.
    • Shipping thousands of microchips based on an Elvees design from a manufacturer in Taiwan through a New York-based shipper to a Hong Kong-based shipping company, and then to mainland China.

    “Mr. Kahn stands accused of repeatedly exporting sensitive technology to Russia before, during, and after Russia launched its unprovoked invasion of Ukraine,” Assistant Atty. Gen. Matthew Olsen of the Justice Department’s National Security Division said in a statement. “Violations of U.S. sanctions and export control laws that aid Russia and other hostile powers endanger our nation’s security and will be met with the full force of the Justice Department.”

    Kahn could face a maximum of 20 years in prison if found guilty, according to prosecutors. He was scheduled to appear in a downtown Los Angeles courtroom Thursday.

    It was not immediately clear if Kahn had any legal representation.

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    Nathan Solis

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  • House and Senate jockey for control as Biden pushes for border-Ukraine deal

    House and Senate jockey for control as Biden pushes for border-Ukraine deal

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    President Joe Biden met with the four Congressional leaders on Wednesday to discuss ways to secure a bipartisan national security deal that would fund border enforcement efforts and unlock military aid for Ukraine.

    While Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries are united in their support for Ukraine, House Speaker Mike Johnson, who leads the Republican-controlled lower chamber, has been noncommittal regarding continued aid to the embattled European country, insisting the border must be dealt with first.

    However, Johnson recently criticized a prospective bipartisan Senate border deal, which Schumer said could receive a Senate vote next week. He argued that the solution to the ongoing wave of migrant crossings is the GOP’s border and immigration, H.R. 2, a measure that would restrict immigration and fund border security efforts, which passed the House without a single Democratic vote. On Wednesday, he showed some signs of softening his firm position.

    “I told the president what I have been saying for many months and that is that we must have change at the border, substantive policy change,” Johnson said in an address following the meeting. “We’re not insistent on a particular name of a piece of legislation, but we are insistent that the elements have to be meaningful.”

    House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, and Speaker of the House Mike Johnson appear together at the U.S. Capitol Building on December 12, 2023, in Washington, D.C. President Joe Biden met with the four leaders today to discuss U.S. national security priorities.
    Photo by Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

    Johnson’s comments come during a tenuous time amid his newfound leadership where some conservative members of his party voiced the threat of removing him from the speakership due to disputes over funding levels.

    Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia Republican, escalated the situation, after telling an Axios reporter she would introduce a motion to vacate — the procedure used to oust former Speaker Kevin McCarthy — if Johnson supports a Ukraine aid package.

    With such threats looming, Johnson has displayed some hesitancy on taking firm public positions.

    Punchbowl News, a Congress-focused digital news outlet, reported earlier this week that Johnson told Republicans during a Sunday call that he believes the border would be best handled under a future Trump presidency, casting doubt whether he’d bring a Senate deal to vote.

    Senate Republican whip John Thune, a potential McConnell successor, pushed back on that idea, telling reporters “there’s absolutely no way that we would get the kind of border policy that’s being talked about right now” because Democrats would not agree to such enforcement provisions under Trump. If Johnson were to reject such a deal and avoid a Ukraine vote, some believe he could be defying the wishes of the majority of his party.

    “If you strip the Ukraine portion out of the larger bill and just put Ukraine on the floor as a standalone vote in the House, it gets over 300 votes,” Democratic Congressman Adam Smith of Washington told Newsweek. “It’s just a matter of being willing to stand up to the MAGA Republicans who don’t support Ukraine.”

    Smith has unique insight on the issue given that he serves as the top Democrat on the Armed Services Committee, which is known for its unique level of bipartisanship due to its role overseeing national security matters. Smith’s Republican counterpart Congressman Mike Rogers of Alabama has notably spoken in favor Ukraine.

    With Congress divided among 220 Republicans and 213 Democrats, it would take less than half of the Republican Conference to support Ukraine to exceed the 300-vote total Smith predicted, given that all Democrats appear united on the issue. A vote in September 2023 on aid for Ukraine also showed that most Republican House members still supported continued funding.

    Ultimately though, Johnson’s decision will be one influenced by politics, politics around whether his party can afford to reject a bipartisan border deal and whether his party’s base align more closely with McConnell and the GOP senators who support Ukraine or Marjorie Taylor Greene and the conservative lawmakers, most of whom serve in the House, who oppose the effort.

    Republican Senator Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming has served in both chambers of Congress. When it comes to which body she believes better represents the desires of GOP voters, who will ultimately guide the party’s longer-term national security decisions, she gives the edge to House.

    “Most [House] members, because they’re up for reelection every two years, I think have a very close connection to their constituents,” Lummis told Newsweek. “So, they’re more current, I think, than senators.”