"The freshness of the documents —
some appear to be barely 40 days old — and the hints they hold for operations
to come make them particularly damaging, officials say.
When WikiLeaks spilled a huge trove of State Department
cables 13 years ago, it gave the world a sense of what American
diplomats do each day — the sharp elbows, the doubts about wavering allies and
the glimpses at how Washington was preparing for North Korea’s eventual collapse and Iran’s nuclear breakout.
When Edward Snowden swept up the
National Security Agency’s secrets three years later, Americans suddenly
discovered the scope of how the digital age had ushered in a remarkable new era
of surveillance by the agency — enabling it to pierce China’s telecommunications industry
and to drill into Google’s servers
overseas to pick up foreign communications.
The cache of 100 or so newly leaked briefing slides
of operational data on the conflict in Ukraine is distinctly different. The
data revealed so far is less comprehensive than those vast secret archives, but
far more timely. And it is the immediate salience of the intelligence that most
worries White House and Pentagon officials.
Some of the most sensitive material — maps of Ukrainian air
defenses and a deep dive into South Korea’s secret plans to
deliver 330,000 rounds of much-needed ammunition in time for Ukraine’s spring
counteroffensive — is revealed in documents that appear to be barely 40 days
old.
It is the freshness of the “secret” and “top secret”
documents, and the hints they hold for operations to come, that make these
disclosures particularly damaging, administration officials say.
The 100-plus pages of slides and briefing documents leave no
doubt about how deeply enmeshed the United States is in the day-to-day conduct
of the conflict, providing the precise intelligence and logistics that help
explain Ukraine’s success thus far. While President Biden has barred American
troops from firing directly on Russian targets, and blocked sending weapons
that could reach deep into Russian territory, the documents make clear that a
year into the conflict, the United States is heavily entangled in almost
everything else.
It is providing detailed targeting data. It is coordinating
the long, complex logistical train that delivers weapons to the Ukrainians. And
as a Feb. 22 document makes clear, American officials are planning ahead for a
year in which the battle for the Donbas is “likely heading toward a stalemate”
that will frustrate Vladimir V. Putin’s goal of capturing the region — and
Ukraine’s goal of expelling the Russians.
One senior Western intelligence
official summed up the disclosures as “a nightmare.” Dmitri Alperovitch, the
Russia-born chairman of Silverado Policy Accelerator, who is best known for
pioneering work in cybersecurity, said on Sunday that he feared there were “a
number of ways this can be damaging.”
He said that included the possibility that Russian
intelligence is able to use the pages, spread out over Twitter and Telegram,
“to figure out how we are collecting” the plans of the G.R.U., Russia’s
military intelligence service, and the movement of military units.
In fact, the documents released so far are a brief snapshot
of how the United States viewed the conflict in Ukraine. Many pages seem to
come right out of the briefing books circulating among the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, and in a few cases updates from the C.I.A.’s operations center. They are
a combination of the current order of battle and — perhaps most valuable to
Russian military planners — American projections of where the air defenses
being rushed into Ukraine could be located next month.
Mixed in are a series of early warnings about how Russia
might retaliate, beyond Ukraine, if the conflict drags on. One particularly
ominous C.I.A. document refers to a pro-Russian hacking group that had
successfully broken into Canada’s gas distribution network and was “receiving
instructions from a presumed Federal Security Service (F.S.B.) officer to
maintain network access to Canadian gas infrastructure and wait for further
instruction.” So far there is no evidence that Russian actors have begun a
destructive attack, but that was the explicit fear expressed in the document.
Because such warnings are so
sensitive, many of the “top secret” documents are limited to American officials
or to the “Five Eyes” — the intelligence alliance of the United States,
Britain, Australia, New Zealand and Canada. That group has an informal
agreement not to spy on the other members. But it clearly does not apply to
other American allies and partners.
There is evidence that the United States has plugged itself
into President Volodymyr Zelensky’s internal conversations and those of even
the closest U.S. allies, like South Korea.
In a dispatch that is very
reminiscent of the 2010 WikiLeaks disclosures, one document based on what is
delicately referred to as “signals intelligence” describes the internal debate
in Seoul over how to handle American pressure to send more lethal aid to
Ukraine, which would violate the country’s practice of not directly sending
weapons into a war zone. It reports that South Korea’s president, Yoon Suk
Yeol, was concerned that Mr. Biden might call him to press for greater
contributions to Ukraine’s military.
It is an enormously sensitive
subject among South Korean officials. During a recent visit to Seoul, before
the leaked documents appeared, government officials dodged a reporter’s
questions about whether they were planning to send 155-millimeter artillery
rounds, which they produce in large quantities, to aid in the war effort. One
official said South Korea did not want to violate its own policies, or risk its
delicate relationship with Moscow.
Now the world has seen the
Pentagon’s “delivery timeline” for sea shipments of those shells, along with
estimates of the cost of the shipments, $26 million.
With every disclosure of secret
documents, of course, there are fears of lasting damage, sometimes overblown.
That happened in 2010, when The New York Times started publishing a series
called “State’s Secrets,” detailing and
analyzing selected documents from the trove of cables taken by Chelsea Manning,
then an Army private in Iraq, and published by Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks founder.
Soon after the first articles were published, Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton expressed fear that no one would ever talk to American diplomats again.
“In addition to endangering
particular individuals, disclosures like these tear at the fabric of the proper
function of responsible government,” she told reporters in the Treaty Room of
the State Department. Of course, they did keep talking — though many foreign
officials say that when they speak today, they edit themselves with the
knowledge that they may be quoted in department cables that leak in the future.
When Mr. Snowden released vast
amounts of data from the National Security Agency, collected with a $100 piece
of software that just gathered up archives he had access to at a facility in
Hawaii, there was similar fear of setbacks in intelligence collection. The
agency spent years altering programs, at a cost of hundreds of millions of
dollars, and officials say they are still monitoring the damage now, a decade
later. In September, Mr. Putin granted Mr. Snowden, a low-level intelligence
contractor, full Russian citizenship; the United States is still
seeking to bring him back to face charges.
But both Ms. Manning and Mr. Snowden
said they were motivated by a desire to reveal what they viewed as
transgressions by the United States. “This time it doesn’t look ideological,”
Mr. Alperovitch said. The first appearance of some of the documents seems to
have taken place on gaming platforms, perhaps to settle an online argument over
the status of the fight in Ukraine.
“Think about that,” Mr. Alperovitch
said. “An internet fight that ends up in a massive intelligence disaster.””
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