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Tuesday, June 23, 2015

China Gets Pass from Obama on ‘Devastating’ OPM Hack

The Obama administration continues to play down one of the nation’s most damaging Chinese cyber espionage operations in order to maintain a dialogue with China and host a summit for its leader this fall.

Weeks after the discovery that millions of personal records on federal workers was stolen by Chinese hacker in an intelligence operation, the president and his advisers failed to condemned the state-sponsored security breach whose damage continues to worsen almost weekly.

The Obama administration, in a sign of its apparent unwillingness to take any steps against China for the hacking, will go ahead with the hosting this week of the latest Strategic and Economic Dialogue in Washington. The dialogue is known for producing little in the way of tangible results of regular meetings between senior U.S. and Chinese officials. The questionable diplomacy is said its supporters to advance U.S. interests. However, keeping secret the Chinese connection to the cyber attack is likely to encourage further attacks.

Daniel Russel, assistant secretary of state for East Asia, made no mention in a briefing for reporters whether the Chinese role in the OPM hack would be discussed at the dialogue, which begins Tuesday.

Instead, he said cyber security would be discussed in the Strategic Security Dialogue that he said, “really is germane to building a relationship of trust between the U.S. and China. It’s an important common concern.”

“We don’t always see eye to eye, but the fact is that global challenges require that we cooperate,” Russel said.

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2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Everybody gets a pass from Obama...except Americans. They just get the shaft!

Steve said...

This is how the US plans to handle our internet security; make friends with the hackers and ask them to please stop doing it!

Please say NO to Net Neutrality or any other attempt by the FCC to take control of the internet.