Prepare for the worst…and hope for the best. This unofficial mantra of the emergency preparedness and response community also applies to cyber preparedness. ...
Prepare for the worst…and hope for the best. This unofficial mantra of the emergency preparedness and response community also applies to cyber preparedness.
This week seven federal agencies, 11 states, 12 international partners, and 60 private sector companies are doing just that: preparing for the worst in cyberspace. These organizations are all participants in Cyber Storm III, a global cybersecurity preparedness exercise led by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. By the end of the week, these organizations will have responded to a fictionalized cyber threat scenario designed to test their individual and collective capabilities to respond to cyber attacks and the National Cyber Incident Response Plan (Interim Version, September 2010).
Federal cyber preparedness has never been more important. The threat to federal information assets and networks is diverse, persistent, and growing.
In recent testimony before the U.S. House of Representatives, General Keith Alexander, Commander of the U.S. Cyber Command, stated that U.S. Department of Defense networks are “probed roughly 250,000 times an hour” and characterized the “…shift toward operationalizing cyber tools as weapons to damage or destroy” as a “great concern to us at Cyber Command.”
The National Cyber Incident Response Plan states:
This week’s Cyber Storm III exercise will provide new insight into our federal agencies’ cyber preparedness. As agencies identify lessons learned from the exercise and begin to make improvements to address areas of weakness, they should do so through a framework addressing the following elements:
General Alexander described the new approach needed for cyber deterrence by paraphrasing General Sun Tzu’s The Art of War: “we must understand the cyber environment and, the capabilities of our adversaries, and our own abilities.”
By evaluating federal cybersecurity programs through this framework, agencies can better understand their capabilities and live up to their shared responsibility for cyber preparedness.
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