Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI Crime News
FBI Director Christopher Wray on January 9 said the Bureau is well-postured to defend against foreign interference heading into the 2024 election cycle, despite the growing number of foreign actors and nation-states seeking to disrupt our democratic process.
“Americans can and should have confidence in our election system,” Wray said during a fireside chat with U.S. Army Gen. Paul M. Nakasone—the dual-hatted director of the National Security Agency and commander of U.S. Cyber Command—that was moderated by National Public Radio journalist Mary Louise Kelly. The FBI hasn’t witnessed any foreign interference effort that has jeopardized “the integrity of the vote count itself in any material way,” he added.
The conversation was part of the 2024 Fordham International Conference on Cybersecurity, co-hosted by the FBI and Fordham University at the school’s Lincoln Center campus in New York City.
Protecting Elections
Information warfare and election interference aren’t new, Wray told the audience of public and private sector cyber experts, international partners, academics, and students.
But the uptick in the number of nation-states and overseas players who want to interfere with U.S. elections or otherwise exert foreign influence on American affairs—and the growing array of tools they can use to meddle in our democratic process—are, he said.
“The threats are more challenging, but the defense is better,” Wray said. “Everybody’s raising their game.”
The FBI Director called Russia “a regular player in this space,” and said that the country’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine hasn’t deterred it from trying to tamper with American politics. On the contrary, Wray noted, one could argue that American policy on Ukraine hits so deep a nerve that the Russian government is trying to simultaneously advance its agenda there and brainstorm ways to influence or interfere with business here at home.
“If anything, for them, the stars align in terms of those two efforts,” he said. “And so we have to be even more effective in countering it.”
But he said Russia isn’t the only nation-state seeking to sway American politics, noting that other countries—including Iran and China—are also active in this arena. “They’re all pursuing slightly different agendas and using slightly different techniques, but we’re watching all of it,” Wray explained.
The good news is that partnerships are allowing the Bureau and the government, more widely, to rise to the challenge of protecting U.S. elections from foreign interference. Wray said collaboration between the Bureau and its fellow U.S. government agencies, the federal government’s relationship with state election officials, and public-private partnerships, in general, have all become “exponentially more sophisticated and effective” with each new election cycle.
Partnerships also help the American populace become more resistant to foreign adversary efforts to use chaos as a tool for disruption. Wray also noted that it’s imperative that Americans be eagle-eyed amid misinformation efforts by foreign governments and the rise of emerging technologies like artificial intelligence.
“I think that’s a responsibility that every American has as an informed citizen and, ultimately, voter,” he said.