U.S. President Donald Trump suggested Saturday that the U.S. used cyberattacks
or other technical capabilities to cut power off in Caracas during strikes on
the Venezuelan capital that led to the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás
Maduro.
If true, it would mark one of the most public uses of U.S. cyber power against
another nation in recent memory. These operations are typically highly
classified, and the U.S. is considered one of the most advanced nations in
cyberspace operations globally.
“It was dark, the lights of Caracas were largely turned off due to a certain
expertise that we have, it was dark, and it was deadly,” Trump said during a
press conference at Mar-a-Lago detailing the operation.
Gen. Dan Caine, chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said during the same press
conference that U.S. Cyber Command, U.S. Space Command and combatant commands
“began layering different effects” to “create a pathway” for U.S. forces flying
into the country early Saturday. Caine did not elaborate on what those “effects”
entailed.
Spokespeople for the White House, Cyber Command and Space Command did not
respond to requests for comment on the cyber operations in Venezuela.
Internet tracking group NetBlocks reported a loss of internet connectivity in
Caracas during power cuts early Saturday morning. Alp Toker, founder of
NetBlocks, said in an email Saturday that if cyberattacks contributed to these
outages, “it will have been targeted, not impacting the broader network space.”
Saturday’s offensive marked the latest cyberattack targeting Venezuelan
infrastructure in recent weeks. Venezuelan national oil and gas company PDVSA,
or Petróleos de Venezuela, S.A., last month accused the U.S. government of
carrying out a cyberattack that led to delays in operations across the country.
The Trump administration has not publicly commented on whether the U.S. was
involved in the December attack. PDVSA said its facilities were not damaged in
the strikes on Saturday.
Tag - Digital politics
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Der Konflikt zwischen der EU und den USA spitzt sich zu und trägt einen neuen
Namen. Elon Musk. Die Strafe der EU gegen seine Plattform X löst eine Welle
politischer Angriffe aus. Musk stellt die EU infrage, verbündet sich mit rechten
Akteuren und verstärkt ein transatlantisches Spannungsfeld, das weit über die
digitale Welt hinausgeht. Gordon Repinski ordnet ein, warum diese
Auseinandersetzung eine Probe für die europäische Regulierungskraft ist und
welche geopolitischen Muster sich darin spiegeln .
Im 200-Sekunden-Interview spricht Damian von Boeselager, Mitgründer und
EU-Abgeordneter von Volt, über die Regulierung von Plattformen. Er erläutert,
warum der Digital Services Act aus seiner Sicht notwendig ist, welche Risiken
von algorithmischer Machtkonzentration ausgehen und ob Europa langfristig eine
öffentlich getragene Alternative zu privaten sozialen Netzwerken braucht.
Anschließend berichtet Rasmus Buchsteiner aus Brüssel über den erzielten
Kompromiss im Migrationspaket. Er erklärt, wie Rückführungen,
Solidaritätsmechanismen und neue Herkunftsstaatlisten zusammenhängen und wie der
Besuch von Wolodymyr Selenskyj zum europäischen Jahresendspurt gehört.
Das Berlin Playbook als Podcast gibt es jeden Morgen ab 5 Uhr. Gordon Repinski
und das POLITICO-Team liefern Politik zum Hören – kompakt, international,
hintergründig.
Für alle Hauptstadt-Profis:
Der Berlin Playbook-Newsletter bietet jeden Morgen die wichtigsten Themen und
Einordnungen. Jetzt kostenlos abonnieren.
Mehr von Host und POLITICO Executive Editor Gordon Repinski:
Instagram: @gordon.repinski | X: @GordonRepinski.
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LISBON — Ursula von der Leyen’s European Commission should continue to enforce
its digital rules with an iron fist despite the outcry from U.S. officials and
big tech moguls, co-chair of the Greens in the European Parliament Bas Eickhout
told POLITICO.
As Green politicians from across Europe gather in the Portuguese capital for
their annual congress, U.S. top officials are blasting the EU for imposing a
penalty on social media platform X for breaching its transparency obligations
under the EU’s Digital Services Act, the bloc’s content moderation rule book.
“They should just implement the law, which means they need to be tougher,”
Eickhout told POLITICO on the sidelines of the event. He argued that the fine of
€120 million is “nothing” for billionaire Elon Musk and that the EU executive
should go further.
The Commission needs to “make clear that we should be proud of our policies … we
are the only ones fighting American Big Tech,” he said, adding that tech
companies are “killing freedom of speech in Europe.”
The Greens have in the past denounced Meta and X over their content moderation
policies, arguing these platforms amplify “disinformation” and “extremism” and
interfere in European electoral processes.
Meta and X did not reply to a request for comment by the time of publication.
Meta has “introduced changes to our content reporting options, appeals process
and data access tools since the DSA came into force and are confident that these
solutions match what is required under the law in the EU,” a Meta spokesperson
said at the end of October.
Tech mogul Musk said his response to the penalty would target the EU officials
who imposed it. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the fine is “an attack
on all American tech platforms and the American people by foreign governments,”
and accused the move of “censorship.”
“It’s not good when our former allies in Washington are now working hand in
glove with Big Tech,” blasted European Green Party chair Ciarán Cuffe at the
opening of the congress in Lisbon.
Eickhout, whose party GreenLeft-Labor alliance is in negotiations to enter
government in the Netherlands, said “we should pick on this battle and stand
strong.”
The Commission’s decision to fine X under the EU’s Digital Services Act is over
transparency concerns. The Commission said the design of X’s blue checkmark is
“deceptive,” after it was changed from user verification into a paid feature.
The EU’s executive also said X’s advertising library lacks transparency and that
it fails to provide access to public data for researchers as required by the
law.
Eickhout lamented that European governments are slow in condemning the U.S.
moves against the EU, and argued that with its recent national security
strategy, the Americans have made clear their objective is to divide Europe from
within by fueling far-right parties.
“Some of the leaders like [French President Emmanuel] Macron are still
desperately trying to say that that the United States are our ally,” Eickhout
said. “I want to see urgency on how Europe is going to take its own path and not
rely on the U.S. anymore, because it’s clear we cannot.”
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Vom CEO-Posten ins Kabinett: Deutschlands erster Digitalminister Karsten
Wildberger im Interview mit Gordon Repinski. Er verspricht die digitale
Brieftasche für alle Bürger – und nennt einen konkreten Zeitplan, wann der
Personalausweis aufs Handy kommt.
Außerdem erklärt Wildberger seinen 4-Punkte-Plan zur Entbürokratisierung des
Staates, warum er mehr Begeisterung für Künstliche Intelligenz in Deutschland
fordert und und der Minister spricht über politische Botschaften, seinen Umgang
mit dem Beamtenapparat und weshalb er Altersgrenzen für Social Media
unterstützt.
Das Berlin Playbook als Podcast gibt es jeden Morgen ab 5 Uhr. Gordon Repinski
und das POLITICO-Team liefern Politik zum Hören – kompakt, international,
hintergründig.
Für alle Hauptstadt-Profis:
Der Berlin Playbook-Newsletter bietet jeden Morgen die wichtigsten Themen und
Einordnungen. Jetzt kostenlos abonnieren.
Mehr von Host und POLITICO Executive Editor Gordon Repinski:
Instagram: @gordon.repinski | X: @GordonRepinski.
he last time an American president deployed the U.S. military domestically under
the Insurrection Act — during the deadly Los Angeles riots in 1992 — Douglas
Ollivant was there. Ollivant, then a young Army first lieutenant, says things
went fairly smoothly because it was somebody else — the cops — doing the
head-cracking to restore order, not his 7th Infantry Division. He and his troops
didn’t have to detain or shoot at anyone.
“There was real sensitivity about keeping federal troops away from the front
lines,” said Ollivant, who was ordered in by President George H.W. Bush as
rioters in central-south LA set fire to buildings, assaulted police and
bystanders, pelted cars with rocks and smashed store windows in the aftermath of
the videotaped police beating of Rodney King, a Black motorist. “They tried to
keep us in support roles, backing up the police.”
By the end of six days of rioting, 63 people were dead and 2,383 injured —
though reportedly none at the hands of the military.
But some in the U.S. military fear next time could be different. According to
nearly a dozen retired officers and current military lawyers, as well as
scholars who teach at West Point and Annapolis, an intense if quiet debate is
underway inside the U.S. military community about what orders it would be
obliged to obey if President-elect Donald Trump decides to follow through on his
previous warnings that he might deploy troops against what he deems domestic
threats, including political enemies, dissenters and immigrants.
On Nov. 18, two weeks after the election, Trump confirmed he plans to declare a
national emergency and use the military for the mass deportations of illegal
immigrants.
One fear is that domestic deployment of active-duty troops could lead to
bloodshed given that the regular military is mainly trained to shoot at and kill
foreign enemies. The only way to prevent that is establishing clear “rules of
engagement” for domestic deployments that outline how much force troops can use
— especially considering constitutional restraints protecting U.S. citizens and
residents — against what kinds of people in what kinds of situations. And
establishing those new rules would require a lot more training, in the view of
many in the military community.
“Everything I hear is that our training is in the shitter,” says retired Army
Lt. Gen. Marvin Covault, who commanded the 7th Infantry Division in 1992 in what
was called “Joint Task Force LA.” “I’m not sure we have the kind of discipline
now, and at every leader level, that we had 32 years ago. That concerns me about
the people you’re going to put on the ground.”
In an interview, Covault said he was careful to avoid lethal force in Los
Angeles by emphasizing to his soldiers they were now “deployed in the civilian
world.” He ordered gun chambers to remain empty except in self-defense, banned
all automatic weapons and required bayonets to remain on soldiers’ belts.
But Covault added that he set those rules at his own discretion. Even then
Covault said he faced some recalcitrance, especially from U.S. Marine battalions
under his command that sought to keep M16 machine guns on their armored
personnel carriers. In one reported case a Marine unit, asked by L.A. police for
“cover,” misunderstood the police term for “standing by” and fired some 200
rounds at a house occupied by a family. Fortunately, no one was injured.
“If we get fast and loose with rules of engagement or if we get into operations
without a stated mission and intent, we’re going to be headline news, and it’s
not going to be good,” Covault said in the interview.
Trump has repeatedly said he might use the military to suppress a domestic
protest, or to raid a sanctuary city to purge it of undocumented immigrants, or
possibly defend the Southern border. Some in the military community say they are
especially disturbed by the prospect that troops might be used to serve Trump’s
political ends. In 1992, Covault said, he had no direct orders from Bush other
than to deploy to restore peace. On his own volition, he said, he announced upon
landing in LA at a news conference: “This is not martial law. The reason we’re
here is to create a safe and secure environment so you can go back to normal.”
Covault said he believes the statement had a calming effect.
But 28 years later, when the police killing of another Black American, George
Floyd, sparked sporadically violent protests nationwide, then-President Trump
openly considered using firepower on the demonstrators, according to his former
defense secretary, Mark Esper. Trump asked, “Can’t you just shoot them? Just
shoot them in the legs or something?” Esper wrote in his 2022 memoir, A Sacred
Trust. At another point Trump urged his Joint Chiefs chair, Gen. Mark Milley, to
“beat the fuck out” out of the protesters and “crack skulls,” and he tweeted
that “when the looting starts, the shooting starts.” Esper wrote that he had “to
walk Trump back” from such ideas and the president didn’t pursue them.
Some involved in the current debate say they are worried Trump would not be as
restrained this time. He is filling his Pentagon and national security team with
fierce loyalists. The concern is not just in how much force might be used, but
also whether troops would be regularly deployed to advance the new
administration’s political interests.
This topic is extremely sensitive inside the active-duty military, and a
Pentagon spokesperson declined to comment. But several of the retired military
officials I interviewed said that they were gingerly talking about it with their
friends and colleagues still in active service.
And Mark Zaid, a Washington lawyer who has long represented military and
intelligence officers who run afoul of their chain of command, told me: “A lot
of people are reaching out to me proactively to express concern about what they
foresee coming, including Defense Department civilians and active-duty
military.” Among them, Zaid said, are people “who are either planning on leaving
the government or will be waiting to see if there is a line that is crossed by
the incoming administration.”
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
After the D.C. National Guard was ordered to clear demonstrators from Lafayette
Square across from the White House in 2020 using tear gas, rubber bullets and
flash-bang grenades, a group of lawyers founded “The Orders Project” aimed at
connecting up lawyers and troops looking for legal advice.
One of the founders, Eugene Fidell of Yale Law School, said that the group
disbanded after the first Trump administration but is now being resurrected.
“With the return of President Trump, we’re ready to help people in need,” Fidell
said.
The Lafayette Square incident remains a topic of some debate inside the military
community. One DC guardsman, Major Adam DeMarco, an Iraq war veteran, later said
in written testimony to Congress that he was “deeply disturbed” by the
“excessive use of force.” “Having served in a combat zone, and understanding how
to assess threat environments, at no time did I feel threatened by the
protesters or assess them to be violent,” he wrote. “I knew something was wrong,
but I didn’t know what. Anthony Pfaff, a retired colonel who is now a military
ethics scholar at the U.S. Army War College, said this confusion reveals a
serious training deficiency: Domestic crowd control and policing “is not
something for which we have any doctrine or other standard operating procedures.
Without those, thresholds for force could be determined by individual
commanders, leading to even more confusion.”
Protests continued over the death of George Floyd on June 3, 2020, near the
White House in Washington. President-elect Donald Trump has repeatedly said he
might use the military to suppress a domestic protest, to raid a sanctuary city
to purge it of undocumented immigrants or possibly defend the Southern border. |
Alex Brandon/AP
For active military, most of the current debate is happening behind closed
doors. As a result, some retired military as well as scholars and lawyers are
trying to bring the issue into public view.
“It’s legally and ethically dicey to have open conversations about this,” says
Graham Parsons, a philosophy professor at West Point who urged military officers
and troops to consider resisting “politicized” orders in a New York Times op-ed
in September. One concern is whether the military could tarnish itself with
an incident like Kent State, when four college students were shot to death by
jittery and poorly trained Ohio National Guardsmen in 1970.
“Soldiers are trained predominately to fight, kill and win wars,” says Brian
VanDeMark, a Naval Academy historian and author of the 2024 book Kent State: An
American Tragedy. “Local police and state police are far better trained to deal
with the psychology of crowds, which can become inherently unpredictable,
impulsive and irrational. If you’re not well trained to cope, your reaction
might be inadequate and turn to force.” He adds that at the Naval Academy as
well as West Point, “my impression is this is an issue that is being thought
about and worried about a lot but it’s not openly discussed.”
Some lawyers and experts in military law say a great deal of confusion persists
— even among serving officers — over how the military should behave, especially
if Trump invokes the Insurrection Act and calls up troops to crush domestic
protests or round up millions of undocumented immigrants. In most cases, there
is little that officers and enlisted personnel can do but obey such presidential
orders, even if they oppose them ethically, or face dismissal or court-martial.
But as Covault puts it bluntly: “You don’t always follow dumb orders.”
A file image captured by an RC-26 flying over Minneapolis on June 4, 2020. When
the police killing of another Black American, George Floyd, sparked sporadically
violent protests nationwide, Trump openly considered using firepower on the
demonstrators, according to his former Defense Secretary Mark Esper. |
Department of Defense via AP
Under long-standing military codes, troops are obliged to disobey only obviously
illegal orders — for example, an order to conduct a wholesale slaughter of
civilians as happened in the village of My Lai during the Vietnam War. But under
the more than 200-year-old Insurrection Act, Trump would have extraordinarily
wide latitude to decide what’s “legal,” lawyers say.
“The basic reality is that the Insurrection Act gives the president dangerously
broad discretion to use the military as a domestic police force,” says Joseph
Nunn, an expert at the Brennan Center for Justice. “It’s an extraordinarily
broad law that has no meaningful criteria in it for determining when it’s
appropriate for the president to deploy the military domestically.” Nothing in
the text of the Insurrection Act says the president must cite insurrection,
rebellion, or domestic violence to justify deployment; the language is so vague
that Trump could potentially claim only that he perceives a “conspiracy.”
The Insurrection Act, a blend of different statutes enacted by Congress between
1792 and 1871, is the primary exception to the Posse Comitatus Act, under which
federal military forces are generally barred from participating in civilian law
enforcement activities.
Most Americans may not realize how often presidents have invoked the
Insurrection Act — often, in the view of historians, to the benefit of the
nation. While it’s been 32 years since Bush used it to help quell the Los
Angeles riots, the Insurrection Act was also invoked by President Dwight
Eisenhower following the Supreme Court’s 1954 Board v. Board of
Education decision, when Ike deployed the 101st Airborne Division (with fixed
bayonets on their rifles) to help desegregate the South. George Washington and
John Adams used the Insurrection Act in response to early rebellions against
federal authority, Abraham Lincoln invoked it at the start of the Civil War, and
President Ulysses Grant used it to stop the Ku Klux Klan in the 1870s.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
But when it comes to the next Trump administration, the real question for most
military lawyers and personnel will likely be less purely legalistic and more
ethical: Even if Trump decides something is legal and the courts back him up,
are troops still bound to do as he says under the Constitution?
One lawyer, John Dehn of Loyola University — a former Army career officer and
West Point graduate — calls this the “Milley problem,” referring to the
well-documented angst of the former Joint Chiefs chair during Trump’s first
presidency. Milley stirred controversy by publicly apologizing after Trump used
him in a staged photo of the Lafayette Square incident. During the Jan. 6, 2021
insurrection, he reportedly assured then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi that he would
“prevent” any unwarranted use of the military, and he has acknowledged calling
his Chinese counterparts to assure them that no nuclear weapons would be
launched before Trump left office.
Milley, who has called Trump “fascist to the core,” later told Bob Woodward for
the 2024 book War that he feared being recalled to active duty to face a
court-martial “for disloyalty.” At one point Trump himself suggested Milley
could have been executed for treason.
In a newly published law review essay, Dehn argues that while Milley might have
breached his constitutional duties, the Constitution “is not a suicide pact,”
and Milley served a higher purpose by protecting the nation. He quotes Thomas
Jefferson as writing “strict observance of the written laws is doubtless one of
the high duties of a good citizen: but it is not the highest. [T]he laws of
necessity, of self-preservation, of saving our country when in danger, are of
higher obligation.”
Similarly, some within the military community are urging troops to “lawyer up”
and prepare to resist what they consider unethical orders, saying resistance can
be justified if the soldier thinks it would jeopardize the soldier’s own
conception of military “neutrality.”
Trump departs the White House on June 1, 2020. Trump’s former Joint Chiefs
chair, Gen. Mark Milley (right), has called Trump “fascist to the core.” |
Patrick Semansky/AP
“By refusing to follow orders about military deployment to U.S. cities for
political ends, members of the armed forces could actually be respecting, rather
than undermining, the principle of civilian control,” wrote Marcus Hedahl, a
philosophy professor at United States Naval Academy, and Bradley Jay Strawser, a
scholar at the Naval Postgraduate School, in a blog post on Oct. 25.
Others within the military community disagree, sometimes vehemently. Such
thinking is seriously misguided and could lead to widespread legal problems for
military personnel, says retired Air Force Maj. Gen. Charles Dunlap, a former
deputy judge advocate general now at Duke Law School. “I am concerned because I
do think there’s been some mistaken information that’s out there. The fact is,
if an order is legal then members of the armed forces have to obey it even if
they find it morally reprehensible.”
In a Washington Post op-ed published after the election, another retired
general, former Joint Chiefs Chair Martin Dempsey, agreed, saying it was
“reckless” to suggest that “it is the duty of the brass to resist some
initiatives and follow the ‘good’ orders but not the ‘bad’ orders that a
president might issue.”
Dunlap cites the military’s standard Manual for Courts-Martial, which states
clearly that “the dictates of a person’s conscience, religion, or personal
philosophy cannot justify or excuse the disobedience of an otherwise lawful
order.” Dunlap and other lawyers also note that Supreme Court precedent backs
that up; in 1974 the Supreme Court ruled: “An army is not a deliberative body.
It is the executive arm. Its law is that of obedience.”
Inside the military this conundrum is known as “lawful but awful”: Active-duty
troops have no choice, especially if the order comes from the
commander-in-chief. “No one should be encouraging members of the military to
disobey a lawful order even if it’s awful,” says Nunn. “And it’s crucial that is
as it should be. We do not want to live in a world where the military picks and
chooses what order to obey based on their own consciences. We don’t want to ask
a 20-year-old lieutenant to interpret an order from the president.”
Indeed, that could set another dangerous precedent, some military lawyers say,
by undermining the principle of civilian control that the Founders said was
fundamental to the U.S. republic. “You don’t have to look far for examples of
countries where the military is picking and choosing which orders to follow,”
says Nunn.
Most legal experts agree that troops must obey all nominally legal orders. But
military lawyers say it’s important for troops to remember that even if called
into action they must obey peoples’ constitutional rights — including the right
to assemble and to be protected from unlawful arrest and seizure or unreasonable
force.
Esper, left, and Milley, right, listen during a Senate Armed Services Committee
on budget posture on Capitol Hill in Washington on March 4, 2020. | Jacquelyn
Martin/AP
“You have to follow the Fourth, Fifth and Sixth amendments. They don’t get
waived,” said Dehn. When it comes to the Fourth Amendment, for example, which
protects people from unreasonable searches and seizures by the government, “the
requirement of reasonableness applies” to the military just as it does to
police, said Dehn. So do protections for due process and other rights of the
accused enshrined in the Fifth and Sixth Amendments.
“Due process still applies,” Nunn agreed. “Military personnel deployed under the
[Insurrection Act] can’t do what law enforcement can’t do. They can’t shoot
peaceful protesters.”
Yale’s Fidell says any successful legal challenges to Trump’s orders will likely
be more “retail than wholesale.” By this he means that even if the president can
broadly justify the Insurrection Act legally, “you might able to show a
particular order is unlawful, for example if you’re ordered to use your
helicopter to create a downdraft to disperse rioters — remember that happened at
Lafayette Square — or shoot at students.”
In the end much will depend on what Trump’s senior legal advisers tell him and
what courts decide, lawyers say. But for the first time in memory, “we have to
consider the possibility we could have a commander-in-chief who is willing to
order the military to do something that is pretty threatening to the
constitutional order,” says Parsons, the West Point scholar.
“Even if we get the law straight, what’s the right thing to do?” adds Parsons.
“If the president invokes the Insurrection Act we don’t really know what the
ethical boundaries are. Among the military lawyers this is just uncharted
territory.”
Says one lawyer who has studied many cases of military-civilian conflict and
spoke on condition of anonymity because he fears retribution from the new Trump
administration: “I think things are going to be bad, really bad. This is going
to be worse than last time. Trump is angry. He desperately wants to turn on his
TV and see guys in uniform on the streets.”
But Dunlap, for one, hopes that “cooler heads will prevail”: “I’m cautiously
optimistic that people are going to realize that not all the campaign rhetoric
is going to be translatable into action.”
Trump and Musk want to run a giant experiment on the federal bureaucracy. Two
big unknowns already loom over it.
Trudeau and his top ministers insist they’re ready for the next White House.
The NRSC is canceling its independent ad reservations and redirecting it to
hybrid ads, made with the candidates.