McLEAN, VA. — The United States expects to face fast-moving threats to American elections this year as artificial intelligence and other technological advances have made interference and meddling easier than before, FBI Director Christopher Wray said Thursday.
''The U.S. has confronted foreign malign influence threats in the past,'' Wray told a national security conference. ''But this election cycle, the U.S. will face more adversaries, moving at a faster pace, and enabled by new technology.''
Wray singled out advances in generative AI, which he said had made it ''easier for both more and less-sophisticated foreign adversaries to engage in malign influence.''
The remarks underscored escalating U.S. government concerns over sometimes hard-to-detect influence operations that are designed to shape public opinion. Though officials have not cited successful efforts by foreign governments to directly alter election results, they have sounded the alarms over the past decade about foreign influence campaigns.
Wray suggested the FBI would share information this year about threats that it sees.
''As intelligence professionals, we've got to highlight threats in specific, evidence-based ways so that we're usefully arming our partners and, in particular, the public against the kinds of foreign influence operations they're likely to confront,'' he said.
In 2016, Russian operatives sought to boost Republican Donald Trump's election chances by stealing and leaking Democratic emails and by using a hidden but powerful social media campaign to sow discord among American voters.
In 2020, U.S. intelligence officials have said, Russian President Vladimir Putin authorized influence operations to denigrate Democrat Joe Biden and help Trump in that year's election. China ''considered but did not deploy'' influence operations, while aggressive efforts by Iran sought to exploit vulnerabilities in state election websites as Tehran sought to hurt Trump's reelection chances, officials have said.