Day: April 5, 2026
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Lawmakers are advancing the SECURE Act (Strategy for Executive-led Counterintelligence and Unified Reform) to transition U.S. counterintelligence from a reactive, law-enforcement-centric model to a proactive and unified offensive posture. Introduced by House Intelligence Committee Chairman Rick Crawford, the bill is a central component of the FY2026 Intelligence Authorization Act (IAA). [1, 2, 3, 4]
Key Objectives of the SECURE Act
The legislation aims to address critical vulnerabilities that experts warn could lead to a “9/11-scale intelligence failure” if left unaddressed. [1]Offensive Mandate: Redefines the legal definition of counterintelligence from merely “protecting” to a mandate to “deter, disrupt, investigate, and exploit” foreign intelligence operations.
Unified Leadership: Empowers a newly created Director of Counterintelligence with the authority to direct and compel cooperation between various services, moving beyond simple coordination to close exploitable “seams” in the system.
Strategic Targeting: Specifically reorients resources toward countering “great power adversaries” (such as Russia and China) by using deception and other tools to neutralize state-sponsored networks.
Congressional Transparency: Requires the FBI to notify Congress when initiating counterintelligence investigations into federal officeholders or candidates. [2, 3, 4, 5]Current Legislative Status
House Progress: The House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence passed the FY2026 IAA, including the SECURE Act provisions, in September 2025.
Broader Reform Context: This effort coincides with intense debates over the April 2026 expiration of FISA Section 702, with some lawmakers pushing for stricter warrant requirements alongside these structural counterintelligence reforms. [3, 6, 7, 8, 9]Would you like to see how these new counterintelligence powers might interact with the upcoming FISA Section 702 reauthorization?
[1] intelligence.house.gov
[2] intelligence.house.gov
[3] intelligence.house.gov
[4] intelligence.house.gov
[5] thehill.com
[6] brennancenter.org
[7] intelligence.house.gov
[8] biggs.house.gov
[9] justsecurity.org— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Apr 5, 2026
National Intelligence Reform: Lawmakers are advancing the SECURE Act to move the U.S. toward a more “proactive and unified” counterintelligence posture – Google Search google.com/search?q=National…
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Apr 5, 2026
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#CIA, #FBI, and #Counterintelligence
News Today – AM 4/5/2026
Major counterintelligence developments for April 5, 2026, include a significant FBI cyber breach and a major CIA-led rescue operation in Iran.
Latest News & Major Incidents
FBI Cyber Breach Classified as “Major Incident”: The FBI has officially notified Congress of a cyber intrusion into one of its unclassified surveillance systems [10]. The agency has classified the event as a “major incident” under federal law [10].
CIA-Led Rescue Operation in Iran: A senior administration official confirmed that the CIA executed a deception campaign to rescue a missing U.S. airman in Iran [14]. The agency reportedly spread false information within Iran to facilitate the airman’s exfiltration [14].
Iran War Developments: President Trump stated that the conflict with Iran will conclude “very shortly,” though he cautioned that more strikes may occur in the coming weeks [15]. [1, 2, 3]FBI Counterintelligence Actions
Personnel Changes: FBI Director Kash Patel recently dismissed several agents who worked on counterintelligence and Iran-related missions [15]. Patel maintains that the Iran threats mission center remains highly resourced, citing a 43% increase in counter-espionage arrests [31].
China Technology Theft: Three individuals were charged on March 19, 2026, for conspiring to divert cutting-edge U.S. artificial intelligence technology to China [2].
Investigation into Lawmakers: Recent reports indicate the FBI has reopened or expanded reviews of old investigative files concerning Representative Eric Swalwell and his past ties to a suspected Chinese intelligence operative [17]. [3, 4, 5, 6, 7]Ongoing Threats & Policy Shifts
Cyber Warfare: The FBI recently warned of Russian intelligence services targeting commercial messaging accounts and Iranian actors deploying malware via Telegram [19].
National Intelligence Reform: Lawmakers are advancing the SECURE Act to move the U.S. toward a more “proactive and unified” counterintelligence posture [3]. Experts warn the current system is “crumbling at the seams,” covering less than 10% of high-priority foreign intelligence threats [4].
Modernization Efforts: DNI Tulsi Gabbard announced the largest-ever cybersecurity investment for the Intelligence Community to modernize defense infrastructure [5]. [8, 9, 10, 11]Would you like more details on the cyber breach at the FBI or specific foreign threat updates?
[1] facebook.com
[2] instagram.com
[3] cbsnews.com
[4] cbsnews.com
[5] facebook.com
[6] youtube.com
[7] youtube.com
[8] fbi.gov
[9] intelligence.house.gov
[10] intelligence.house.gov
[11] dni.gov— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Apr 5, 2026
Foreign Doctors Forced Out of U.S. Hospitals by Trump Immigration Policy – The New York Times nytimes.com/2026/04/04/us/tr…
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Apr 5, 2026
RT @NikolajVsevolo1: #USA #FBI
“Se si svolge una serie ricerca storica è difficile distinguere, in quegli anni, il modo di operare del KGB…— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Apr 5, 2026
