China, Russia and just about every other country uses information gathered form it’s spying on America to advance their political and economic goals….
President Biden moved to pull the wraps off the hoarding of secrets of the American intelligence agencies first in the Ukraine buildup by Russia….
One can image Biden seating in briefing after breifing being told the Chinese have stolen this and that from American industry and government ….
Other countries doing the same….
It appears that he has decided that America needs to join the game…..
The openness of America helps it grow….
But is also HAS helped others….
There will be some that won’t like the government reaching out to private business in America….
But it IS more and more becoming a necessity ….
U.S. spy agencies will share more intelligence with U.S. companies, nongovernmental organizations and academia under a new strategy released this week that acknowledges concerns over new threats, such as another pandemic and increasing cyberattacks.
The National Intelligence Strategy, which sets broad goals for the sprawling U.S. intelligence community, says that spy agencies must reach beyond the traditional walls of secrecy and partner with outside groups to detect and deter supply-chain disruptions, infectious diseases and other growing transnational threats.
The intelligence community “must rethink its approach to exchanging information and insights,” the strategy says.
The U.S. government in recent years has begun sharing vast amounts of cyber-threat intelligence with U.S. companies, utilities and others who are often the main targets of foreign hackers, as well as information on foreign-influence operations with social-media companies.
The last National Intelligence Strategy was released in 2019 under the Trump administration, before the Covid-19 pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine….
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Illustrating the changing threats, a senior U.S. official said that the daily intelligence briefing prepared for President Biden and his top advisers—once dominated by terrorism and the Middle East—now regularly covers topics as varied as China’s artificial-intelligence work, the geopolitical impacts of climate change, and semiconductor chips.
The new strategy is meant to guide 18 U.S. intelligence agencies with an annual budget of about $90 billion whose work Haines coordinates.
The 16-page document, which contains no budget or program details, also says spy agencies must support the U.S. in its competition with authoritarian governments such as China and Russia, particularly in technological arenas….