SPRINGFIELD,
Va. (AP) — Inside a hotel ballroom near the nation’s capital, a U.S.
Army officer with battlefield experience told 120 state and local
election officials that they may have more in common with the military
strategists than they might think.
These
government officials are on the front lines of a different kind of
high-stakes battlefield — one in which they are helping to defend
American democracy by ensuring free and fair elections.
“Everyone in this room is part of a bigger effort, and it’s only together are we going to get through this,” the officer said.
That
officer and other past and present national security leaders had a
critical message to convey to officials from 24 states gathered for a
recent training held by a Harvard-affiliated democracy project: They are
the linchpins in efforts to defend U.S. elections from an attack by
Russia, China or other foreign threats, and developing a military
mindset will help them protect the integrity of the vote.
The
need for such training reflects how elections security worries have
heightened in the aftermath of the 2016 election, when Russian military
agents targeted voting systems across the country as part of a
multi-pronged effort to influence the presidential election. Until then,
the job of local election officials could had been described as
something akin to a wedding planner who keeps track of who will be
showing up on Election Day and ensures all the equipment and supplies
are in place and ready to go.
Now,
these officials are on the front lines. The federal government will be
on high alert, gathering intelligence and scanning systems for
suspicious cyber activity as they look to defend the nation’s elections.
Meanwhile, it will be the state and county officials who will be on the
ground charged with identifying and dealing with any hostile acts.
“It’s
another level of war,” said Jesse Salinas, the chief elections official
in Yolo County, California, who attended the training. “You only attack
things that you feel are a threat to you, and our democracy is a threat
to a lot of these nation-states that are getting involved trying to
undermine it. We have to fight back, and we have to prepare.”
Salinas
brought four of his employees with him to the training, which was part
of the Defending Digital Democracy project based at the Belfer Center
for Science and International Affairs at the Harvard Kennedy School. The
group has been working actively with former and current military,
national security, political and communications experts — many of whom
dedicate their time after work and on weekends — to develop training and
manuals for state and local election officials. Those involved with
leading the training asked for anonymity because of their sensitive
positions.
The project’s latest playbook
focuses on bringing military best practices to running Election Day
operations, encouraging state and local election officials to adopt a
“battle staff” command structure with clear roles and responsibilities
and standard operating procedures for dealing with minor issues. The
project is also providing officials with a free state-of-the-art
incident tracking system.
Eric
Rosenbach, co-director of the Belfer Center and a former U.S. Army
intelligence officer who served as chief of staff to Defense Secretary
Ash Carter in the Obama administration, told the group gathered for the
training that it “shouldn’t be lost on you that this is a very
military-like model.”
“Let’s
be honest about it,” Rosenbach said. “If democracy is under attack and
you guys are the ones at the pointy end of the spear, why shouldn’t we
train that way? Why shouldn’t we try to give you the help that comes
with that model and try to build you up and do all we can?”
Instructors
stressed the need for election officials to be on the lookout for
efforts to disrupt the vote and ensure that communications are flowing
up from counties to the state, down from states to the counties, as well
a s up and down to the federal government and across states.
Piecing
together seemingly disparate actions happening in real-time across
geographical locations will allow the nation to defend itself, said
Robby Mook, Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton’s campaign
manager in 2016. Mook co-founded the Defending Digital Democracy project
with Matt Rhoades, Republican nominee Mitt Romney’s 2012 campaign
manager.
“Find
a way to input data in a consistent, efficient and reliable way to
ensure you know what is going on and prevents things from falling
through the cracks,” Mook told the election officials. “You got to rise
above just putting out fires.”
At
the training were officials from California, Colorado, Georgia, North
Carolina, Oregon, Tennessee, West Virginia and other states. In one
exercise, election officials were paired up as either a state or county
under an Election Day scenario, charged with logging incidents and
trying to piece together what turned out to be four different
coordinated campaigns to disrupt voting.
“One
of the big takeaways was just how the lack of one piece of information
moving up from the counties to the state or moving from the states to
counties, if either of those things don’t happen, it can have a
significant impact,” said Stephen Trout, elections director for Oregon.
Trout
said he would move quickly to acquire, customize and implement the
incident tracking system, which would be an upgrade from the paper
process currently in use. Dave Tackett, chief information officer for
the West Virginia Secretary of State’s Office, said he will recommend
some structuring changes at his state operations center, including
bringing key personnel into the room and incorporating elements of the
incident tracking system like mapping and the ability to assign
individuals to specific incidents.
“Events
like today are helping us zero in on how to structure ourselves better,
how to really think in a different mindset so that we can carry out all
the different tasks that have to be done with elections,” said Karen
Brinson Bell, executive director of the North Carolina Board of
Elections. “(It’s) the importance of communications, the importance of
having standard operating procedures in place so all the i’s are dotted
and the t’s crossed ahead of time and you are prepared for the unknown.”
No comments:
Post a Comment