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up next: Documenting Russian War Crimes in Ukraine: AP, Frontline PBS
now reading: Hidden Over 2 Years: Dem Cyber-Firm's Sworn Testimony It Had No
Proof of Russian Hack of DNC



HIDDEN OVER 2 YEARS: DEM CYBER-FIRM'S SWORN TESTIMONY IT HAD NO PROOF OF RUSSIAN
HACK OF DNC

By Aaron Mate, RealClearInvestigations
May 13, 2020
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CrowdStrike, the private cyber-security firm that first accused Russia of
hacking Democratic Party emails and served as a critical source for U.S.
intelligence officials in the years-long Trump-Russia probe, acknowledged to
Congress more than two years ago that it had no concrete evidence that Russian
hackers stole emails from the Democratic National Committee’s server.

Crowdstrike President Shawn Henry: "We just don’t have the evidence ..."
Crowdstrike.com



CrowdStrike President Shawn Henry's admission under oath,  in a recently
declassified December 2017 interview before the House Intelligence Committee,
raises new questions about whether Special Counsel Robert Mueller, intelligence
officials and Democrats misled the public. The allegation that Russia stole
Democratic Party emails from Hillary Clinton, John Podesta and others and then
passed them to WikiLeaks helped trigger the FBI's probe into now debunked claims
of a conspiracy between the Trump campaign and Russia to steal the 2016
election. The CrowdStrike admissions were released just two months after the
Justice Department retreated from its its other central claim that Russia
meddled in the 2016 election when it dropped charges against Russian troll farms
it said had been trying to get Trump elected.

Henry personally led the remediation and forensics analysis of the DNC server
after being warned of a breach in late April 2016; his work was paid for by the
DNC, which refused to turn over its server to the FBI. Asked for the date when
alleged Russian hackers stole data from the DNC server, Henry testified that
CrowdStrike did not in fact know if such a theft occurred at all: "We did not
have concrete evidence that the data was exfiltrated [moved electronically] from
the DNC, but we have indicators that it was exfiltrated," Henry said.

Henry reiterated his claim on multiple occasions: 

 * "There are times when we can see data exfiltrated, and we can say
   conclusively. But in this case it appears it was set up to be exfiltrated,
   but we just don’t have the evidence that says it actually left."

 * "There’s not evidence that they were actually exfiltrated. There's
   circumstantial evidence but no evidence that they were actually exfiltrated."

 * "There is circumstantial evidence that that data was exfiltrated off the
   network. … We didn't have a sensor in place that saw data leave. We said that
   the data left based on the circumstantial evidence. That was the conclusion
   that we made."

 * "Sir, I was just trying to be factually accurate, that we didn't see the data
   leave, but we believe it left, based on what we saw."
 * Asked directly if he could "unequivocally say" whether "it was or was not
   exfiltrated out of DNC," Henry told the committee: "I can't say based on
   that." 

Rep. Adam Schiff: Democrat held up interview transcripts, but finally relented
after acting intel director Richard Grenell suggested he would release them
himself.
(Senate Television via AP)



In a later exchange with Republican Rep. Chris Stewart of Utah, Henry offered an
explanation of how Russian agents could have obtained the emails without any
digital trace of them leaving the server. The CrowdStrike president speculated
that Russian agents might have taken "screenshots" in real time. "[If] somebody
was monitoring an email server, they could read all the email," Henry said. "And
there might not be evidence of it being exfiltrated, but they would have
knowledge of what was in the email. … There would be ways to copy it. You could
take screenshots." 

Henry’s 2017 testimony that there was no “concrete evidence” that the emails
were stolen electronically suggests that Mueller may have been misleading in his
2019 final report. The report stated that Russian intelligence "appears to have
compressed and exfiltrated over 70 gigabytes of data" and agents "appear to have
stolen thousands of emails and attachments" from Democratic Congressional
Campaign Committee and DNC servers, respectively. It also suggests that the DNC
emails were transferred to a server in Illinois controlled by the Russian
intelligence service GRU. But in addition to including the qualifier "appear,"
Mueller's source for the Illinois server claim is redacted. That leaves
CrowdStrike, to date, as U.S. intelligence officials’ primary, publicly known
source for its confident claims about Russian hacking.

The stolen emails, which were published by Wikileaks – whose founder, Julian
Assange has long denied they came from Russia – were embarrassing to the party
because, among other things, they showed the DNC had favored Clinton during her
2016 primary battles against Sen. Bernie Sanders for the presidential
nomination. The DNC eventually issued an apology to Sanders and his supporters
"for the inexcusable remarks made over email." The DNC hack was separate from
the FBI’s investigation of Clinton’s use of a private server while serving as
President Obama’s Secretary of State. 

The disclosure that CrowdStrike found no evidence that alleged Russian hackers
exfiltrated any data from the DNC server raises a critical question: On what
basis, then, did it accuse them of stealing the emails? Further, on what basis
did Obama administration officials make far more forceful claims about Russian
hacking?

Michael Sussmann: This lawyer at Perkins Coie hired CrowdStrike to investigate
the DNC breach. He was also involved with  Fusion GPS and Christopher Steele in
producing the discredited Steele dossier.
perkinscoie.com



 The January 2017 Intelligence Community Assessment (ICA), which formally
accused Russia of a sweeping influence campaign involving the theft of
Democratic emails, claimed the Russian intelligence service "exfiltrated large
volumes of data from the DNC." A July 2018 indictment claimed that GRU officers
"stole thousands of emails from the work accounts of DNC employees."

According to everyone concerned, the cyber-firm played a critical role in the
FBI's investigation of the DNC data theft. Henry told the panel that CrowdStrike
"shared intelligence with the FBI" on a regular basis, making "contact with them
over a hundred times in the course of many months." In congressional testimony
that same year, former FBI Director James Comey acknowledged that the FBI "never
got direct access to the machines themselves," and instead relied on
CrowdStrike, which "shared with us their forensics from their review of the
system." According to Comey, the FBI would have preferred direct access to the
server, and made "multiple requests at different levels," to obtain it. But
after being rebuffed, "ultimately it was agreed to… [CrowdStrike] would share
with us what they saw."

Henry’s testimony seems at variance with Comey’s suggestion of complete
information sharing. He told Congress that CrowdStrike provided "a couple of
actual digital images" of DNC hard drives, out of a total number of "in excess
of 10, I think." In other cases, Henry said, CrowdStrike provided its own
assessment of them. The firm, he said, provided "the results of our analysis
based on what our technology went out and collected." This disclosure follows
revelations from the case of Trump operative Roger Stone that CrowdStrike
provided three reports to the FBI in redacted and draft form. According to
federal prosecutors, the government never obtained CrowdStrike's unredacted
reports.

CrowdStrike's newy disclosed admissions raise new questions about whether
Special Counsel Robert Mueller (above), intelligence officials and Democrats
misled the public.
AP Photo/Susan Walsh



There are no indications that the Mueller team accessed any additional
information beyond what CrowdStrike provided. According to the Mueller report,
"the FBI later received images of DNC servers and copies of relevant traffic
logs." But if the FBI obtained only "copies" of data traffic – and not any new
evidence -- those copies would have shown the same absence of "concrete
evidence" that Henry admitted to.

Adding to the tenuous evidence is CrowdStrike's own lack of certainty that the
hackers it identified inside the DNC server were indeed Russian government
actors. Henry's explanation for his firm's attribution of the DNC hack to Russia
is replete with inferences and assumptions that lead to "beliefs," not
unequivocal conclusions.  "There are other nation-states that collect this type
of intelligence for sure," Henry said, "but what we would call the tactics and
techniques were consistent with what we'd seen associated with the Russian
state." In its investigation, Henry said, CrowdStrike "saw activity that we
believed was consistent with activity we'd seen previously and had associated
with the Russian Government. …  We said that we had a high degree of confidence
it was the Russian Government."

But CrowdStrike was forced to retract a similar accusation months after it
accused Russia in December 2016 of hacking the Ukrainian military, with the same
software that the firm had claimed to identify inside the DNC server. 

The firm's work with the DNC and FBI is also colored by partisan affiliations.
Before joining CrowdStrike, Henry served as executive assistant director at the
FBI under Mueller. Co-founder Dmitri Alperovitch is a vocal critic of Vladimir
Putin and a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, the pro-NATO think tank that
has consistently promoted an aggressive policy toward Russia. And the newly
released testimony confirms that CrowdStrike was hired to investigate the DNC
breach by Michael Sussmann of Perkins Coie – the same Democratic-tied law firm
that hired Fusion GPS to produce the discredited Steele dossier, which was also
treated as central evidence in the investigation. Sussmann played a critical
role in generating the Trump-Russia collusion allegation. Ex-British spy and
dossier compiler Christopher Steele has testified in British court that Sussmann
shared with him the now-debunked Alfa Bank server theory, alleging a clandestine
communication channel between the bank and the Trump Organization.

Henry’s recently released testimony does not mean that Russia did not hack the
DNC. What it does make clear is that Obama administration officials, the DNC and
others have misled the public by presenting as fact information that they knew
was uncertain.  The fact that the Democratic Party employed the two private
firms that generated the core allegations at the heart of Russiagate -- Russian
email hacking and Trump-Russia collusion – suggests that the federal
investigation was compromised from the start.

The 2017 Henry transcript was one of dozens just released after a lengthy
dispute. In September 2018, the Republican-controlled House Intelligence
Committee unanimously voted to release witness interview transcripts and sent
them to the U.S. intelligence community for declassification review. In March
2019, months after Democrats won House control, Rep. Adam Schiff ordered the
Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) to withhold the
transcripts from White House lawyers seeking to review them for executive
privilege. Schiff also refused to release vetted transcripts, but finally
relented after acting ODNI Director Richard Grenell suggested this month that he
would release them himself.

Several transcripts, including the interviews of former CIA Director John
Brennan and Comey, remain unreleased. And in light of the newly disclosed
Crowdstrike testimony, another secret document from the House proceedings takes
on urgency for public viewing. According to Henry, Crowdstrike also provided the
House Intelligence Committee with a copy of its report on the DNC email theft. 



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