Ambassador Sorin Ducaru, NATO Assistant Secretary General for Emerging Security Challenges: The cyber threat is not just a potential threat, it is daily reality.
ADM Mike Rogers: This is not theoretical.
Michael Hayden and Michael Mukasey: The sponsors of the USA Freedom Act prefer the counsel of hypothetical fears to the logic of concrete realities.
Ian Urbuna: Rachel Malis's father fled Ukraine in 1980 when he was 28, and he vowed never to return. Even in America, old habits, like his KGB-induced skepticism of the police lingered. Malis said that during her childhood in Trumbull, Conn., near New Haven, he would close the living-room blinds whenever he wanted to discuss anything "sensitive," like summer travel plans or family finances.
Tony Mendez: 1. Assume nothing. 2. Never go against your gut. 3. Everyone is potentially under opposition control. 4. Don't look back; you are never completely alone. 5. Go with the flow, blend in. 6. Vary your pattern and stay within your cover. 7. Lull them into a sense of complacency. 8. Don't harass the opposition. 9. Pick the time and place for action. 10. Keep your options open.
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