FORT MEADE, Md. -- All 133 of U.S. Cyber Command’s cyber
mission force teams achieved full operational capability, Cybercom officials
announced today.
Having Cybercom achieve full operational capability early is
a testament to the commitment of the military services toward ensuring the
nation’s cyber force is fully trained and equipped to defend the nation in
cyberspace.
To reach full operational capability, teams met a rigorous
set of criteria, including an approved concept of operation and a high
percentage of trained, qualified and certified personnel. As part of the
certification process, teams had to show they could perform their mission under
stress in simulated, real-world conditions as part of specialized training
events.
Defending Cyberspace, Providing Capabilities
“I’m proud of these service men and women for their
commitment to developing the skills and capabilities necessary to defend our
networks and deliver cyberspace operational capabilities to the nation,” said
Army Gen. Paul M. Nakasone, Cybercom’s commander.
Cybercom leaders emphasize that while this is an important
milestone, more work remains. Now, the focus will shift toward readiness to
perform the mission and deliver optimized mission outcomes, continuously.
“As the build of the cyber mission force wraps up, we’re
quickly shifting gears from force generation to sustainable readiness,”
Nakasone said. “We must ensure we have the platforms, capabilities and
authorities ready and available to generate cyberspace outcomes when needed.”
The cyber mission force has been building capability and
capacity since 2013, when the force structure was developed and the services
began to field and train the force of over 6,200 soldiers, sailors, airmen,
Marines and civilians.
The mission did not wait while teams were building. While
they were in development, or “build status,” teams in the cyber mission force
were conducting operations to safeguard the nation.
“It’s one thing to build an organization from the ground up,
but these teams were being tasked operationally while they were growing
capability,” Nakasone said. “I am certain that these teams will continue to
meet the challenges of this rapidly evolving and dynamic domain.”
Cyber Mission Force
The cyber mission force is Cybercom’s action arm, and its
teams execute the command’s mission to direct, synchronize and coordinate
cyberspace operations in defense of the nation’s interests.
Cyber mission force teams support this mission through their
specific respective assignments:
-- Cyber national mission teams defend the nation by
identifying adversary activity, blocking attacked and maneuvering to defeat
them.
-- Cyber combat mission teams conduct military cyberspace
operations in support of combatant commander priorities and missions.
-- Cyber protection teams defend DoD’s information network,
protect priority missions and prepare cyber forces for combat.
-- Cyber support teams provide analytic and planning support
to national mission and combat mission teams.
Some teams are aligned to combatant commands to support
combatant commander priorities and synchronize cyberspace operations with
operations in the other four domains -- land, sea, air and space -- and some
are aligned to the individual services for defensive missions. The balance
report directly to subordinate command sections of Cybercom, the cyber national
mission force, and Joint Force Headquarters-DoD Information Network.
The cyber national mission force plans, directs and
synchronizes full-spectrum cyberspace operations to deter, disrupt and if
necessary, defeat adversary cyber actors to defend the nation. National mission
force teams are aligned to support the cyber national mission force.
Joint Force Headquarters-DoD Information Network, which also
achieved full operational capability this year, provides command and control of
DoD information network operations, defensive cyber operations and internal
defensive measures globally to enable power projection and freedom of action
across all warfighting domains.
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