miércoles, 16 de mayo de 2018


Wednesday, May 16, 2018
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Threat Report 2018: North Korea’s Nuclear Doctrine



Photo: iStock.com/alexkuehni

Months of fruitful engagement between North Korea, South Korea and the United States could soon turn sour. Yesterday, Pyongyang warned that ongoing joint military exercises and aggressive statements made by the Trump administration were damaging the diplomatic atmosphere. The regime canceled upcoming talks scheduled with South Korea, and threatened to pull out of the Trump-Kim summit, slated for June 12.

Today’s brief looks at the history of U.S.-North Korea negotiations, and the latter’s nuclear program, with insight into the regime’s end goals and what it may—and may not—be willing to put on the table.
  • Talks between U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un are tentatively scheduled for June 2018, which may open the door to resolve a tense nuclear standoff between Washington and Pyongyang. However, past efforts to strike a deal have failed to deliver lasting results and the two sides could face another missed opportunity for nonviolent reconciliation.
     
  • North Korea’s leadership has pursued nuclear weapons as a sign of domestic and international legitimacy as well as to deter other countries, namely the U.S., from contemplating military operations aimed at facilitating regime change.
     
  • To date, the U.S. has engaged in four major sets of formal negotiations with North Korea to address the ongoing nuclear and ballistic missile crises. However, while the two sides have managed to find common ground in previous talks and reach tentative agreements, the end result has remained the same with North Korea continuing to develop its nuclear arsenal and the U.S. left searching for answers short of direct military confrontation.
Read today's brief.

For more information on The Cipher Brief's 2018 Annual Threat Report, click here.



Terrorism and the Future Lone Wolf Threat in America


Terrorist tactics are constantly evolving, and counterterrorism must evolve along with it. Just last month, the Washington Post reported that TSA is adjusting its methods as terrorists turn increasingly toward lone wolf terror attacks.

On the heels of last weekend’s deadly lone wolf attacks in France and Indonesia, The Cipher Brief talked with Carol Rollie Flynn,
former Associate Director of the CIA’s National Counterterrorism Center, about how the terrorism landscape continues to evolve and how to think about the future threat posed by lone wolf attackers here in the U.S..
  • "In contrast to Europe, the U.S. has fortunately not had to deal with the large number of ISIS returnees. ISIS has found France, in particular, to be a fruitful recruiting ground because of the large Muslim French-speaking diaspora, many of whom are French citizens but still not fully integrated into the French society and economy."
     
  • "Preventing these types of attacks is very, very hard because the tools of law enforcement and the IC to detect and pre-empt attacks don’t work if the terrorist is not connected in any detectible way to a known terrorist or terrorist group."
     
  • "Open information networks, such as the Internet and the Dark Web, also enable lone individuals or small groups to gain greater access to weapons and know-how to perpetrate attacks, including WMD or cyber attacks. This could become a greater threat as these lone individuals are able to develop increasingly more sophisticated capabilities and approaches….and to do so without detection by intelligence or law enforcement."
Read more from Flynn on lone wolf terror attacks.

Newsletter by Cipher Brief Content Manager Brian Garrett-Glaser. Please send comments to POV@thecipherbrief.com, and questions to info@thecipherbrief.com.


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