Biden's tepid response to Chicom hacking

 Washington Examiner:

When the White House announced President Joe Biden rallied American allies to condemn China's state-sponsored hacking, many in Washington were perplexed as he bypassed more punitive measures.

China’s Ministry of State Security, which U.S. intelligence officials accused of cyber spying and hacking for profit, was behind multiple “zero-day” exploits that breached the Microsoft Exchange Server, prompting Biden's response. The attacks take advantage of security holes in widely used software, such as the Microsoft Exchange email service, and can operate undetected until the hole is patched.

Asked this week why Biden seemed to hold off on a stronger condemnation of China, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said, "That was not the intention he was trying to project."

The effort to coordinate multilateral partners from the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Japan, and NATO "was under [Biden's] direction," Psaki said. "He continues to feel its important to lead from a position of strength in close coordination with our partners and allies around the world, and he takes the malicious cyber activity — whether it's from Russia or China, whomever the actors may be — quite seriously."

...

Some might think he does not want to displace Hunter's deal with the Chicoms where he allegedly got a share as the Big Guy.  Has Hunter ever unloaded this deal?  It looks like the Biden administration talks tough and carries a very small stick.

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