By The Prowler on 3.30.09 @ 6:09AM
Pelosi none too concerned. Also: Who succeeds Robert Gates?
BREAKING AND ENTERING
Republican members of the House of Representatives weren't
surprised by the
report over the weekend that entities with ties to the
Communist Chinese government had been spying on more than 100
governments and other institutions, such as the Dalai
Lama, via a computer program.
The ChiComs and hacker organizations routinely attempt --
sometimes successfully -- to hack into House computer systems, as
well as other U.S. government institutions.
"Beyond vigilance and security, there isn't much more we can do
about it," says a House Republican member, who says that last
year colleagues' computers were hacked after they or their staffs
had met with human-rights advocates on ChiCom human rights
abuses. "It's getting now that you just expect it, and plan for
it," says the member.
Yet even though House Republicans have raised the issue with
Democrat leadership, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
has chosen not to pursue the issue with the Chinese government.
"Her position is that our national security agencies and Homeland
Security are dealing with this issue, we don't have to," says a
House Democrat leadership aide. "It's not her place."
Yet according to some House Democrats, she has chosen to insert
herself into business negotiations or business dealings between
California constituencies and the Chinese business entities, all
of which have ties in some form to the ChiCom government.
But Pelosi's soft on China's cyberterror strategy may backfire on
her. The Obama Administration is expected to announce next week
an aggressive plan to counter such hacking and data theft.
DEFENSE BUILDUP
The White House, according to sources, has already begun looking
ahead and planning for a transition period for Defense Secretary
Robert Gates, who is expected to stay on in that
post for perhaps another year to implement Obama's revised
Afghanistan strategy.
"We learned a lot from seeing how poorly the Clinton
Administration dealt with the Pentagon coming into office," says
a Defense transition team member. "And they didn't come close to
having the challenges the previous administration had and which
we were picking up. This administration wanted the military
establishment to be its friend, and we think we did a pretty good
of getting them to that point."
The man expected to replace Gates? Retired Republican Sen.
Chuck Hagel, who has been traveling around the
globe giving speeches on defense and national security policy.