Sunday, June 22, 2025
77.6 F
New York

Hegseth orders suspension of Pentagon’s offensive cyberoperations against Russia

By  LOLITA C. BALDOR and DAVID KLEPPER

Updated [hour]:[minute] [AMPM] [timezone], [monthFull] [day], [year]  

WASHINGTON (AP) — Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has paused offensive cyberoperations against Russia by U.S. Cyber Command, rolling back some efforts to contend with a key adversary even as national security experts call for the U.S. to expand those capabilities.

A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive operations, on Monday confirmed the pause.

Hegseth’s decision does not affect cyberoperations conducted by other agencies, including the CIA and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. But the Trump administration also has rolled back other efforts at the FBI and other agencies related to countering digital and cyber threats.

The Pentagon decision, which was first reported by The Record, comes as many national security and cybersecurity experts have urged greater investments in cyber defense and offense, particularly as China and Russia have sought to interfere with the nation’s economy, elections and security.

Republican lawmakers and national security experts have all called for a greater offensive posture. During his Senate confirmation hearing this year, CIA Director John Ratcliffe said America’s rivals have shown that they believe cyberespionage — retrieving sensitive information and disrupting American business and infrastructure — to be an essential weapon of the modern arsenal.

“I want us to have all of the tools necessary to go on offense against our adversaries in the cyber community,” Ratcliffe said.

Cyber Command oversees and coordinates the Pentagon’s cybersecurity work and is known as America’s first line of defense in cyberspace. It also plans offensive cyberoperations for potential use against adversaries.

Hegseth’s directive arrived before Friday’s dustup between President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in the Oval Office. It wasn’t clear if the pause was tied to any negotiating tactic by the Trump administration to push Moscow into a peace deal with Ukraine.

Trump has vowed to end the war that began when Russia invaded Ukraine three years ago, and on Monday he slammed Zelenskyy for suggesting the end to the conflict was “far away.”

The White House did not immediately respond to questions about Hegseth’s order.

Cyber warfare is cheaper than traditional military force, can be carried out covertly and doesn’t carry the same risk of escalation or retaliation, making it an increasingly popular tool for nations that want to contend with the U.S. but lack the traditional economic or military might, according to Snehal Antani, CEO of Horizon3.ai, a San Francisco-based cybersecurity firm founded by former national security officers.

Cyberespionage can allow adversaries to steal competitive secrets from American companies, obtain sensitive intelligence or disrupt supply chains or the systems that manage dams, water plants, traffic systems, private companies, governments and hospitals.

The internet has created new battlefields, too, as nations like Russia and China use disinformation and propaganda to undermine their opponents.

Artificial intelligence now makes it easier and cheaper than ever for anyone — be it a foreign nation like Russia, China or North Korea or criminal networks — to step up their cybergame at scale, Antani said. Fixing code, translating disinformation or identifying network vulnerabilities once required a human — now AI can do much of it faster.

“We are entering this era of cyber-enabled economic warfare that is at the nation-state level,” Antani said. “We’re in this really challenging era where offense is significantly better than defense, and it’s going to take a while for defense to catch up.”

Meanwhile, Attorney General Pam Bondi also has disbanded an FBI task force focused on foreign influence campaigns, like those Russia used to target U.S. elections in the past. And more than a dozen people who worked on election security at the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency were put on leave.

These actions are leaving the U.S. vulnerable despite years of evidence that Russia is committed to continuing and expanding its cyber efforts, according to Liana Keesing, campaigns manager for technology reform at Issue One, a nonprofit that has studied technology’s impact on democracy.

“Instead of confronting this threat, the Trump administration has actively taken steps to make it easier for the Kremlin to interfere in our electoral processes,” Keesing said.

Hot this week

Movie Review: Elio

Directors Adrian Molina, Madeline Sharafian and Domee Shi team...

Tom Cruise and More to Receive Honorary Oscars

Dolly Parton is also being honored by the Academy...

Movie Review: 28 Years Later

Director Danny Boyle returns to the bloody post-apocalyptic world...

Robert Eggers is Planning a Christmas Carol Adaptation

Eggers will become just the latest filmmaker to attempt...

Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow is Now Simply Supergirl

The new movie, which has Milly Alcock starring and...

Topics

Movie Review: Elio

Directors Adrian Molina, Madeline Sharafian and Domee Shi team...

Tom Cruise and More to Receive Honorary Oscars

Dolly Parton is also being honored by the Academy...

Movie Review: 28 Years Later

Director Danny Boyle returns to the bloody post-apocalyptic world...

Robert Eggers is Planning a Christmas Carol Adaptation

Eggers will become just the latest filmmaker to attempt...

Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow is Now Simply Supergirl

The new movie, which has Milly Alcock starring and...

Nicholas Galitzine Teases Masters of the Universe Costume

The movie, which Travis Knight directed, recently wrapped, and...

Matthew McConaughey to Star in New Mike Hammer Movie

The new movie will mark the reunion between the...

Tom Rhys Harries to star in DC Studios Clayface

‘Speak No Evil’ director James Watkins is overseeing the...

Related Articles

Popular Categories