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Richard Clarke's take:

“The U.S. government is involved in espionage against other governments,” he says flatly. “There’s a big difference, however, between the kind of cyberespionage the United States government does and China. The U.S. government doesn’t hack its way into Airbus and give Airbus the secrets to Boeing [many believe that Chinese hackers gave Boeing secrets to Airbus]. We don’t hack our way into a Chinese computer company like Huawei and provide the secrets of Huawei technology to their American competitor Cisco. [He believes Microsoft, too, was a victim of a Chinese cyber con game.] We don’t do that.”

“What do we do then?”

“We hack our way into foreign governments and collect the information off their networks. The same kind of information a CIA agent in the old days would try to buy from a spy.”

“So you’re talking about diplomatic stuff?”

“Diplomatic, military stuff but not commercial competitor stuff.”

-- http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/Richard-Cl...

(Note: He's talking about the US government, not about any other US-based entities.)



Other countries have been using government resources for commercial espionage for decades. It's disingenuous for Clarke to feign outrage over this.

I remember in the early 90s it was revealed that the French Intelligence had bugged Business-Class seats in Air France, and were passing commercial secrets to French companies: http://www.chron.com/CDA/archives/archive.mpl/1992_1089133/i...


The interview was focused on just the US and China. I'm not sure you can conclude that Clarke wasn't pissed about the French spying as well.




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