US intelligence chief grilled on absence of election threats in security assessment
嗯,用户让我用中文总结一下这篇文章的内容,控制在100个字以内,而且不需要以“文章内容总结”或“这篇文章”这样的开头。直接写描述即可。首先,我需要仔细阅读这篇文章,理解其主要内容。 文章讲的是美国情报局局长Tulsi Gabbard在最近的全球威胁评估中没有提到外国对选举的威胁。参议员Mark Warner质问她为什么报告中没有提及这一点,Gabbard回应说今年的评估是根据威胁优先级进行的。之前的情报报告中提到过伊朗、俄罗斯和中国试图通过网络宣传或网络攻击干预选举的情况。然而,距离中期选举不到8个月,政策制定者和前国家安全官员担心特朗普政府忽视了外国干预的风险,并削减了相关机构的预算。Warner认为情报部门不再被允许坦诚讨论威胁。此外,Gabbard还被问及她为何出现在FBI突击检查乔治亚州选举记录的现场,她解释说她是应总统要求去观察行动的。最后,听证会主要讨论了与伊朗的冲突和一些网络安全问题。 现在需要将这些信息浓缩到100字以内。关键点包括:Gabbard未提及外国干预选举、Warner质疑、情报部门不再讨论威胁、预算削减、Gabbard出席FBI行动、以及听证会讨论的重点。 可能的结构是:美国情报局局长未提及外国干预选举威胁,引发参议员质疑;预算削减导致担忧;局长出席FBI行动;听证会主要讨论伊朗冲突和网络安全。 这样大概可以控制在100字左右。 </think> 美国情报局局长未提及外国干预选举威胁引发参议员质疑;预算削减引发担忧;局长出席FBI突击检查;听证会聚焦伊朗冲突和网络安全问题。 2026-3-18 18:45:45 Author: therecord.media(查看原文) 阅读量:6 收藏

The top U.S. intelligence official on Wednesday defended omitting foreign threats to elections from the latest assessment of global dangers, as well as her presence during a FBI raid of a Georgia election office earlier this year.

In the public portion of an annual briefing on the globe’s greatest security threats, Sen. Mark Warner (VA), the top Democrat on the Intelligence Committee, pressed Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard about why the report doesn't mention potential foreign adversary aims to interfere in elections for the first time since 2017.

“Are you saying there is no foreign threat to our elections in the midterms this year?” Warner asked. 

“As I stated in the outset of my remarks, this year’s annual threat assessment matches the prioritization of threats,” Gabbard replied.

Previous clandestine community assessments have documented, at least at a high level, attempts by Iran, Russia or China to sway voters with online propaganda or through cyber operations.

However, with less than eight months before November’s midterms, there is concern among policymakers and former U.S. national security officials that the Trump administration is ignoring the risk of foreign influence efforts around the ballot box — citing cuts to entities like the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and the lack of key appointments, such as a chief of the Foreign Malign Influence Center.

Warner remarked that the omission “does not mean the threat has disappeared. It means the intelligence community is no longer being allowed to speak honestly about it."

Meanwhile, Democrats have expressed alarm over why Gabbard was present for the FBI’s search of 2020 election records in Georgia in January, despite there being no evidence to date of a foreign nexus to that investigation.

Gabbard said she did not participate in a law enforcement search of the elections hub — which has long been the target of President Donald Trump’s conspiracy theories about his loss in the 2020 election — but was there to observe the action "at the request of the president.”

“I did not participate in a law enforcement activity, nor would I, because that does not exist within my authorities,” she said.

Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-GA) inquired when Trump asked her to go the FBI raid to seize 2020 election ballots and records. 

"The day of the raid," she said, before declining to say how the message was delivered.

“It was a request from the president and his administration to go and help oversee this warrant being executed, along with the deputy director of the FBI."

Wednesday’s open session was largely devoted to the ongoing conflict with Iran, with few mentions of digital security issues. There was a single exchange devoted to a powerful electronic surveillance tool that is set to expire about a month and Volt Typhoon, the notorious Chinese hacking operation that burrowed into U.S. critical infrastructure networks.

Speaking to reporters after the hearing, Warner said “we have not seen any decline in efforts of foreign parties to interfere in our democracy.”

“What is almost equally concerning is the idea that at some late date, the administration may gin up intelligence, real or not, to use an excuse to bring in federal forces” and seize control of state and local elections, he added.

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Martin Matishak

Martin Matishak

is the senior cybersecurity reporter for The Record. Prior to joining Recorded Future News in 2021, he spent more than five years at Politico, where he covered digital and national security developments across Capitol Hill, the Pentagon and the U.S. intelligence community. He previously was a reporter at The Hill, National Journal Group and Inside Washington Publishers.


文章来源: https://therecord.media/us-intel-chief-senate-election-security-threat-assessment
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