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NSA, CIA senior officials address artificial intelligence threats and … – intelNews.org

October 2, 2023 by Joseph Fitsanakis

LAST WEEK, TWO SENIOR UNITED States intelligence officials shared rare insights on artificial intelligence, as they discussed some of the opportunities and threats of this new technological paradigm for their agencies. On Wednesday, Lakshmi Raman, Director of Artificial Intelligence at the Central Intelligence Agency, addressed the topic during an on-stage interview at Politicos AI & Tech Summit in Washington, DC. On Thursday, the National Security Agencys outgoing director, Army General Paul Nakasone, discussed the same subject at the National Press Clubs Headliners Luncheon in the US capital.

Nakasone (pictured) noted in his remarks that the US Intelligence Community, as well as the Department of Defense, have been using artificial intelligence for quite some time. Thus, artificial intelligence systems are already integral in managing and analyzing information on a daily basis. In doing so, such systems contribute in important ways to the decision-making by the NSAs human personnel. At the same time, the NSA has been using artificial intelligence to develop and define best-practices guidelines and principles for intelligence methodologies and evaluation.

Currently, the United States maintains a clear advantage in artificial intelligence over is adversaries, Nakasone said. However, that advantage should not be taken for granted. As artificial intelligence organizational principles are increasingly integrated into the day-to-day functions of the intelligence and security enterprise, new risks are emerging by that very use. For this reason, the NSA has launched its new Artificial Intelligence Security Center within its existing Cybersecurity Collaboration Center. The mission of the Cybersecurity Collaboration Center is to develop links with the private sector in the US and its partner nations to secure emerging technologies and harden the US Defense Industrial Base.

Nakasone added that the decision to create the Artificial Intelligence Security Center resulted from an NSA study, which alerted officials to the national security challenges stemming from adversarial attacks against the artificial intelligence models that are currently in use. These attacks, focusing on sabotage or theft of critical artificial intelligence technologies, could originate from other generative artificial intelligence technologies that are under the command of adversarial actors.

Last Wednesday, the CIAs Raman discussed some of the ways that artificial intelligence is currently being put to use by her agency to improve its analytical and operational capabilities. Raman noted that the CIA is developing an artificial intelligence chatbot, which is meant to help its analysts refine their research and analytical writing capabilities. Additionally, artificial intelligence systems are being used to analyze quantities of collected data that are too large for human analysts to manage. By devoting artificial intelligence resources to the relatively menial and low-level tasks of data-sifting and sorting, the CIA enables its analysts to dedicate more time to strategic-level products.

At the same time, however, the CIA is concerned about the rapid development of artificial intelligence by nations such as China and Russia, Raman said. New capabilities in artificial intelligence, especially the generative kind, will inevitably provide US adversaries with tools and capabilities that will challenge American national security in the coming years, she concluded.

Author: Joseph Fitsanakis | Date: 02 October 2023 | Permalink

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Food must be at the centre of environmental policy decisions NSA – Meat Management

Posted on Oct 3, 2023

NSA Scottish Region, the Scottish branch of the National Sheep Association (NSA), has welcomed the Agriculture and Rural Communities (Scotland) Bill; but stressed that policymakers must keep the priorities of food and farming sectors at the heart of decision-making.

The trade body also approved of the Scottish Governments approach to enabling low carbon, efficient, productive, resilient farming businesses but hoped that, as the detail of the bill becomes clearer, it is not the case that policymakers have been blinded by low carbon only.

The NSA added that it hopes Government will recognise that food production will never be emission-free.

Grace Reid, NSA Scottish Region coordinator, said: NSA Scottish Region is keen to see a farm approach that recognises that agricultural businesses plan years ahead. The direction of policy and future support schemes need to be transparent, so sheep farmers know what is coming in the long-term and feel appreciated for the critical work they carry out on a daily basis.

Businesses have had to operate in the dark while we wait for this bill and we need transparency and a clear sense of direction as we proceed from here.

We have a duty to protect the positive practices in which our flocks already deliver for the wider environment and, therefore, society as a whole. Keeping food and farming at the centre of all future policy decisions is imperative, ensuring the environment is prioritised through farming rather than replacing it.

Reid said: Our future generations will look back at this opportunity to change legislation and it is vital we do not compromise their ability to deliver sustainable food production, enhance the resilience of farming practices and meet environmental and climate change goals.

A key priority for NSA Scottish Region when considering the newly published bill is that all implemented powers and policy are fair, simplistic, easy to understand and have a practical approach.

Reid continued: Following the two Scottish Government consultations, which NSA Scottish Region responded to in full, we will now begin to look in detail at what is included within this bill and engage with our sheep farming members on its content.

I urge all members to take part in the next phase of public participation, which has promised to provide a way to help design and develop the new framework included within the Agricultural Reform Programme. Topics such as changes to the 2025 Basic Payment Scheme, Whole Farm Plan, regions and measures are to be covered.

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Food must be at the centre of environmental policy decisions NSA - Meat Management

Iraq-Turkey Pipeline: Will Be Ready to Resume This Week, Says Energy Minister – Bloomberg

  1. Iraq-Turkey Pipeline: Will Be Ready to Resume This Week, Says Energy Minister  Bloomberg
  2. Turkey says to re-start operations of Iraq oil pipeline this week  Reuters
  3. The Critical Role Of Iraq In A New Global Natural Gas Game  OilPrice.com

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Iraq-Turkey Pipeline: Will Be Ready to Resume This Week, Says Energy Minister - Bloomberg

Iraq’s persistent fault line: The dangers of escalating tensions in Kirkuk – European Council on Foreign Relations

For the past century, Kirkuk has been the site of ethnic tension. Particularly since the 2003 US invasion of Iraq, control of the disputed oil-rich province which is populated by Kurds, Arabs, and Turkmen has been one of the countrys most contentious and destabilising issues. The semi-autonomous region of Iraqi Kurdistan, led by the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), asserts that Kirkuk should be part of its jurisdiction and claimed de facto control from 2014 to 2017. Meanwhile, the Iraqi constitution stipulates that Kirkuks status will be determined by a referendum after a census is held but this is yet to happen. Instead, after the Kurdistan Democratic Partys (KDP) failed independence referendum in September 2017, the central government placed Kirkuk under its direct control.

But hostilities have recently escalated following a shock decision last month by Iraqi prime minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani to allow the KDP to resume control of their political offices and military base in Kirkuk city. Sudanis decision sparked protests from Arab and Turkmen residents, which, in turn, led to counter-protests by Kurdish residents. Four people were killed in the unrest, prompting the Federal Supreme Court to pause its implementation. These events underscore the risks of Kirkuks unresolved status, which could be exacerbated by upcoming provincial elections in December and spread tensions to neighbouring Turkey and Iran who have Kurdish populations further heightening regional instability.

The events in Kirkuk echo the ethnic divisions that can immobilise Iraq a country governed by a complex network of alliances that Sudani must navigate to keep his coalition government afloat. Although Kirkuk has been the Achilles heel of every Iraqi leader since 2003, the federal government had, until recently, managed to avoid any large escalations in tensions since taking back control from the KRG in 2017. Sudanis relatively effective handling of the countrys challenges, coupled with the dramatic weakening of the KDP since their ill-fated 2017 referendum, made his decision to permit the KDP to return to Kirkuk, and thus rock the boat, unexpected.

Sudanis weak positioning appears to have been driven by the necessity of balancing his fragmented coalition government. Contrary to the prevailing myth that the prime minister is only beholden to the Shia parties (and by extension Iran), he faces pressure from all parties that helped form the coalition government, including Kurdish parties. Sudani has since explained that he was simply implementing one of this coalitions agreements, but its Arab parties, sensing the KDPs weakness, are now unwilling to support the move.

This recent Kirkuk debacle was a clear mistake for a seasoned politician like Sudani. The deaths of four citizens in clashes between Kurdish protesters and security forces were avoidable. It was a costly error that predictably provoked his Arab coalition allies who have long sought to cement federal government control over Kirkuk. Observers assumed that Sudanis tenure would be challenged by the disgruntled Muqtada al-Sadr, or by new protests related to demand for public sector employment, or electricity outages in the summer. But they did not expect him to be challenged by the reignition of ethnic divisions in Kirkuk which Sudani appears to have unwittingly brought upon himself.

While Kirkuk remains contested, risks of destabilisation will continue to hang over Iraq and the Sudani government. Although the prime minister has done well to hold his government together and steer Iraq through ongoing challenges, the reality is that profound questions such as the fate of Kirkuk and the relationship between Baghdad and the KRG remain unaddressed.

For Baghdad, there is a belief that if Kirkuk were to join Iraqi Kurdistan, it would be somehow leaving Iraq. For the KRG, incorporating Kirkuk would re-start their desired process of independence. Both beliefs are misplaced because whether Kirkuk remains a standalone governorate, becomes a region on its own, or joins the pre-existing region of Iraqi Kurdistan, it is part of a consolidated federal Iraqi state. Iraqs political actors should not treat Kirkuk as a zero-sum game. Instead, they need to recognise that its status should be chosen by its citizens via a referendum, as set out in the Iraqi constitution.

Kirkuks unresolved status is a looming disruptor of Baghdad and KRG relations. Even if it is not the crisis of the hour, it is always a hotbed of tension and one ripe for political exploitation.

But for now, Kirkuks unresolved status is a looming disruptor of Baghdad and KRG relations. Even if it is not the crisis of the hour, it is always a hotbed of tension and one ripe for political exploitation. Firstly, while the announcement that Kirkuk will take part in the provincial elections in December its first since 2005 is a small step towards a representative pathway forward, there is a danger that political parties will continue to use the recent events to mobilise their voter base and further fuel polarisation and ethnic tensions. This would only heighten the security threat from Islamic State group (ISIS) sleeper cells who frequently exploit such situations. Secondly, these recent events have exposed a weakness in Sudanis ability to harmonise the divisions in his coalition, increasing the fragility of the Sudani government. Lastly, as tensions between Baghdad and the KRG intensify, it leaves Iraqi Kurdistan vulnerable to meddling by Turkey and Iran, who worry that the Kirkuks sentiment for independence would spread to their own Kurdish population. For example, they have already intervened militarily in northern Iraq against their own Kurdish opposition present there.

Thus, any further escalation in tensions in Kirkuk may have destabilising effects across the region and beyond. European foreign ministries and their missions in Iraq must leverage their democracy-promoting projects to emphasise to Iraqi politicians that their parties are partners of a coalition government and of a federal state that requires commitment to democratic federalism. Without social harmony amongst Iraqs diverse ethnic populations, the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS and the NATO Mission Iraq, along with other European missions, will never achieve their goal.

Though Kirkuk is one province, it represents a regional fault line that can create instability throughout the Middle East. Until now, Sudani has continued to improve relations with neighbours since assuming power, despite having to navigate the internal divisions of his coalition government. However, this juggling act is made more difficult and more precarious when addressing legacy issues like Kirkuk. While a domestic and sensitive issue, European missions should help create the conditions for a solution by reiterating their support for Iraqi federalism and democracy. This can ease fears over Kirkuks status within the Iraqi state, calm relations with neighbouring Turkey and Iran, and prevent harming the security operations of the Global Coalition and the NATO Mission Iraq. This will then allow all three possible scenarios for Kirkuks future to be on equal footing before a status is chosen by the citizens of Kirkuk, via a referendum held by local government as per the Iraqi constitution.

The European Council on Foreign Relations does not take collective positions. ECFR publications only represent the views of their individual authors.

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Iraq's persistent fault line: The dangers of escalating tensions in Kirkuk - European Council on Foreign Relations

In Iraq, the Hashd calls the shots, by Adel Bakawan – Le Monde diplomatique – English edition

Saraya al-Salam jihadists in clashes with Iraqi security forces, Baghdad, 30 August 2022

Ahmad al-Rubaye AFP Getty

When ISIS fighters took Mosul, Iraqs second city, on 10 June 2014, the nation suffered a collective shock. The army, anti-terrorism forces, police and other national security bodies had proved unable to defeat a few hundred jihadists and, as state forces retreated, they left behind tonnes of military equipment that was picked up by the Sunni-affiliated Daesh (ISIS) fighters. It was experienced as a national disaster, creating a widespread sense of panic and humiliation.

Three days after Mosul fell, Ali al-Sistani, the highest religious authority in Najaf the heart of Iraqi Shiism issued a fatwa calling for a popular military mobilisation against ISIS.

In response, thousands of young volunteers who would never have considered signing up to Iraqs discredited army joined new or existing militias. To keep control of these diverse militias, the government created a body called the Hashd al-Shaabi (Popular Mobilisation Committees). Some Iraqi politicians were soon calling it the new Republican Guard, a reference to Saddam Husseins elite corps. The Hashd played a crucial role in defeating ISIS and its influence still largely shapes Iraqi politics.

The militias, united under one banner, have expanded their operations beyond fighting ISIS and its affiliates. Its indicative of the Hashds growing importance that in July 2023 the government budget recorded its headcount as 238,075 (compared to 122,000 in 2021) or 6% of the civil service, with a payroll of around $2.65bn (1.8% of the total national budget). By way of comparison, the army has a staff of 454,000 and the interior ministry 700,000. Understanding how a paramilitary outfit reached such a size and got to have such a significant impact on public finances entails tracing the evolution of post-Saddam Iraq.

For the authorities that took over after Saddam was removed from power on 9 April 2003, the Hashd was a guarantor of survival, much like the Pasdaran who defend Irans Islamic(...)

Full article:1338words.

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