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NEWS RELEASE

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Feb. 10, 2020

 

NCSC Unveils the National Counterintelligence Strategy of the U.S. 2020-2022

 

The National Counterintelligence and Security Center (NCSC) today unveiled the National Counterintelligence Strategy of the United States of America 2020-2022, outlining a new approach to counterintelligence to address threats that have evolved significantly since the last strategy in 2016.

 

“Today’s strategy represents a paradigm shift in addressing foreign intelligence threats as a nation. While past counterintelligence strategies categorized the threat by our top foreign nation-state adversaries, this one focuses on five key areas where foreign intelligence entities are hitting us hardest and where we need to devote greater attention – critical infrastructure, key U.S. supply chains, the U.S. economy, American democratic institutions, and cyber and technical operations,” said NCSC Director William Evanina.

 

“With the private sector and democratic institutions increasingly under attack, this is no longer a problem the U.S. Government can address alone. It requires a whole-of-society response involving the private sector, an informed American public, as well as our allies,” Director Evanina added.

 

According to the strategy, which was signed by President Trump on January 7, 2020 and is available at www.ncsc.gov, three principal trends characterize today’s counterintelligence threat landscape.

 

To anticipate and deter these threats, the U.S. Government will continue to address its fundamental counterintelligence missions. These include countering foreign intelligence activities in the U.S., mitigating insider threats, protecting U.S. sensitive and classified information as well as sensitive facilities from technical penetrations or espionage, and countering assassination attempts by foreign intelligence services.

 

However, the 2020-2022 strategy goes beyond these traditional government-centric missions to focus on critical infrastructure, key U.S. supply chains, the U.S. economy, American democratic institutions, and cyber and technical operations. It is in these areas where the strategy says investment in capabilities and resources are required to strengthen national security.

 

The strategy’s five strategic objectives, all equally important, are:

 

The strategy recognizes the U.S. Government cannot address these challenges alone and calls for a whole-of-society approach that fully integrates the assistance of the private sector, an informed public, as well as foreign allies. Sound counterintelligence and security procedures must become part of everyday American business practices. Implementing the strategy will require partnerships, information sharing, and innovation across public and private sectors.

 

The strategy also makes clear that the U.S. must leverage all instruments of American power, including offensive and defensive counterintelligence measures, to meet these increasing challenges. Federal departments and agencies must align their plans to the five key objectives in the strategy, identify resource requirements and evaluate their performance against the strategy’s five objectives.

 

NCSC is a center within the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.NCSC is the nation’s premier source for advancing counterintelligence and security expertise and a trusted mission partner in protecting America against foreign and other adversarial threats.

 

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