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Richard Clarke on Who Was Behind the StuxnetAttack
 America's longtime counterterrorism czar warns that the cyberwars have already begun—and that wemight be losing
Smithsonian
magazine, April 2012,
Clarke has seen the future of war and says it will be fought by hackers.
 Khue Bui 
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, in which Michael Caine silently,precisely, grinds and brews his morning coffee. High-tech java seems to go with the job.But saying Clarke was a spy doesn’t do him justice. He was a meta-spy, a master counterespionage, counter-terrorism savant, the central node where all the most secret, stolen, security-encrypted bits of informationgathered by our trillion-dollar human, electronic and satellite intelligence network eventually converged.Clarke has probably been privy to as much “above top secret”- grade espionage intelligence as anyone atLangley, NSA or the White House. So I was intrigued when he chose to talk to me about the mysteries of Stuxnet.“The picture you paint in your book,” I said to Clarke, “is of a U.S. totally vulnerable to cyberattack. Butthere is no defense, really, is there?” There are billions of portals, trapdoors, “exploits,” as the cybersecurity guys call them, ready to be hacked.“There isn’t today,” he agrees. Worse, he continues, catastrophic consequences may result from using ourcyberoffense without having a cyberdefense: blowback, revenge beyond our imaginings.“The U.S. government is involved in espionage against other governments,” he says flatly. “There’s a bigdifference, however, between the kind of cyberespionage the United States government does and China. TheU.S. government doesn’t hack its way into Airbus and give Airbus the secrets to Boeing [many believe thatChinese hackers gave Boeing secrets to Airbus]. We don’t hack our way into a Chinese computer company like Huawei and provide the secrets of Huawei technology to their American competitor Cisco. [He believesMicrosoft, too, was a victim of a Chinese cyber con game.] We don’t do that.”“What do we do then?”“We hack our way into foreign governments and collect the information off their networks. The same kind of information a CIA agent in the old days would try to buy from a spy.”“So you’re talking about diplomatic stuff?”
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