Tweaking The Agenda For Obama's Europe Trip
By: Rachel Marsden
 U.S. President Barack Obama is headed to Europe this week. There used 
to be a time prior to his election when he would travel to Europe and inspire 
the masses -- mostly on the strength of their own idealistic projections. But 
now, never has a Nobel Peace Prize laureate seen so many global conflicts erupt 
on his watch, while mostly standing there slack-jawed like a spectator at a 
fireworks display..
Stopping first in Estonia, then in Wales for the NATO leaders' summit, Obama has 
already nicely sidestepped any real-life problems that need addressing. "Part of 
the reason I'll be going to Estonia is to let the Estonians know that we mean 
what we say with respect to our treaty obligations," he said. That's nice -- but 
of all the places in the world where there's actual conflict going on right now, 
Estonia isn't actually one of them.
How about dealing with the current problems in the world before tackling 
imaginary ones? Perhaps Obama could use some friendly suggestions for how to 
make the best use of his time during this trip.
Estonia, Obama's first stop, is home to NATO's Cyber Defense Center of 
Excellence. Last year, the Center published the Tallinn Manual, which 
painstakingly attempted to apply the traditional laws of warfare to hacking. 
Nation-states are still struggling with the non-state guerrilla warfare tactics 
used by jihad terrorists waging ideological warfare uncontained by geographical 
boundaries. Such difficulties were most recently highlighted when British Prime 
Minister David Cameron evoked the idea of delaying re-entry or seizing the 
British passport of any citizens caught returning from fighting, thereby forcing 
them to disembark from the Jihadi Global Tour. The suggestion promptly provoked 
opposition along the lines of, "What if other countries then bar their own 
jihadists from re-entry and we all just get stuck with each other's jihadists?"
Take all the problems that nations currently have in developing effective 
counterterrorism measures -- well, the few measures that aren't automatically 
ruled out because they cause civil rights types to go apoplectic. Now add a 
further element of difficulty -- abstraction -- and you have the challenge of 
counter-cyberwarfare.
If Obama is visiting the epicenter of cyber defense, then he should leverage the 
opportunity to talk about the issue. Or are we to assume that the relentless and 
non-stop tit-for-tat of cyberattacks and return volleys between nation-state 
actors now rank so low on the priority list that Obama can afford to daydream 
about conventional warfare during his visit there instead?
Just last week, we were all told that the FBI was looking into a cyberattack on 
JPMorgan Chase banking data that is believed to be of foreign origin -- 
specifically Russian, according to a Bloomberg report. Is this a significant 
legitimate and existential public concern? Or the announcement of a breach that 
lasted about three months despite regular systemic security checks just 
convenient to expose now that it's time for another round of anti-Russian 
sanctions?
Is the hack the breach itself? Or is the disclosure of the breach and the 
subsequent incitement of public fear one big massive hack of public perception 
of cybersecurity and any associated fears?
The public deserves to know how much of the hacking fear mongering coming out 
either directly from, or associated with, the U.S. government is really worth 
being concerned about. Tallinn would be the ideal place to highlight these 
questions and offer some legitimate insight and answers from international 
experts.
Which brings us to yet another way Obama could leverage his European visit: How 
about using the pretext of Russian bogeymen hackers to open up a diplomatic 
channel with Russian President Vladimir Putin? Somehow I think that a request to 
discuss hacking would work better as an overture than, "Can we talk about 
Ukraine?" No one seems to want to actually discuss Ukraine -- and by "discuss," 
I mean make any real diplomatic inroads.
Stop talking about invasions or sanctions for a few weeks. Find something else 
to do. It's not like NATO countries have no other problems to deal with. The 
entire Middle East is teeming with Islamic terrorists beheading people left and 
right. Try tackling that one, first. Russia will still be there to complain 
about afterwards -- but at this point, that should really be a fallback. Like 
when you're channel surfing and have been up and down the dial five times and 
you sigh and say to yourself, "Oh well, at least Seinfeld is on." Vladimir Putin 
should be NATO's Seinfeld. And right now there's a really ugly war movie to 
which Obama and his NATO colleagues should be exclusively riveted instead. It's 
not as sexy and the characters don't dress as nicely and aren't as 
Hollywood-friendly -- but without proper attention, it fast risks becoming a 
series.
 
COPYRIGHT 2014 RACHEL MARSDEN