At a congressional hearing in February, the top intelligence and law enforcement officials from the Trump administration expressed serious concerns about Russian intentions to once again attack U.S. elections, likely through cyber attacks. Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.) then pressed the officials on whether Donald Trump had directed any of them to take “specific actions to confront and to blunt” Russian interference activities.
As regular readers may recall, the administration officials hemmed and hawed, but none pointed to any specific presidential directives.
Two weeks later, something similar happened: the head of the National Security Agency said he had not been authorized by Trump to disrupt Russian cyber-attacks targeting our elections.
And yesterday, the Trump White House went just a little further, eliminating the job of the nation’s cyber-security czar.
Trump signed an executive order rearranging the federal information technology infrastructure that includes no mention of the White House cybersecurity coordinator or of a replacement for Rob Joyce, who said last month that he is leaving the position to return to the National Security Agency, where he previously directed cyber-defense programs. […]
John Bolton, Trump’s new national security adviser, has widely been reported to have sought to eliminate the job as part of a top-to-bottom reorganization of the National Security Council. Joyce and his predecessors reported to the president; the senior NSC directors report to Bolton.
The outgoing White House cyber-security coordinator’s responsibilities will now shift to two other members of the NSC’s team — one of whom has little background in this area.
Politico, which first raised the prospect of this happening, broke the story yesterday.
A New York Times report added, “Cybersecurity experts and members of Congress said they were mystified by the move…. It was the latest in a series of steps that appeared to run counter to the prevailing view in Washington of cybersecurity’s importance.”
The cynical among us might be tempted to note that Trump, the beneficiary of a foreign adversary’s cyber-attacks on our elections, doesn’t seem altogether eager to defend the United States against the next expected offensive.
In fact, as NBC News’ report added, Democrats were beside themselves yesterday, with some drafting legislation — which the Republican majority is likely to ignore — intended to prevent the White House’s change.
Top Democrats on Capitol Hill reacted harshly to the decision. In a statement, Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., ranking Democrat on the House Homeland Security Committee, criticized Bolton for “already wreaking havoc on the National Security Council.









