‘National Security’ Officials Who Endorsed Harris Tied To Intel Agencies, Defense Contractors
Deep State Officials Who Endorsed Harris Tied To Intel Agencies, Defense Contractors
The tenth anniversary of the Sony Pictures hack, which was centered around the Seth Rogen and James Franco comedy “The Interview,” has come around.
In the film, Rogen and Franco team up to interview North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to save their dwindling television careers.
The movie’s plot was allegedly so egregious in the eyes of the DPRK dictator that North Korean hackers breached the servers of Sony Pictures, releasing massive data dumps that included troves of emails from Sony executives like CEO Michael Lynton and co-chairman Amy Pascal.
'Typically, it’s the IT staff you have to worry about.'
It took just four days after the November 24, 2014, hack for the first report, published byRe/code, to attribute the attack to North Korean entities.
Initially, Sony received messages from a group called “God’sApstls,” littered with statements about Sony's bad business practices.
“We’ve got great damage by Sony Pictures,” the message said in broken English. “The compensation for it, monetary compensation we want. Pay the damage, or Sony Pictures will be bombarded as a whole. You know us very well. We never wait long. You’d better behave wisely.”
The God’sApstls were only referred to again in follow-up messages by a group called the Guardians of Peace.
“We’ve already warned you, and this is just a beginning. We continue till our request be met,” the other group’s message said, per Deadline. “Thanks a lot to God’sApstls contributing your great effort to peace of the world,” it added.
This is where allegations began that the hack originated from inside the Sony lot rather than a North Korean entity.
Lucas Zaichkowsky, a cybersecurity expert, remarked at the time that state-sponsored hackers typically do not adopt catchy names like Guardians of Peace.
“Attackers don't create cool names for themselves,” he stated.
Researcher Ken Heckenlively agreed, saying the hackers’ messages “sounded like what comes from a group of disgruntled employees.”
The author told Blaze News in an interview that he spoke to tech experts, cybersecurity firms, and even former members of the intelligence community, all of whom were skeptical of the official government narrative.
The author joked through a choppy internet connection that “the powers that be will not stop this information from getting out!” The feed then stabilized enough to show his book.
On the cover, a cartoon Barack Obama and Kim Jong Un fight like Godzilla and Rodan in front of a Hollywood backdrop. The subjects inside, however, are much more serious than the cover may let on.
Inside the Sony Hack: The Story Behind America’s Most Notorious Brink-of-War Cover-Up
Heckenlively explained that in 2014, several cybersecurity agencies wanted to jump into action and save the day.
He referred to cybersecurity agencies as being “like bounty hunters” who all want to play hero for the big tech companies.
Cybersecurity company Norse got the job and began its investigation in late December 2014.
"Sony had gone through a significant downsizing in [May] 2014," Heckenlively told Blaze News. “And a lot of that included IT staff. Typically, it’s the IT staff you have to worry about because they have access to your network,” he laughed.
"Pretty quickly it appeared to [Norse] that the hack was done by an insider, using this other hacker group called Lizard Squad that had previously hacked the Sony PlayStation,” Heckenlively stated, emphasizing yet another curious hacking group name.
That hack, which took place just a few months earlier in August 2014, took down the PlayStation Network, Xbox Live, and Facebook.
"That wasn't the narrative that the United States government wanted, though,” the author continued. "It was the North Koreans! It was Kim Jong Un! ... But the North Koreans didn't have the capacity to do that. The hack was done by an insider, probably with an actual physical presence on the Sony lot."
Kurt Stammberger, then senior vice president of Norse, presented his findings to the FBI. They also suggested the breach was an inside job.
“Sony was not just hacked; this is a company that was essentially nuked from the inside,” Stammberger toldCBS News. “We are very confident that this was not an attack masterminded by North Korea and that insiders were key to the implementation of one of the most devastating attacks in history.”
Stammberger posited that the security lapse likely stemmed from six disgruntled former employees who were among those laid off earlier in 2014.
But this wasn’t a case of Norse going rogue and defying the government; other cybersecurity professionals agreed with the company.
Los Angeles Times columnist Michael Hiltzik characterized the evidence implicating North Korea as “circumstantial” and noted that other experts were also “skeptical” about linking the attack to the regime.
Wired’s Kim Zetterdescribed evidence against the North Korean government as "flimsy,” while an actual hacker also doubted the North Korean connection.
Hector Monsegur, who previously hacked Sony with the group Anonymous, said that the latest attack on the company happened way too fast.
“For something like this to happen, it had to happen over a long period of time. You cannot just exfiltrate one terabyte or 100 terabytes of data in a matter of weeks,” he toldCBS News.
Monsegur doubted North Korea's capability to manage such a transfer due to its limited internet infrastructure. He also suggested that the attack could have been executed by hackers sponsored by China, Russia, or North Korea, but he leaned toward the possibility that it was an inside job by a Sony employee.
Critics have long pointed to a possible cover-up by U.S. intelligence agencies; a lack of direct evidence implicating the North Koreans has only strengthened those claims.
By most accounts, it took seven to nine days after the hack for the reticle to be placed over North Korea as the perpetrator. According to theHollywood Reporter, it took just 25 days for the FBI to label Guardians of Peace as acting on behalf of the North Korean government.
The reasons for an alleged cover-up were numerous but not unending.
One possible reason was the reauthorization of the Corporate Terrorism Risk Program. The federal program provides compensation to companies that have suffered losses due to terrorist acts.
The “temporary federal program,” which began after 9/11, was reauthorized in January 2015, just two months after the Sony hack. It has been renewed twice and remains in place through December 31, 2027.
According to the program’s 2024 report, the program has paid out $56.7 billion in premiums to insurance companies between 2003 and 2023.
Heckenlively’s most lucid explanation was regarding another possible reason for a cover-up: to drum up conflict between North Korea and the United States, which would have benefitted the military/intelligence contractor Rand Corporation.
Sony’s connections to that organization were through former studio head Lynton, who was on the Rand board of trustees at the time, as revealed by emails in the data dump.
“Lynton's father was in British intelligence and served on the board of directors for Rand Corporation,” Heckenlively stressed. “As did [Amy] Pascal's father.”
Contacts between Lynton and Rand showed that the organization wanted to invite stars like George Clooney to events and showed Lynton offering a contract to Barack Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett.
Simply put, executives on the Sony lot were deeply tied to those with direct connections to the federal government.
'I came away thinking he was a pretty good guy, that he wanted to know the truth.'
The collusion allegedly started when Rogen and his writing partner, Evan Goldberg, submitted “The Interview” as a script.
“The movie was originally meant to be about an unnamed, ambiguous [leader], much like Sacha Baron Cohen's movie ‘The Dictator,’” Heckenlively explained. “But at some point in development, a Sony executive suggests that Kim Jong Un be made the antagonist of the film.”
When asked if Rogen would have known about a connection between Sony and Rand as the reason for the change, Heckenlively pointed to remarks the actor made in 2019 to the Hollywood Reporter.
Rogen said at the time that the fact North Korean entities never targeted him, and that “raised suspicions in [his] head.”
“That didn’t seem like North Korea’s MO. That seemed more like young, amateurish hackers than a foreign government launching a systematic attack on another country,” he said.
After suggesting that North Korea could have been used as a cover story, Rogen added, “It would be nice to know the truth.”
“I don’t think I would feel drastically different on a personal level if it was or wasn’t North Korea. I do think other people would probably feel vindicated,” he concluded.
Heckenlively made it a point to get across the fact that through all his research, he was pleasantly surprised by the way Rogen handled the ordeal.
“I came away thinking he was a pretty good guy, that he wanted to know the truth,” Heckenlively said.
The author smiled at the idea that someone in Hollywood was interested in knowing the truth.
In the end, Heckenlively came to a simple conclusion: Intelligence agencies are working with movie studios to create entertainment pieces that will be provocative and serve a certain agenda.
Whether that is foreign-policy-based or to push specific legislation, government agencies may have their hooks even deeper into Hollywood than the common person realizes.
A Pentagon-funded study has highlighted how geriatric government officials' mental degeneration could pose a risk to national and global security.
The RAND Corporation's National Security Research Division noted in a report published earlier this year that as a consequence of people living longer and working later in life, "the workforce might experience a higher prevalence of dementia than in past generations."
"Taken together, we believe that an increasing number of cleared personnel — that is, personnel who hold or have held security clearances — have or will have dementia," concluded the RAND researchers.
The Mayo Clinic indicated that age is a major risk factor for dementia, with the risk rising dramatically after age 65.
According to the report, 45% of the federal workforce is over the age of 50 and 15% of all non-season full-time permanent federal civilian employees are retirement-eligible.
A great many individuals presently progressing away from the mean might soon begin experiencing "difficulty remembering new information, poor judgment, impulsivity, disorientation, and behavioral changes."
In other words, they might join the over 55 million persons worldwide who the World Health Organization indicated presently suffer from dementia worldwide, the majority of whom are believed to specifically have Alzheimer's disease.
Whereas with some sufferers, the pain of mental deterioration may be localized, a demented person in the national security workforce could wreak havoc on the global stage should they misplace or volunteer sensitive information.
"The risk that an individual becomes a national security threat because of dementia symptoms depends on many factors, such as the nature of the classified information they hold, for how long the unauthorized disclosure of that information could cause damage (including serious or exceptionally grave damage), and whether the individual is targeted by an adversary," said the report.
A nonthreatening case would be a geriatric with early-stage dementia who has committed to writing everything down in an unsecured notebook. If the notes do not pertain to damaging classified knowledge, then the targeting of the individual and theft of the notebook by bad actors, though embarrassing, would not be the end of the world.
However, if a retired senior intelligence official around Biden's age began divulging the classified details of covert surveillance and other missions they had previously been involved in — perhaps to people in a nursing home — then extant operations, diplomatic efforts, and more could ultimately be compromised.
The RAND researchers stressed the importance of codifying processes by which current and past security clearance holders could be checked for dementia risks, particularly those who have dealt with top secret materials in the past.
Among their more "extreme" prescriptions for handling what they figure will be a worsening problem, the researchers recommended monitoring at-risk personnel based on predictive models; assessing environmental threats to determine the likelihood of bad actors eliciting classified intelligence; conducting cognitive testing; and implementing additional monitoring systems."
Since "workplace protections to prevent ageism and Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act protections for health information" might get in the way, priority should be "to protect the most-valuable assets."
This research is especially timely given that President Joe Biden, who became the oldest individual to ever take the White House three years ago, is running for re-election in 2024, possibly against a Republican opponent only three years his junior.
Biden routinely exhibits signs of cognitive breakdown — tripping over nothing, mistaking his sister for his wife, repeatedly confusing the names of disparate nations, and relying upon cue cards for instructions on how to execute basic functions.
A number of Biden's apparent blunders would also qualify as symptoms of dementia.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, people with dementia have problems with memory; attention; communication; reasoning, judgment, and problem solving; and visual perception beyond typical age-related changes in vision.
Forgetting a family member's name and not being able to complete tasks independently are among the signs of dementia highlighted by the CDC.
Biden is not, however, the only politician in Washington who appears to be struggling with his duties partly as a consequence of his advanced age.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), 90, asked "Where am I going?" as she was wheeled back into the Senate in May after suffering a bout of shingles, which appears to have paralyzed more than just certain parts of her face. Her handlers have made sure to coach Feinstein on how to help shape American legislative history, in one instance audibly telling her during a vote, "Just say aye."
The problem of degenerating gerontocrats is also not a problem limited to one party.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has on more than one occasion frozen in public. His most recent episode prompted Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), an ophthalmologist, to suggest the issue "looks like a focal, neurological event."
Newsweek reported that the 118th U.S. Congress is older than any in American history. Whereas the average voter in the U.S. is 50 years old, the average age of Democratic senators is 65 and the average age of Republican senators is 63.
"Between now and 2040, the senior population is projected to swell by 44 percent, while the 18-to-64 population grows by just 6 percent. And many of those elders will have no qualms about keeping older politicians in office," journalist William J. Kole, author of "The Big 100: The New World of Super-Aging," told Newsweek. "Older Americans' lock on higher office is only going to intensify as the Baby Boomers age into their 100s."
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