U.S. Intelligence Chief Says North Korea Could Strike Again

Speaking at an intelligence conference, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper explained how he knows North Korea was behind the Sony hack.

U.S. Intelligence Chief Says North Korea Could Strike Again
Getty Images / T.J. Kirkpatrick

Director of National Intelligence James Clapper doubled down Wednesday on the belief that North Korea carried out the hack on Sony and even named the person who might've authorized the attack. 

"My dinner host was General Kim [Yong Choi], a four-star general in charge of the Reconnaissance General Bureau — the RGB. The organization responsible for overseeing the attack against Sony," Clapper said at a cyber security conference at Fordham University.

That was Clapper referencing his dinner meeting with General Kim Yong Choi last year to help secure the release of former American hostages Kenneth Bae and Matthew Miller. According to Clapper, Kim would've been the one to give the green-light for the cyber attack.

In addition to naming a culprit, Clapper also warned of future North Korean cyber attacks and said the U.S. must "push back" against the communist country. 

This revelation from the U.S. intelligence head follows skepticism from other security experts as to whether North Korea actually committed the Sony hack. According to Bloomberg, Clapper — for the first time — explained North Korea was behind the attack because the U.S. has had to deter the country from carrying out similar attacks. 

In a separate speech at the same conference, FBI director James Comey reiterated Clapper's statements:  

"I have very high confidence about this attribution, as does the entire intelligence community," Comey said. 

Wednesday's speeches from Clapper and Comey seem timely considering news from the South Korean Defense Ministry saying North Korea doubled the size of its "cyber forces" last year and is looking to paralyze South Korea, a U.S. ally. 

North Korea has denied responsibility for the Sony attack and even ostensibly offered to help the U.S. investigate the hack. But following the implementation of U.S. sanctions on North Korea Tuesday, a spokesperson said the sanctions will only harden North Korea's resolve to "defend the sovereignty of the country." 

This video includes images from Getty Images.