U.S. lawmakers introducing legislation to “punish” foreign cyber thieves
June 5, 2013
Just ahead of U.S. President Barack Obama’s California meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping this week, a group of American lawmakers will introduce legislation aimed at imposing sanctions on foreign hackers conducting industrial espionage against the United States tomorrow.
Rep. Mike Rogers (R-TK), chair of the House intelligence committee, along with Rep. Tim Ryan (D-TK) and Sen. Ron Johnson (R-TK), will introduce legislation "that provides real consequences and punishments for nation-state cyber hackers who relentlessly prey on American cyber networks and steal millions of dollars of intellectual property each year," according to a House intel committee announcement. "Cyber hackers from nation-states like China and Russia have been aggressively targeting U.S. markets, stealing valuable intellectual property, and then repurposing it and selling it as their own."
Notice how the language of the announcment refers to state-employed or sponsored cyber theives who steal business secrets on behalf of foreign governments rather than limiting their activities to collecting diplomatic and military information — something U.S. spies say is a bridge too far.
While the announcement gives no specifics as to how the legislation will punish hackers, Rogers has shared some thoughts on how he wants to hit back at state-backed economic espionage from place like China with Killer Apps several times over the last year.
Here’s what he told Killer Apps on February 13 — a week before Mandiant published its famous report detailing the exploits of a Chinese military backed hacking crew — when asked what the United States should do to combat rampant cyberespionage coming out of China:
"This is a problem of epic proportions here, and they need to be called on the carpet. There have been absolutely no consequences for what they have been able to steal and repurpose to date." Rogers suggested that the U.S. implement trade sanctions and identify "individuals who participate in this, go after their visas, go after family travel, all of the levers we have at the Department of State. The problem is that bad."
Rogers isn’t the only public figure calling for the United States to hit back at countries that use their intelligence services to conduct economic espionage.
Just last month, former Obama administration officials Dennis Blair, who served as the administration’s first director of national intelligence, and Jon Huntsman, who served as U.S. ambassador to China from 2009 through 2011, released a report urging the U.S. government to deny foreign businesses that benefit from stolen intellectual property (IP) access to the U.S. financial system and to increase Justice Department investigations and protections of "trade secret theft." They also suggested that the protection of American intellectual property ought to be a factor when the U.S. Treasury’s Committee on Foreign Investment considers whether or not to allow a foreign business to invest in U.S. firms.