Twitter, RSS and Facebook logos

  Connect with Security Magazine!
     Follow us on Twitter and Facebook or subscribe to our newsletters or RSS feeds.

Security Newswire

Senate Confirms Military Cybersecurity Chief

The U.S. Senate unanimously confirmed National Security Agency director Keith Alexander as head of a new DoD command tasked with defending military networks from cyber attacks.
 
When it becomes fully operational in October, the U.S. Cyber Command will be headquartered at Fort George G. Meade in Maryland alongside NSA, and will report through the U.S. Strategic Command. Cyber Command will absorb two of the organizations currently leading much of the military's cyber-defense capabilities -- the Joint Functional Component Command for Network Warfare and the Joint Task Force for Network Operations.
 
"The Department of Defense requires a focused approach to secure its own networks, given our military's dependence on them for command and control, logistics, and military operations," Alexander said at his confirmation hearing last month. "If confirmed, my main focus will be on building the capacity, the capability, and the critical partnerships required to secure our military's operational networks."
 
 In his confirmation hearing, Alexander brushed aside any suggestions that Cyber Command would militarize cyberspace, repeatedly saying that the new organization would focus on defense rather than offense. He said he would be working closely with the DoD's policy undersecretary to develop a comprehensive strategy, and with the Department of Homeland Security to develop a strategy that would be put in place to offer DoD support to protect federal civilian and critical infrastructure networks in the event of a national security crisis.
 
Some of the key challenges Alexander pointed to at the hearing included attribution of attackers and their intent, improving the security of DoD networks, partnering with the DHS and private industry in the event of major crisis, ensuring the protection of civil liberties, and navigating rules of war in situations where, unlike in traditional warfare, attackers can launch attacks from computers located in neutral third countries or route attacks through American-owned computers here in the United States.
 
While Alexander focused more on cyber-defense, he did say in written answers to Senators' questions that "under the right circumstances," Cyber Command would have the authority to use offensive cyber weapons against military command and control networks, weapons, power grids, transportation-related networks, national telecommunications networks, and even enemies' financial institutions.
 
In addition to the new job, Alexander, a graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, will stay on as director of NSA. However, NSA will remain distinct from Cyber Command in identity and mission. President Obama nominated Alexander in October. Throughout his career, Alexander has held numerous military leadership roles, including deputy chief of staff for the Army, director of intelligence for the U.S. Central Command, and deputy director for requirements, capabilities, assessments, and doctrine for the Joint Chiefs of Staff. As part of the shift, Alexander also received a fourth star and has been promoted from Lt. General to General.
You must register or login in order to post comments.

Multimedia

Videos

Image Galleries

Stanley Customer Appreciation Event at ASIS 2011

Customers enjoyed the annual Stanley customer appreciation event during ASIS 2011 in Orlando.

Podcasts

The New Age of Video Surveillance
In this podcast, Bill Lawrence, director of Service Solutions and Platforms for ADT Security Services, explains the growing interest in video surveillance by both government agencies as well as businesses of every stripe. He discusses what any organization should consider before investing heavily in the technology. Lawrence is a 25-year veteran of both the information technology and physical security industries, with extensive experience in network video surveillance and physical security convergence.
More Podcasts

Your Time

On a daily basis, how much work time do you estimate that you spend addressing an emergency or crisis within your organization?
See Poll Results Poll Archive

THE SECURITY STORE

comptiahighriseproductphoto
CompTIA Security+ Certification Study Guide
CompTIA's Security+ certification is a globally-recognized, vendor neutral exam that has helped over 60,000 IT professionals reach further and higher in their careers. The current Security+ exam (SY0-201) focuses more on being able to deal with security issues rather than just identifying them.
More Products

Clear Seas Research

Clear Seas ResearchWith access to over one million professionals and more than 60 industry-specific publications,Clear Seas Research offers relevant insights from those who know your industry best. Let us customize a market research solution that exceeds your marketing goals.

Vertical Sector Focus: Critical Infrastructures

criticalhomepagethumbFrom terrorism to vandalism, it’s preparedness, response, training and partnerships. Learn about some of the critical security issues facing this sector.

Visit the Critical Infrastructure page to read more.  

STAY CONNECTED

facebooklogo twitterlogo  linkedinlogo  YouTube icon